The Grapes Of Wrath: Paragraph Analysis

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Level II: Paragraph about the Wall
Throughout the novel, Offred and her companion, Ofglen, visit the Wall during their shopping trips. The Wall is where the government displays the criminals whom were hanged at the recent Salvaging for everyone to see. It is an important element of the setting because it offers insight of other rights the government has stripped away besides woman’s rights. For example, the crimes Offred sees displayed are doctors who giving abortions, Jews who did not change their religious stance, and two men who partook in homosexual acts. There are also three women hanged- two handmaids and a wife- for unknown reasons, but it is suspected adultery or murder attempt. When the Wall is empty, it serves a reminder of what is to come-there will soon be people to inhabit it. Offred also
The society is based around controlling reproduction by forcing the women with fertile wombs to bear children for high-ranking and infertile married couples. When the narrator, Offred, sees an egg on her breakfast tray, she thinks, “this is what God must look like: an egg. The life of the moon may not be on the surface, but inside. The egg is glowing now, as if it had an energy of its own. To look at the egg gives me intense pleasure” (Atwood 110). Based on her reaction, Offred desires to have a child, even though it will be taken from her by the government. She relates to the egg because they both are unfertilized but contain the ability to create life, but they both also have an expiration day-Offred will become an “Unwoman” if she doesn’t have a child. After Ruth drops the egg from Offred’s breakfast and it cracks on the floor, the two women have a discussion about children. The broken egg serves as a reminder to Offred that she is not yet pregnant and that her time is running out (Atwood

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