In 1884‚ Mark Twain published the sequel to his critically successful The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. Rather than writing the sequel as "another ’boy ’s book ’ in the light comic tone"1 in which Tom Sawyer was written‚ Twain took a different approach. He took it upon himself in this new novel to expose the problems which he saw in society‚ using one of the most powerful methods available to him. The novel was The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn; the method was satire. The beauty of using satire was
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film‚ “Rabbit-Proof Fence”‚ not only undergo a tough physical challenge in order to achieve their ultimate destination – their home!‚ but also learn about their inner selves throughout that challengeable journey. Similarly‚ the persona of Margaret Atwood’s poem‚ “Journey to the Interior” attempts to discover the inner self by challenging the metaphysical journey. Furthermore‚ Judy Minkove depicts an image of a determined and optimistic tetraplegic physician‚ Dr. Lee who coped with many different challenges
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1. In her commentary “Reading Blind‚” Margaret Atwood gives her opinions on factors that make a short story good. She writes that a good story has to have a voice that moves not only across pages but also through time. Most people are first introduced to stories at a young age by the “scandalous gossips” and “family secrets” that children overhear their mothers discussing in the kitchen‚ or the oral tales with “talking donkeys” and “definite endings” that their grandmother recites to them. All these
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beings who want to explore and know everything. This can also be seen in various individuals as well. It is important to teach a person‚ what is good and what is bad‚ at an early age as this would help in shaping the person’s future. In Margaret Atwood’s “the Handmaids Tale”‚ certain individuals in a dystopian society go against the government’s rules. The government of Gilead is a theocratic government that removes the rights from the women and creates a strict caste system. The residents in Gilead
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Totalitarianism‚ Violence‚ and the Color Red in The Handmaid’s Tale In literature‚ the color red symbolizes many things‚ each with its own emotional impact. Red can be associated with violence and bloodshed‚ or it can be associated with love and intense emotions. In The Handmaid’s Tale‚ Offred‚ chosen to be a “baby-maker” for a couple she was assigned to‚ desires to escape the dystopian society that she lives in. Thus‚ Margaret creates a fictional government that uses totalitarianism‚ violence
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Margaret Atwood’s‚ The Handmaid’s Tale‚ constructs a near-future dystopia where human values do not progress and evolve‚ but instead become completely diminished and dominated under the Republic of Gilead. This powerful and secure new government gains complete political control and begins to abuse their power by forcing fertile women to reproduce. The Gileadean society is enforced by many Biblical laws‚ morals‚ and themes‚ yet the Gileadian religious ideologies are based on only a few specifically
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The Handmaid’s Tale and 1984 are similar in that they share a “subversion of authority” motif. In both novels‚ characters continuously rebel against the States that they are subject to‚ regardless of the consequences of their actions. In The Handmaid’s Tale‚ Offred subverts the authority of the State by having an affair with Luke before she was married to him. Serena Joy also rebels against the State in The Handmaid’s Tale by purchasing the illegal contraband‚ cigarettes‚ and smoking them in front
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their experiences‚ beliefs and their values. Earth is not a planet free of criminals or negative people but in order to balance this‚ there are people who see the positives of life and are grateful for every minute of the day. Offred from Margaret Atwood’s‚ The Handmaid’s Tale lives in a dystopia in which she cannot escape. She could rebel‚ be manipulative or be a villain but she did not instead‚ she coped with the situation. Similarly‚ Hamlet in Shakespeare’s‚ Hamlet thinks that living
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Tradition‚ it is believed that Atwood intended this to be suggestive of the apartheid homelands that occurred in South Africa in the 1940s‚ where the government declared that the nonwhite South Africans would be forced to live segregated from the white. Atwood’s implication of this situation in the newscast‚ was intended to make it apparent that the republic of Gilead was under xenophobic and racist rule. In Cuaron’s Children of Men‚ the United Kingdom becomes the only stable nation in the world. Immigrants
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Compare the dystopian societies‚ and the methods used to create them‚ in ‘The Handmaids Tale’ by Margaret Atwood‚ and ‘1984’ by George Orwell (paying particular attention to the representation of gender). The futuristic and oppressive themes that define a dystopian society are in ‘1984’ by George Orwell and ‘The Handmaids Tale’ (THT) by Margaret Atwood. These forms of society feature contrasting types of repressive social control and these stories often explore the concept of humans abusing technology
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