Characterism In The Handmaid's Tale

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One can only be torn to threads by society so much before they are no longer themselves. Societies are constantly ruling the people and telling them how to live and in Margaret Atwood’s book, The Handmaid’s Tale, no one is more to blame than the society of Gilead. Gilead is a society where every basic human right is taken from women and their role in society is specifically and only to provide their uterus to a qualifying male. In most novels, the character overcomes their weakness or struggle in life and they become the better person or the hero of the novel. Offred in this case, does not rise to the occasion and become the hero. It is partially her own fault and partially the society's fault. In the dystopian novel, The Handmaid’s Tale, by …show more content…

The society of Gilead strips every basic human right and power from women until they are nothing; because of this, all women will be impacted tremendously and incapable of returning to a normal life after the laws have been lifted. “In The Handmaid’s Tale, Atwood explicitly questions why people so often cooperate with totalitarian regimes and how they come to accept life under their dominion,” (Laflen). The Handmaid’s have grown accustomed to doing whatever it takes to survive; the society they live in forces them to think of themselves as the Commander's puppet. As a Handmaid, Offred must conceive a child with the Commander. During these sex ceremonies the Handmaid must play it absolutely safe because everyone is watching, “One false move and I’m dead,” (Atwood 88) Offred says. Handmaids have the most responsibility, but at the same time they do not have any responsibility at all. During the ceremony, Offred must make sure not to move a muscle or make any suspicious movements that would raise an eye. “It is true that the colonization of Offred's body can be linked with

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