The Role Of Identity In The Handmaid's Tale

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In the authoritarian society of Gilead in Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale, the characters have no access to an identity. It is predetermined for them. Characters are told what their role is in society, what institutions concern them, what media they will be exposed to, who they will associate with, and what routines they must follow. Characters, like the handmaids, have no access to sovereignty as well; it is in the hands of others. Consequently, by human instinct, the characters feel a need to take back their own selves, a need that is manifested in small, but dangerous acts of political and personal defiance. In The Handmaid’s Tale, Offred and the Commander engage in small, but dangerous acts of rebellion as a means to reconstruct a …show more content…

Although we are not granted access to the Commander’s mind or private life, we garner evidence that he, too, is not safe from the Eyes. He is confined to the functions a Commander must assume. Like Offred, he doesn’t possess an identity that is his own. Under the Republic of Gilead, he is only what he is told to be; a Commander, that works for the advancement of the regime, who has limited relations to other Commanders and those who work for him in his household, he is nothing more, nothing less. Thus, he rebels to discover who he was born as, not who the regime made him to be. As a Commander, his identity is made up of certain beliefs that he is compelled to possess, like the idea that the establishment of Gilead is progressive and beneficial. The Commander states that in Gilead, women are “protected [and] can fulfill their biological destinies in peace, with full support and encouragement” (219-20). However, he then rebels by asking Offred for her opinion, asking her what she thought “we overlooked?” (220). The act of discussing this with Offred is an attempt at developing an identity because it reveals that he doesn’t accept what has been shoved down his throat. Had he accepted his assigned identity, he wouldn’t feel a need to discuss the belief with others, he’d be at peace with the belief and feel no need to contest it. Discussions allow for people to develop new beliefs and to self-reflect, which he then does. Offred states that the regime overlooked falling in love and agrees with her, revealing that he is constructing a new identity, one that is able to have opinions that are acquired through self-discovery (220). Furthermore, this isn’t the first time the Commander does this, he asked for

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