Women And Women In The Handmaid's Tale By Margaret Atwood

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Margaret Atwood is famous for many things. She is a poet, novelist, story writer, essayist, and an environmental activist. Her books are usually bestsellers and have received high praises in the United States, Europe, and her native country, Canada. She has also received many Literary awards, like the Booker Prize, the Arthur C. Clarke Award, and the two Governor General’s Awards (“Margaret Atwood” Poetry). Through her books, she has written about what she sees in society towards women. She discusses how gender equality was corrupted in the past, but still is far from being reached, and women’s roles in society (“Spotty-handed”). Atwood also takes events in her life; like the Great Depression, Communism, and World War II; and applies it to her works. Margaret Atwood's works, including her novel The Handmaid's Tale, reflects women’s fight in equality, how society determines …show more content…

In that time, many women began to want their own rights, especially the right to vote. This came from a sense of independence after the men went to fight in World War II and the women stayed home and took their jobs. Once the men came back, the women realized they could do so much more and wanted rights, resulting in the Women’s Movement (“American”). Atwood agreed with the Women’s Movement on the idea that women deserved more rights. She went on to say that the Women’s Movement changed “how people read and therefore what you can get away with in art” (“Spotty-handed”). In earlier times, society thought it was socially right to think of women as a man’s property, or keep them suppressed through laws. Eventually as the Women’s Movement formed, women had more rights and that's reflected in books. Although Women’s rights were not completely accepted it was now a widespread topic and women’s roles in books changed from those under the control of men to those in power. Atwood expressed this in her poem,

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