How Does Margaret Atwood Create Tension In The Handmaid's Tale

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In Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale the protagonist, Offred, is living in a dystopian society where the key to survival is subdued acquiescence. Offred stays submissive throughout the book. With an internal monologue that uses a scattered sense of time and the softening rebellion within Offred, the reader can feel the inward movement of the conformity within Offred. Offred’s memories fill the book, the details of the society are only dictated through Offred’s eyes; she references her own complacency with disdain while nevertheless obeying every rule in front of her. The strength of of her inward questioning fades as the tension between her rebellion and her outside conformity grows. Atwood uses three different setting intermixed as a way to elaborate the confusion and disconnect within Offred. A sense of complacency follows each time with varying internal resistance fading as time moves chronologically, and getting more and more dichotomizing as the book, and subsequently Offred’s story, progresses. Disobeying any restrictions on her life fades into outwardly obeying the choiceless life outwardly, even with a rebellious mind. …show more content…

Her love of Luke and her daughter drive her fierce refusal of the creeping control, as she attempts to run away with what matters to her. After she is taken to the center for reformation, Offred holds onto the internal questioning and fight, but she attempts of conform as a way to survive. As she becomes a handmaid and time separated her from those she loved, Offred slowly becomes acquiescent internally as the outward conformity seeps into her mind. Offred goes from adamantly refusing to claim any part of the new life she is placed into, “ — not my room, I refuse to say my” (8), to the mindless “I sit in my room” (291), waiting for fate to collect

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