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Patriarchy In The Handmaids Tale

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Patriarchy and women’s collaboration Patriarchy is a social system in which male dominates the society and takes control of women. The history of patriarchy goes as far back to the beginning of civilization. Since then, women have been suffering under the patriarchal rule of men, and many social movements have arisen to resist the inequality that could lead to a patriarchal society. In the modern day societies, some female writers and activists put complete effort to make people aware of the negative effects of patriarchy. In order to show the world how dangerous patriarchy is and what it could lead to, Margret Atwood in her book (The Handmaid’s Tale) eloquently described the terrible life of women in a dystopian world created by men as …show more content…

They created Aunts, Marthas, Wives, and Handmaids to use them against each other. For instance, the Aunts were used to watch over the Handmaids in the red center where the handmaids were kept and taught things to be good handmaids. Under the Aunts watch, escaping the red center was impossible because the Aunts were very strict. As the narrator states that Moira threatened an Aunt’s life in order to escape. Nonetheless it would have been impossible to escape because they were strict, and holding electric weapons “Aunt Sara and Aunt Elizabeth patrolled; they had electric cattle prods slung on thongs from their leather belts.’’ (Atwood, 2) This shows that women’s collaboration to resist the system was weak. Also, the system brainwashed some women to support patriarchy, as the narrator talks about Ofglen- a handmaid when she tells the story of herself being raped, all the aunts said that it was her fault not the man’s fault ” But whose fault was it? Aunt Helena says, holding up one plumping finger. Her fault, her fault, her fault, we chant in unison” (Atwood, 72). Also, the Gilead republic created spies among the women in the system to gather information for the system and capture anyone who breaks the rules secretly. The narrator talks about herself not trusting anyone even Ofglen- her shopping partner- as she states” It occurs to me that she may be a spy’’( Atwood, 169) even though she was a Handmaid

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