The Threat of Physical, Emotional, and Mental Abuse if you Disagree: Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale

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In Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale there is a threat of physical, emotional, and mental abuse if you disagree with the established group or party. The Handmaid’s Tale is a book about a “woman victimized by a totalitarian system that attempts to control her thoughts and deny her humanity” (Thomas 90). In The Handmaid’s Tale there are differences between all the women. There are the wives, who are married to the commanders. The commanders are in charge of all the other women. There are the econowives, which are the wives of the low-ranking officials. The Martha’s are in charge of the upkeep of the commander’s house. The Handmaid’s are in charge of having the commander’s baby. Each woman has to listen to their husband or commander. No woman can think for herself. The men are in charge of everything. (Atwood, Thomas)
The threat of physical abuse is huge. Being woman is enough of a crime, but “any crime can result in an execution and a public hanging on ‘The Wall’” (Cameron 3). A woman can be hung for just about anything. If they defy the people in charge they can get hurt. The women are constantly abused. The Gilead government is in charge of what goes on in this society. If a woman has an affair with a different man they are taken and possibly tortured or hung. The Red Center, which is where they were taught how to be Handmaid’s, the women were constantly tortured. They had Aunts that looked over them. These aunts were not nice and, “they had electric cattle prods slung on thongs from their leather belts” (Thomas 91). The aunt’s view was all that was needed was the Handmaid’s baby making parts. The women did not need their feet, hands, or any part other than the torso. When the woman did something wrong or tried to run away th...

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...ned. In the future there are all sorts of people running it and it is the exact opposite of Gilead. I would like to believe that ‘Offred’ was not sent to the wasteland or harmed. I would like to believe that she had that baby and had a happy life. Those things are uncertain, but what is certain is that the Gilead government was overthrown sometime in the future and a new happy government was formed. The Handmaid’s Tale was a strong warning of what could happen and what we hope will never happen. (Atwood)

Works Cited
Atwood, Margaret. The Handmaid's Tale. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1986. Print.
Thomas, Deborah. ""Don't let the bastards grind you down": Echoes of hard times in the Handmaid's Tale." Dickens Quarterly. (2008): 90-96. Print.
Cameron, Kathleen. "The Handmaid's Tale." . N.p., n.d. Web. .

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