The Totalitarian Regime In The Handmaid's Tale

554 Words2 Pages

Living under totalitarian regimes, Marji and Offred are women being oppressed by the government through others, developing a sense of fear. As a method of gaining control, women in power or prominent positions are used to spread each regimes message, and keep other women without power feeling protected. As Marji walks down the street wearing a jacket, pin, and sneakers as symbols of her abhorrence towards the Shah’s and is stopped by a group of women: “They were the Guardians of the Revolution, the women's branch. This group had been added in 1982, to arrest women who were improperly veiled. Their job was to put us back on the straight and narrow by explaining the duties of Muslim women” (Satrapi, 132-133). These women are used to enforce rules …show more content…

In The Handmaid’s Tale, the Aunts are made to be prominent, wise women who guide handmaids in the “right direction” told by the regime, paralleling the Guardians in Persepolis. By giving the Aunts some power, they feel important compared to the other women, and will follow the regime blindly without thinking about the consequences. Atwood writes, “Blessed be the fruit Jeanie, Aunt Lydia would have said, without looking up from her desk, where she was writing something. For every rule there is always an exception. The Aunts are allowed to read and write. (Atwood, 129)” The government has given the Aunts small allowances such as writing and reading; these minimal “gifts” are used to show them their false importances and have them continue spreading the regimes ideas. The Aunts are cleverly used by the regime to easily control both the Aunts and the handmaids. Offred on the other hand has had every ounce of power and individuality stripped from her, and is able to freely see the true complexity and horror of the regime. As an additional aspect of true control over the handmaids, spies, also known as Eyes, are placed to develop an idea of

Open Document