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    make money‚ grow companies and make new products to stay competitive in a growing field. What isn’t often considered‚ however‚ is how companies stay on top of their competition and whether their motives involve helping people‚ or making money. In Oryx and Crake Margaret Atwood highlights this ethical issue through the lives of characters directly involved in this business to show that companies both in the novel and in today’s society use poor and desperate people to further their businesses and turn

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    for Discussion 1. Oryx and Crake includes many details that seem futuristic‚ but are in fact already visible in our world. What parallels were you able to draw between the items in the world of the novel and those in your own? 2. Margaret Atwood coined many words and brand names while writing the novel. In what way has technology changed your vocabulary over the past five years? 3. The game "Extinctathon" emerges as a key component in the novel. Jimmy and Crake also play "Barbarian Stomp"

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    Created by Crake as a part of the Paradice project‚ they are humanoid creatures that possess what Crake considered the best bits of genetic material from across species. Crake envisioned them to be ideal‚ immortal predecessors to humans after the dispersal of his killer BlyssPluss Pill. The Crakers‚ with their restricted reproductive capacities‚ certainly appear to pose an ideal solution to the problems associated with overpopulation and the lack of pair-bonding amongst them. It no longer matters

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    Margaret Atwood has a prevalent and reoccurring subject throughout her novel‚ Oryx and Crake. She includes this topic to further exemplify how humanity and art are intertwined; therefore‚ one cannot exist without the other. In this instance‚ the dystopian society has rejected self-expression and creativity as an acceptable form of pleasure. The result is that citizens have turned to gene splicing‚ public executions‚ and child pornography as a means for entertainment (Atwood …). Throughout this essay

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    Although Moira’s role in Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale is subtle she is actually a very important and crucial character to the novel. Moira is the Gilead’s most extreme case because of her personality and personal beliefs. She embodies everything that her best friend and the main character‚ Offred does not. Moira is rebellious‚ which will not be tolerated by the regime; independent‚ which is strictly against the morals and way of life in the Gilead‚ and; she is also a lesbian‚ which defies

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    HaidMaids Tale The novel‚ The Handmaid’s Tale‚ by Margaret Atwood focuses on the choices made by the society of Gilead in which the preservation and imprisionmeny of mankind is more highly regarded than freedom or happiness. I think that Ms. Atwood believes that the possibility of our society becoming as that of Gilead is very evident in the choices that we make today and from what has occurred in the past. Our actions will inevitably catch up to us when we are most vulnerable.In The Handmaid’s

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    In Handmaid’s tale (novel) there are couple symbols such as Handmaid’s red habit‚ flowers‚ scribble‚ and Harvard’s Wall. As we can notice in Novel‚ Offred often uses the symbols such as different colors. For example‚ the red color of costumes which were worn by Handmaid’s symbolizes fruitfulness‚ which they bear a child and it’s also a uniform color for the Handmaid’s. According to Offred” red: the color of blood‚ which defines us” (p. 8‚9). Red also symbolized the menstrual cycle and childbirth

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    In Offred’s world‚ she is oppressed and controlled. She’s forced to live in a society that’s controlled by a religious regime that forces its citizens to live under a strict set of rules. Over the course‚ there are a series of events and allusions that show that the world Offred lives in is similar to an event of history. The novel The Handmaid’s Tale connection to colonial-age America is due to the existence of old religions relevant at the time and the events within the books. The strongest

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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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    The Handmaid's Tale Essay

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    As a dystopian novel‚ The Handmaid’s Tale reflected a repressive society‚ through the first person point of view. Offred‚ the woman who brings the reader to her daily life in the Republic of Gilead‚ tells the story as it happens. She also leads the readers to her flashbacks‚ when Gilead did not exist‚ the times she still had a husband and daughter‚ when she was still free‚ not a property but a person. The title Offred‚ replaced her real name‚ demonstrate that she is a property of the Commander Fred

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