The Handmaid's Tale Identity Essay

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IRP Final Paper Identity is what makes a person unique. It is what distinguishes a person from the other seven billion people that inhabit the earth alongside them. Without an identity, one is another person in a sea of unfamiliar faces with nothing to make them special. The reader experiences this very phenomenon in Margaret Atwood’s novel, The Handmaid’s Tale, as the women have their identities stripped from them in the dystopian, war-stricken society and are forced to be just seen and not heard. Using the protagonist as her tool, Atwood presents the idea that the loss of an identity results in the loss of a person, and a person will do anything to fill the void that needs to be filled. In the beginning of the novel, the protagonist is portrayed as lost and confused, with little direction or drive to be …show more content…

When the reader is finally given a name to call the narrator, it is not even a proper name. The name given to her is “Offred” meaning “Of Fred,” Fred being her Commander’s, the person she is assigned to, name. She has another name, one she had before the war, however, “nobody uses [it] now, because it is forbidden” (Atwood 84). The government has made it illegal for any woman to be addressed by their birth names, instead reducing them to the property of the men who have jurisdiction over them. The women are stripped of their identity due to the war, without anyway of getting back to the status of where they were. Society is built against women having their own voice and “because of the pain such a life brings, Offred’s entire existence in Gilead is a psychological and physical struggle” (Guilick 67). The psychological struggle arises as Offred is haunted with the image of who she used to be. With the laws in place making any talk of the country before the war

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