The Handmaid's Tale By Margaret Atwood

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In the Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood, Atwood portrays many postmodern themes by exploring feminism, religion, and sexual violence through the perspective of Offred. Gilead, the society Offred lives in, is a religious dystopia that provides freedom from any sort of harm against women. Gilead is built around protecting women from sexual violence while reinforcing it through the many practices the society enforces. Before Gilead, Offred lived in a normal western society with her husband and daughter but it soon then started to change little by little, giving very few rights to women. The society changed because of the presence of pornography, sexual, and sexual assault or any sort of violence to women. By allowing the women freedom to do …show more content…

Janine had to share that she was gang-raped as a teen and had an abortion, then Aunt Helena asked whose fault it was, “Her fault, her fault, we chant in unison” (Atwood 72). They continue on by saying she led the guys on and that God allowed it to teach her a lesson. Even in the new society that is supposed to protect women they still victim blame allowing for it to still happen to other instead of punishing guys. However, at the Salvagings the handmaids do punish someone who the society claims is a rapist but Offred thinks he is innocent and that they just use him as a scapegoat to take away the anger of the women in the society. By not providing a true punishment for raping women, Gilead reestablishes the power of men because it conditions the men through negative reinforcement. Handmaids also have to attend Prayvaganza which celebrates forced marriage for the young daughters of the Wives. This creates sexual violence because it basically forces enslavement to young girls that will now be forced to be a wife which leads to more inferiority within the society. It teaches the young girls to be a servant to their husband which increases their chances of sexual violence in their

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