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    Fertile women are the key for a thriving country. In the book‚ Handmaid’s Tale there is a country named Gilead that was born after the destruction of the United States. Within the Gilead‚ there is a strong totalitarian government where the people do not have the freedom to think their own thoughts. Gilead is a biblical term for “hill of testimony”. Religion plays a big part on how Gilead controls their government. The women of Gilead no longer have control over themselves‚ as the government dictates

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    The Pardoner’s Tale and The Wife of Bath’s Tale‚ both are interesting story by Geoffrey Chaucer. Both tales utilizes irony to showcase problems present within the Medieval era and relate to today‚ such as rape and thievery to the lifelong lessons such as‚ Greed is the root of all evils and content featuring woman’s dominance‚ rights‚ and morality in general. In the Pardoner’s Tale‚ Chaucer writes about a man who preaches to his audience for money. The pardoner speaks of three men that lost their

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    Gender

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    a major theme in contemporary identity informed through the help of feminism and other major groups. The term is related to but distinct from “sex” (used to refer both to the physical distinction between men and women and sexual intercourse) and “gender” (the social and cultural distinctions between men and women). Sexuality is used to refer to “erotic desires‚ practices and identities” or “aspects of personal and social life which have erotic significance” (Weeks‚ 1985). Debates on sexuality in

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    The handmaid’s Tale reveals a new career called handmaid in the future society‚ whose mission is to have children for senior officials. Both Secret daughter and The handmaid’s tale describe an oppressive patriarchal theocratic society. Female characters have to struggle with the cruel reality for their role as women. By doing so‚ they try to challenge the patriarchal power structure and unfair treatment of women. This resistance proves that there is no inherently superior gender. It reveals that

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    Navneet Kainth Ms. Camilleri ENG 4U0 7/21/2015 Corrupt Totalitarian Society in The Handmaid’s Tale and Brave New World Totalitarianism is a political state that hold total control of one’s life and causes a corrupt society to occur. Brave New World‚ by Aldous Huxley and The Handmaid’s Tale‚ by Margaret Atwood share a corrupted totalitarian society through the use of the characters‚ conflicts and themes presented in the novels. These literary works are presented with the character’s freedom being

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    Is the Tell-Tale Heart a Tall Tale? How can we always trust a narrator to be credible in stories we read? Are we to assume that the words we read are always truth? If characters are able to lie to one another‚ the narrator could also have the ability to fib to the reader‚ or at the very least give a sense of false hyperbole to a situation. In the case of Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Tell Tale Heart”‚ is our narrator capable of telling the story of his late night plight with complete objectivity? The

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    Canterbury Tales

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    10/2/12 The Canterbury Tales The Canterbury Tales‚ written by Geoffry Chaucer‚ is known as a Frame tale. A Frame tale is a story that leads up to another story. The Canterbury Tales‚ to me‚ was a very interesting story. A couple of the characters‚ the Knight and the Plowman‚ greatly caught my eye. The Canterbury Tales is about a pilgrimage made to a holy place during the 1300’s for religious reasons. Twenty-nine pilgrims travel to Canterbury to visit the shrine of Saint Thomas a Becket. As

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    The Squire's Tale

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    The Squires Tale The Squire is the son of the knight. Chaucer describes him as good horse rider‚ able to joust well‚ and he carves the Knight’s meat for him at dinner. These qualities make him a good squire. The Franklin even praises him for being everything a squire and a young man should be. Though Chaucer also describes the Squire as embroidered like a meadow‚ making him sound more like a woman then a young man‚ Chaucer also mentions the Squire’s ability to dance‚ sing‚ and write poetry. The

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    Pardoners tale

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    stated in The Pardoner’s Tale. The Pardoner’s Tale is one of The Canterbury Tales. In The Pardoner’s Tale‚ the Pardoner begins the prologue by fleetingly accounting his methods of conning people out of their money. Then‚ he begins to tell a tale. In the tale‚ three rioters are out to kill Death. They encounter an old man who explains he will wander the earth for someone who’s willing to exchange youth for an old age. He says “Not alas Death will take my life” (The Pardoner’s Tale 119). The men ask him

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    In The Handmaid’s Tale‚ Margaret Atwood employs symbolic colors and caste systems to create a world where the only significant‚ defining aspects of any one person are the traits and assigned colors of their respective caste. The removal of any individuality allows characters to conform to the stereotypes and roles placed upon them by this new society‚ effectively creating the disparities that keep each group from interacting and bonding with each other. This disunion between females is not exclusive

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