Margaret Atwood Research Paper

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When a human is born, he is molded by the views of those around him - but some break the mold. Unlike many women of her time, author Margaret Atwood has been known to be politically-driven and shameless. Atwood has spent the overwhelming majority of her life invested in both poetry and prose alike. She has been reading since she was a small child, wrote for her high school newspaper, and has even received prestigious awards for her works. Inspired by family and years spent in various schools, renowned poet and novelist Margaret Atwood has created many works revolving around sexism and other political affairs of modern society.
Born Margaret Eleanor Atwood on November 18, 1939 in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, Atwood is the middle child of Carl Edmund Atwood and Margaret Dorothy Killam of Nova Scotia. She is the younger sister of Harold Atwood and the older sister of Ruth Atwood, with whom she spent much of her childhood. As Carl Atwood was a forest entomologist, the Atwood family spent most of the year in Canadian bush country. She consequently learned about the wilderness first-hand and also used books to propel her knowledge, which she continued to do even after moving to Toronto at age seven (Van Bergen).
Being a bright child, Atwood entered public high school at the age of twelve. There, she …show more content…

The novel depicts a totalitarian society in which women are subjugated. Inspired by the decrease in births in the 1980s, the women in Atwood’s society are useless, aside from providing children for the social elite. For this, she received the Arthur C. Clarke award and the Governor General’s Award for English-Language Fiction (Van Bergen). In her lifetime so far, she has also had the honor of being presented with many other awards, including the Presidential Medal for Poetry, the Trillium Award of Excellence, American Humanist of the Year award, and the Ida Nudel Humanitarian Award (“Margaret Atwood”

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