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    Handmaid's Tale Analysis

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    “For every prohibition you create‚ you also create an underground” (Biafra). John Biafra‚ who started the underground punk movement in 80s‚ thus expresses the ineffectiveness of prohibition. The fact is that in the past‚ nowadays‚ and probably in the future‚ neither of prohibitions of vital and ubiquitous elements of life had have a complete success on people. The history witnesses the prohibitions of vital elements such as ideas‚ cults‚ choices‚ and their short-term “nominal” successes. It’s called

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    Canterbury Tales

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    Canterbury Tales Presentation Rubric | NAME: | PERIOD: | | | | | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total | Organization | Audience cannot understand presentation because there is no sequence of information. | Audience has difficulty following presentation because student jumps around. | Student presents information in logical sequence which audience can follow. | Student presents information in logical‚ interesting sequence which audience can follow. | | Subject Knowledge | Student does not have grasp

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    the viking tales

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    The viking tales‚ Jennie Hall The book has two parts‚ the first part is about king Olaf and his son Harald. The second part is about discorverers like discovering Greenland and Wineland (nowadays) America. Men of the country norway were great warriors and discoverers they have discovered Iceland en many more lands‚ but the old sages are the most populair . There are many stories of the old vikings who have live in Norway‚ old tales were told over and over until everbody knew them and loved them

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    Although Margaret Attwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale is a dystopian novel‚ its message is ultimately one of hope. Discuss with close reference to the text. World Literature 5 Word Count: 1‚121 Margaret Attwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale is widely regarded as a dystopian novel; presenting society in a distinctly negative light through its themes of oppression and human misery. Its heavily biased depiction of the Republic of Gilead is conveyed through the narrator Offred

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    The Handmaid's Tale

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    you. This is demonstrated through the resisting character of Lester Burnham. Alma De Groen’s Australian play reflects the dystopian genre to suggest the impossibility of achieving equality for all genders. The twentieth century novel The Handmaid’s Tale written by Margaret Attwood confronts the features of a totalitarian society‚ as she is concerned with the objectifications placed upon women‚ and was written in conjunction with the 1980s

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    Power is a fragile notion that can be easily used and abused. When societal power is absolute and dominant‚ it often leads to oppression and persecution of people. Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale examines the dangerous impact of a governing body embracing complete power whilst substantiating as a warning to modern society‚ if people refuse to fight back dominant groups with strong ideologies‚ the outcome could be devastating. On the other hand Shirley Jackson’s The Lottery embodies societal

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    procreate‚ in which citizens are forced to come to terms with the demise of humanity. This horrifying possibility becomes a reality in the dystopian worlds of The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood and the film‚ Children of Men directed by Alfonso Cuaron. A decline in birth rates in the Republic of Gilead from The Handmaid’s Tale and the infertility crisis in the United Kingdom in Children of Men lead the two nations to become xenophobic. Additionally‚ the infertility prompts a war for resources resulting

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    her conditions as a handmaid - Narrator‚ named Offred describes how women lived in the time - Forbidden to talk to each other - Learned to read each other’s lips - Laps around the former football field - Armed guards called Angel’s patrol the outside - Scene changes from the past to the present - “Nicer” room fitted with curtains‚ pillow‚ a window which does not open completely - Aunt Lydia believes that Offred’s circumstance is a “privilege”‚ instead of a prison - Handmaids are dressed entirely

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    Handmiad's Tale

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    Advanced English Assessment 2 A truly valuable novel is not purely based on content‚ but has the ability to challenge and spur readers into reaction based on construction and language of the text. Atwood’s A Handmaid’s Tale is a true example of such value‚ as her novel not only attracts readers but also warns us of the uncertainties and dangers of the future. She demonstrates how language can be used as a powerful tool for both manipulation and domination as well as how reconstructions of both fiction

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    tale of genji

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    viewpoint and the cultural and social factors influencing the author. __________________________________________________________________________ Directions and Analysis Task 1: Analyze Literary Elements in Genji Monogatari Genji Monogatari‚ or The Tale of Genji‚ is a Japanese novel written in the early eleventh century that tells the story of Genji‚ the son of a Japanese emperor. Genji is considered to be one of the first psychological novels. Read the first four chapters of part I of Genji Monogatari

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