Margaret Atwood’s commentary about social issues in our society Rebecca Harper Mr.Yuen English 12 May 19‚ 2014 Margaret Atwood’s commentary about social issues in our society Born on the 18 November 1939 in Ottawa‚ Ontario‚ Margaret Atwood was the second of three children. Her family spent most of every year in bush country Quebec and Ontario. She grew up surrounded by science‚ and was encouraged to read up on popularized science by her entomologist father‚ his students‚ colleagues and
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For this essay I aim to show the importance of memory and of remembering the past in The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood. The Handmaid’s Tale is a ‘speculative fiction’ first published in 1985 but set in the early 2000s. The novel was in response to changes in US politics with the emergence of Christian fundamentalism‚ the New Right. Atwood believed that society was going wrong and wrote this savage satire‚ similar to Jonathan Swift’s ‘A Modest Proposal’‚ depicting a dystopia which she uses as
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Introduction As Margaret Atwood herself put it best‚ “not real can tell us about real.” Oryx and Crake is a dystopian novel‚ which plays on the fear of human extinction by the hands of humans themselves. As implausible as it may seem‚ certain technologies and social developments presented in the novel are not entirely farfetched. This essay will discuss the real life analogue of Atwood’s “perfect” modified human race‚ and how technological advances in our current world can possibly lead to our
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Figurative Language Figurative language was used by Margaret Atwood‚ through the persona of Offred‚ to illustrate The Handmaid’s Tale. Figurative Language consists of similes‚ metaphors‚ personification‚ alliteration‚ onomatopoeia‚ hyperbole and idioms. First‚ figurative language can be used to describe different settings. 1. Offred’s experience at night in her bedroom “The heat at night is worse than the heat in daytime. Even with the fan on‚ nothing moves‚ and the walls store up warmth
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George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty Four and Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaids Tale are both novels in which the state‚ namely Oceania and Gilead‚ attempts to exert totalitarian control over the lives of its peoples. Through Orwell and Atwood’s subsequent portrayal on the ensuing dystopias we are clearly able to see the respective states desire to control love and emotion‚ which are considered undesirable distractions‚ as a means of achieving the totalitarian control that they so desire. It is thus in
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Explore the ways Atwood presents the struggle for gender equality in the novel Written by Margaret Atwood The Handmaids Tale explores the reversal of women’s rights in a society called Gilead. It is founded on what is to be considered a return to traditional values‚ gender roles and the suppression of women by men‚ and the Bible is used as the guiding principle. Women are not only tripped from their right to vote‚ they are also denied the right to read and write‚ according to the new laws of Gilead
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Oppressed Rights by the Oppressive Regime in Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale delves well into the horrid nature of extreme control and immoral limitations in defining the corrupt theocratic government at large‚ and more specifically the effect this control has on the society’s women. In an age in which a newly emerged and merciless governmental system called the Republic of Gilead has “put life back to the middle ages‚” sparked by a widespread panic of infertility
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grief in the word “weeping”. These images are focused around a seemingly fertile garden; Atwood suggests here that Serena is mourning her lack of fertility. We also see that the tulips of the garden are described as being “red” and “a darker crimson” bearing similarities to being “cut” and starting to “heal”. The reader experiences imagery of bleeding and pain linked to the image of the fertile flower. Atwood suggests here that the sight of fertility in Serena’s garden is painful and that she is
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studying the way in which the author presents major and minor characters‚ language devices. Margaret Atwood’s novel The Handmaid’s Tale is set in a speculative future‚ exploring gender inequalities in an absolute patriarchy where women are breeders‚ mistresses‚ housekeepers‚ or housewives or otherwise exiled to the colonies. By using context‚ we can learn that The Handmaid’s Tale‚ published in 1986‚ written by Atwood during the time of the ant-feminist backlash‚ presents truths about the world that she
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Anup Kumar Dey Assistant Professor Department of English Assam University‚ Diphu Campus Diphu‚ Karbi Anglong‚ Assam‚ India - 782460 deyanup1@gmail.com Woman‚ Land and Nation: An Ecocritical Reading of Margaret Atwood’s Poetry The word "ecocriticism" was probably first used in William Rueckert’s essay "Literature and Ecology: An Experiment in Ecocriticism" (1978) and was subsequently accepted in critical vocabulary when Cheryll Glotfelty‚ at that time a graduate student at Cornell‚ revived
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