Commentary on Margaret Atwood´s A Handmaid´s Tale

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The Handmaid’s Tale is a dystopian novel written by the Canadian author Margaret Atwood. In this book, Atwood shows that no one is a beneficiary in a totalitarian, patriarchal society like Gilead Republic by revealing the oppression facing by different characters in the story. Even though this book does not have a sophisticated setup for background, Atwood still successfully ties the story to the real world that we live in and leads us to think about the question she asks in the book. Since this book causes people’s profound rethinking of the problems that we are facing now (e.g., infertility, low birth rate, public good vs. personal rights) and the writing is fantastic, it is definitely a worth reading book. In this book, Atwood creates a patriarchal society that is extremely religious. The bible was distorted, so it can be interpreted in a way which is in favor of the regime. When pollution and chemical spills led to declining fertility rates, the architects of Gilead assassinated the president and members of Congress and launched a coup, cracked down on women’s rights, and forbidding women to hold property or jobs. The main character, which is named Offred later, attempted to flee across the border into Canada, but they were caught and separated from one another and has never seen each other again. After her capture, Offred was sent to the Re-education Center and was trained to become an Handmaid. The ideology of the Gilead regime is that women should be subservient to men and solely concerned with bearing children, and such a social order ultimately offers women more respect and safety than the old, pre-Gilead society offered them. Offred regards herself as “ two-legged wombs, that's all: sacred vessels, ambulatory chalices”... ... middle of paper ... ...e distance between the story and the reality. Another feature of this book is the using of suspense. The Latin sentence “ Nolite te bastardes carborundorum” first appeared in Chapter 9, but the meaning of this sentence was not revealed until Chapter 29. Nick’s identity of being a Mayday member is also a secret before the last chapter. Many questions in the previous part of the book are answered in the Historical Notes part. All of these make reading this book challenging and interesting. Even though I neither have enough personal experience about the power of religion nor understand some cultural background of this book, I enjoyed reading the Handmaid’s Tale and felt that I was intellectually-engaged while I was reading. I would suggest this book to my friend since it is beautifully written and causes me thinking about the problems that are not far away from us.

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