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What Is The Feminism In The Handmaids Tale

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The Handmaid’s Tale, the classic riveting story of an elaborately designed yet horrifyingly possible dystopia has shocked and provoked thought in readers for decades. Atwood’s graphic and often brutal writing style paired with the political undertones rooted deep within the novel made for a literary masterpiece, as well as a cornerstone for feminist literature. However, beneath the glossy fictional surface the book is a complex political exposé which brings up and illustrates the focal frustrations that come with modern feminist. The book graphically shows the societal wrongs that feminism fights against & uses conceptual imagery within the story to illustrate these wrongs. Simply put, Gilead (the fictional republic in the book) was blatantly designed to illustrate these wrongs through clever concepts & excellent symbolism. The author, Margaret Atwood wrote the book in the mid 80-s in a …show more content…

It highlights the terrible phenomena that exist in the modern western world by illustrating symbolic and well conceptualized characters and fictional political structures. The patriarchal design of Gilead is an excellent highlight of the dominant masculinity as well as the power and privilege that men withhold in the western world. The concept of the handmaid is perfect symbolism for the restriction of women’s social and sexual rights, as well as the inequities that they face in the western world. The social hierarchy is also a gritty painting of the hidden discriminatory hierarchy that exists in the real world. Over all the Handmaid’s Tale is an excellent piece that brings up the important issues of modern day feminism. Perhaps one day these issues will resolve themselves and the idea of Gilead will become less of a dystopia and more of a cartoonish fantasy land or a forgotten thing of the

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