The Wall In The Handmaid's Tale

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In the novel “The Handmaid’s Tale” by Margaret Atwood, Atwood mentions of an place in Chapter 6, that offred and ofglen had visited before returning back home from their shopping trip. In the times of Gilead, there were certain acts or actions that were banned by the leading leaders, and such acts if committed and discovered , were met with an punishment of sort. The function of the wall was to showcase the dead bodies of the people who had gone against Gilead and broke the ban set on the actions they have committed ( Atwood 32). The wall as described by offred is “..Is hundreds of years old too: or over a hundred, at least”., “Like the sidewalks, it’s brick red..”., “ Now the gates have sentries and there are ugly new floodlights mounted …show more content…

The second purpose the wall severed as a scaretactic, a way of displaying the corpses of doctors; to ensure that if other doctors were to follow in their predecessors footstep, that they would meet the same fate as their fallen brethren (Atwood 32). The crimes the doctors had committed that had gotten them put up on the wall was the banned act of giving women the chance of having an abortion, proof of that is when offred states, “Each has a placard hung around his neck to show why he has been executed: a drawing of a human fetus”(Atwood 32). According to offred, the act of removal of an human fetus from the inside of a woman's body was now illegal, but in past times the case was not true, doctors were called Angel Markers, and the act of abortion was legal, also because of the way Gilead was set up, the doctors that had been hung, were killed due to their work of the past. Afterward, offered makes the point to mention out loud; “No women in her right mind, these days, would seek to prevent a birth, should she be so lucky as to conceive”(Atwood

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