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    In “The Handmaid’s Tale”‚ a novel written by Margaret Atwood‚ the Gilead society is largely built upon hypocrisy because it doesn’t truly follow the religious beliefs. Even though the whole society is shaped by religion‚ the people with authorities stealthily break rules and punish rapists due to religious beliefs when every single handmaid is trained to be pregnant against their desire which is considered rape in a way. Raping is perceived as a sin according to every religion and the Gilead society

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    Studying Literature

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    Canadian students have problems appreciating their culture. The Canadian literature most frequently studied is typically old. This literature includes works such as “The Apprenticeship of Duddly Kravitz”‚ by Mordecai Richler‚ “The Stone Angel” by Margaret Laurence and the “Fifth Business” by Robertson Davies. The Fifth Business is quite unique since it was published in 1970– over 35 years ago –

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    The Year of the Flood

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    A threat to Human society is the next pandemic. What will this Pandemic bring? How will the Human society prepare‚ or eventually do to prevent the Pandemic. The Gardeners from Margaret Atwood’s novel “The Year of the Flood” are a group of eco-subversives that prepare for a Pandemic. The Gardeners use different religions to make up their beliefs. In both “ The Year of The Flood” and the article by David Shenk “ How to Survive the Avian Flu‚ Smallpox‚ or Plague” tell the reader to grow food‚ stock

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    Oryx and Crake

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    December 12‚ 2013 The Importance of Childhood in Oryx And Crake In Atwood’s novel Oryx and Crake we see the cause and effect of how our childhood and how we are raised has a large correlation to what type of adult we become. Through the character of Jimmy and later his new persona Snowman‚ the reader is shown the detrimental effects of an abandoned childhood. Not only do Jimmy’s poor choices in his adult life have a clear link to his neglected and unguided childhood they also create an adult

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    Tale by Margret Atwood‚ the world in which the main characters live in is a totalitarian nation looking for utopia. Both main characters are presented as rebels against their governments but both worlds are very different. Winston Smith and Offred are looking for a way to beat their governments‚ and their rebellion leads them to similar situations. They both gain friends and information to help their rebellion‚ but their outcomes are very different. “Reviewers of Margaret Atwood ’s The Handmaid

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    Throughout The Handmaid’s Tale‚ and Little Women‚ Margaret Atwood and Gillian Armstrong respectively present the struggle women face to establish identities within patriarchal societies. Both authors explore this cause by setting their texts in a society where men are empowered and women potentially disempowered. Where Atwood creates a destructive patriarchy through a futuristic dystopia that strips women of individuality‚ Armstrong contrastingly explores the idea that women can create an identity

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    Starspangled Cowboy

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    ASSIGNMENT 1 205L: Close Reading‚ Good Writing By Aly Verbaan Student # 31201792 Backdrop addresses cowboy By MARGARET ATWOOD Starspangled cowboy sauntering out of the almost- silly West‚ on your face a porcelain grin‚ tugging a papier-mâché cactus on wheels behind you with a string‚ you are innocent as a bathtub full of bullets. Your righteous eyes‚ your laconic trigger-fingers people the streets with villains: as you move‚ the air in front of you blossoms with targets

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    Handmaid's Tale Power

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    the over-all effect that emerges from all these mobilities‚ the concatenation that rests on each of them and seeks in turn to arrest their movement. (Foucault 1978‚ p. 93) Margaret Atwood’s novel The Handmaid’s Tale gives a classical example of this all-encompassing nature of power. Set in the late-20th-century future‚ Atwood pictures a male-dominated‚ theocratic totalitarian society‚ set on the geographical territory of the (former) United States‚ called the Republic of Gilead. Due to the impact

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    The Handmaid’s Tale written by Margaret Atwood is about the feminist movement and how it would be if women were not equal to men. The book begins to describe where the women live. It takes place in the Republic of Gilead. Each women was assigned to a specific job and had no choice what to wear the color the commander said to wear. The narrator of this story’s name is Offred. Offred is known as one of the Handmaid’s in this book. She is forced to wear a long red habit. Due to the low reproduction

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    Oryx and Crake

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    and Stow 802) As a result we are consuming resources at a rate that is not renewable‚ or feasible for the future. It is plausible that we will have to rely on scientific advancement to sustain our species. The novel‚ Oryx and Crake‚ written by Margaret Atwood‚ displays the aftermath of these events as an overpopulated earth advances to meet our needs. In this essay I will examine how human consumption could create a world of false reality‚ as developed in the main theme of the novel‚ Oryx and Crake

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