The Handmaid's Tale By Margaret Atwood

1151 Words3 Pages

The Unknown Taste of True Freedom In today's world, people in the first world exaggerate small inconveniences until it seems as a case of oppression. People do this while ignoring the big picture, the world, and other people. Currently, many people are suffering in other parts of the world. Many are slaughtered because of their religion, for instance muslims in Myanmar. This genocide is being ignored by the media, as most horrific things are. Should people recognize the suffering of others, and compare their own life to the life of others? Should people use their abilities and the rights they have to help others recover from their oppression? In the novel by Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid's Tale, and in the film directed by Neill Blomkamp, …show more content…

In The Handmaid's Tale, the handmaid’s lack many human rights, as most of the women believe that it is normal to be disrespected. These women are forced to train to become an opinionless handmaid, who are mentally strained. Offred recalls being shown pornography depicting rape, abuse, and murder by Aunt Lydia. Aunt Lydia then says, “You see what things used to be like? That was what they thought of women, then” ( The Handmaid’s Tale, 112). Aunt Lydia conditions the women, soon to be slaves, into allowing and tolerating the abuse they will get while working as a handmaid. The women are tortured by the haunting made up stories used to brainwash them into becoming a handmaid. Not only does this deteriorate their mental health, but it also makes them capable of getting abused and hurt by others. In Elysium, the working environment lacks safety precautions, and the workers do not have any respect. After being exposed to a copious amount of radiation, Max’s boss disrespects him and says, “Does his skin fall off or something? I don't want to replace the bedding. Just get him out” (Blomkamp, Elysium). Max is scrutinized and not even recognized as a life by the bourgeois. No worker in this universe is. Many workers on Earth put themselves at risk in order to make a minimum amount of money. Although the common workplace lacks basic human rights, no citizen on Earth in Elysium is required to work in such …show more content…

Although, The Handmaid’s Tale justice system is more cruel. In the Handmaid’s tale, many prosecuted citizens are punished unfairly, and it is near impossible to escape parole. The hangings end, and the guardians bring a drugged guardian on stage and claims he is a rapist. He is violently beat by outraged handmaid’s. Oglen tells Offred, “He wasn't a rapist at all, he was a political” ( The Handmaid's Tale, 263). The justice system is so corrupt in The Handmaid’s Tale that they punish others as if it were the biblical times. They publicly hang and beat to death to drive fear into other civilians do not do as they did. Sadly, some of the citizens were prosecuted over mundane tasks, such as drawing a fetus. In Elysium, they are no human police officers, thus no arrests can be defended and many innocent people are prosecuted. Max jokes around with the AI cops, and is immediately tackled. The robot says to Max, “Zero tolerance policy applies to all Citizens” (Blomkamp, Elysium). With the lack of humanity in the justice system, citizens are treated inhumanely, and with no empathy. To continue, many innocent citizens are beaten and accused for crimes. The citizens of America in The Handmaid’s Tale are more oppressed by the law, and have harsher consequences to small crimes than the citizens of Earth in

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