Theme Of Desire In The Handmaids Tale

1159 Words3 Pages

Kandace Nassir
Professor Doucet
April 17, 2014
Gender, Sexuality, and Desire

Throughout the novel, “The Handmaid’s Tale” by Margaret Atwood, she portrays how Offred and other characters desperately use desire, gender, and sexuality in the novel to convey the theme. She begins with the first-person narrator, Offred, by describing the old school gymnasium where she sleeps, and how she feels like she is lost in the atmosphere. She works in a house that is run by a married Commander, and the narrator has to have sex with the commander regularly everyday, in a standard Ceremony, by attempting to become pregnant and also provide the household with a child. She has a uniform that is a red dress because it represents blood and all the handmaids wear red. She has assigned tasks and very little freedom because she is basically in a prison. She is confined to her room except when she goes out, while she is being supervised and watched while she is shopping or going to prescribed events. Throughout the beginning chapters, she has frequent flashbacks to various times in her life. She reminisces about her husband Luke and compares how life is now from before, their daughter, and her mother. Offred has desperate desires towards knowledge and language that she is being denied by the regime. The main focus of the Gileadean regime is the control of sexuality, sex, and gender.

In the beginning of the novel, is it highly evident that Offred’s desires for language to assist her communicate and keep her identity was strong. The Handmaid’s and Offred learned each others real names for instance in the opening chapters when it was not allowed by passing messages bed to bed in the center she was in. She explains how, “We learned to lip-read, our head...

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...ld have desire for many things such as language, love, and her sexuality at times. Offred’s desire to read connected to when the Commander offered her a Vogue magazine, which made her think about her childhood memories. Her gender conveys how the characters were split up whether they were Handmaid’s, wives, or Commanders; they had their own roles in the society. These women are all forbidden from working outside the house, reading, and spending money. These women are either baby-making machines or Handmaids who are basically known as slaves, who are apart of a dystopian society. This society is created by a big group of people who maintain and strengthen their power by including torture and death in other peoples lives. This world of Gilead is a group of religious conservative extremists who have taken power, and turned the sexual revolution completely upside down.

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