The Handmaids Tale Character Analysis

1086 Words3 Pages

In life, we can either follow the rest of the herd of cattle of become a tiger and break out. In the book The Handmaids Tale by Margaret Atwood talks about a dystopian city where everyone must follow their rules if you do not want to be punished. This is especially for women who must follow these rules and boundaries that are put in place. However, there is one character who doesn 't follow any of their rules but instead breaks free from them. Moira is the only Handmaid to escape without being caught. This essay will discuss how Moira 's character development helped shape the key messages of gender equality and personal liberty against the forces of ignorance and prejudice. Moira is the only one to really take action against Gilead. Unlike Gilead claims to promote solidarity between women, but in fact, it only produces suspicion, hostility, and petty tyranny. The kind of relationship that Moira and Offred maintain from college onward does not exist in Gilead. In Offred 's flashbacks, Moira also embodies female resistance to Gilead. She is a lesbian, which means that she rejects male-female sexual interactions, the only kind that Gilead values. More than that, she is the only character who stands up to authority directly by make two escape attempts, one successful, from the Red Center. The manner in which she escapes—taking off her clothes and putting on the uniform of an Aunt—symbolizes her rejection of Gilead 's attempt to define her identity. From then on, until Offred meets up with her again, Moira represents an alternative to the meek subservience and acceptance of one 's fate that most of the Handmaids adopt. When Offred runs into Moira, Moira has been recaptured and is working as a prostitute at Jezebel 's, servicing the Commanders. Her fighting spirit seems broken, and she has become resigned to her fate. After embodying resistance for most of the novel, Moira comes to exemplify the way a totalitarian state can crush even the most independent

Open Document