"Margaret Atwood" Essays and Research Papers

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    Handmaids tale

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    Marlyn Barroso ETS 192 October 3rd‚ 2013 Hierarchy in The HandMaid ’s Tale Margaret Atwood ’s The Handmaid ’s Tale is a interesting novel that will have you confused but also have you bitting your nails with intrigue. So many questions might go in your head‚ at the same time; Atwood wrote this novel so her readers can have curiosity‚ even after reading the last word of the last paragraph of the last page of the book. One of the main topics of this novel is the effect on society when a women

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    Dystopia and Utopia

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    will stay ‘perfect’ forever? What is the true definition of ‘perfect’ or ‘utopian’ and who decides what this is? One man’s utopian mansion could be another man’s dystopian nightmare. Using extracts from popular movies‚ poems and novels such as Margaret Atwood’s Oryx and Crake or the movie directed by respected director Peter Weir‚ The Truman Show‚ this essay will compare and contrast why the modern definition of the ‘Utopian’ condition is unsustainable. The essay will cover important topics about

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    writer who had won numerous world-class writing prizes‚ Margaret Atwood is famous for being as a novelist‚ many of her poems were inspired by fairy tales. In her work the readers can always find traces about woman: their powers‚ their status‚ their spiritual world. Combine the two significant traits‚ “The Blue beard’s Egg” is a short story which retell a traditional classic fairy rale that originated from Charles Perrault’s “Bluebeard”. Atwood takes a modern peek of the old tale. In Perrault’s version

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    Designer Babies

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    Creating the Perfect One. In the last few years‚ scientists have invented different methods for fertility‚ such as medicines‚ donors‚ In Vitro Fertilization‚ and many others. Methods like these are for men and women who are infertile. In Margaret Atwood’s novel Oryx and Crake‚ Crake has figured out a way to keep a lot of things away from the Crakers‚ like where they came from and why they are different from snowman. Science technology is growing every day in Crake’s “Paradice” lab. In today’s

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    Margaret Thatcher Case

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    Margaret Thatcher Case Study  ORGB 321 ­ Leadership  McGill University                          Adam Fischer (260518805)  Anaelle Haddad (260636750)   Daniel Aleman (260521566)      Professor Patricia E. Hewlin  January 27‚ 2014         ​ Problem and Issue Identification  The  case  we  studied  alludes  to  Margaret  Thatcher‚  a British politician  who would eventually  become  Prime  Minister.  Her   rise  to  power  was not easy‚  starting  with the  fact that  she was  born in a  modest  family 

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    The Handmaid's Tale

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    Comparing texts forces us to question our values in the context of the author’s zeitgeist and our own. The dystopia novel The Handmaid’s Tale (1985)‚ written by Margaret Atwood‚ and the film adaptation Children of Men (2006)‚ directed by Alfonso Cuarón‚ both examine the abuse of power by totalitarian government regimes which come about as a result of chaotic disasters. These oppressive governments’ abuse of their given power creates a dystopic world‚ and with it come restrictions to individual freedom

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    particular passage may be delivering to the reader. The purpose of this is so that one may gain a full and better understanding of the work as a whole and the many different ways that it can be translated. In The Handmaid’s Tale‚ the author Margaret Atwood uses literary language as one of her major tools within the novel to really captivate the reader and her usage of words really helps the reader connect with Offred and understand the issues that her story brings to the forefront. However‚ despite

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    difference of opinion. This conventional trait among society allows diverse ideas to be suggested and added upon for a better future and eventually an all around Utopia. Rebellious attitude is depicted throughout George Orwell’s novel 1984 and Margaret Atwood’s novel The Handmaid’s Tale in a subtle‚ yet powerful way. The faint‚ disobedient remarks made by their characters suggest their hope in the future generations opposed to the present one. When a rebellious mindset comes in contact with an

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    would recommend this novel to this specific person is because her favourite author is Margaret Atwood. This individual would love this novel‚ because there’s so much in this novel that remains unsaid‚ so much that stays between the lines. She likes novels that play with your mind and make you think. She would love how one story leads to another but yet they’re connected to each other some how. She also likes how Margaret Atwood’s novels are more work then a typical book. Another reason why I would recommend

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    better for herself‚ as she says “we still had our bodies”. This suggest that she is willing to trade her body‚ perhaps through prostitution‚ to make her life better‚ which shows an element of sexual violence and desperation. In the first chapter‚ Atwood creates a clear contrast between what the gymnasium used to be like and what it has become‚ for example: “dances that would have been held there”. From the previous description‚ it sets a peaceful‚ calm setting that wouldn’t have brought many fears

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