Allusions In The Handmaid's Tale

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Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale provides a look into a dystopian world of complete male dominance. Women have been entirely denied of their basic needs, and are no longer able to live as individuals. For decades preceding the creation of Gilead, women were regarded as subordinate to men. These inequalities often led women to believe they were inferior and lacked the knowledge and power men seemed to display. They were not granted access to voting rights, equal wages, or job opportunities. As the years progressed, women fought for equal rights; however, these accomplishments were soon revoked with the transition of the United States, into a totalitarian region known as The Republic of Gilead. The new Republic’s regime resulted in the demise As Offred begins to reminisce about previously enjoyed summer days, she recalls the holidays which will soon occur throughout the following months. Offred than fast forwards her thinking to the first of September, which in the Republic of Gilead is known as Labor Day. Atwood then uses allusion in an ironic way, when Offred says, “September first will be Labor Day, they still have that. Though it didn’t used to have anything to do with mothers” (Atwood 257). The original holiday celebrated on the first of September was an occasion commemorating workers’ rights, while the new holiday in the novel celebrates childbirth—another meaning of the word labor. This speaks to the fact that female workers no longer have rights to commemorate and therefore are subjected to a holiday to support the only attribute The Republic of Gilead admires in women. Without a stimulating occupation or a meaningful existence, a feeling of emptiness can occupy a woman’s mind. Atwood uses this holiday to reflect what the Republic of Gilead feels should be a female’s main purpose, concluding that their lives are unfulfilling. The Commander, however, feels that men also suffer from lack of meaning. He observes, “The problem wasn’t only with the women… The main problem was the men. There was nothing for them anymore” (Atwood 272). The Commander’s allusion to days pre-Gilead forms an ironic response. In Offred’s mind, men had all the power in the new Republic and therefore had no reason to feel life is futile. If what the Commander observes is true, than both men and women suffer when one group is oppressed. Another allusion to women’s oppression is the use of the name Jezebel for the night club in the novel. One night, when Offred has been told to engage in sexual intercourse with Nick, the Commander sneaks her into a forbidden club, where men of his rank go to seek

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