Description
The Handmaid’s Tale is a dystopian story – one about an imagined place that is undesirable – written by Canadian author Margaret Atwood and first published in 1985. Dystopian novels often feature totalitarian governments, and this story is no exception. In the United States of the near future, an extreme Christian theocracy rules. The government seems to be constantly at war, although we don’t directly witness this in the urban setting of the novel. The society’s problems are compounded by the fact that not many people are able to give birth (no kids, no soldiers!). The few women that are fertile are rounded up, indoctrinated to become ‘handmaids’ and given to prominent members of the military dictatorship as reproductive slaves. Being a prominent work of science (or speculative) fiction, The Handmaid’s Tale is an apt choice for an investigation into literature and contexts. Anti-totalitarian dystopian novels flourished in the 20th century, including such famous stories as 1984, Brave New World and Fahrenheit 451. The work gives insight into issues surrounding religion, government and subjugation of women and was written at a time of conservative religious revival, marked by such events as the election of Margaret Thatcher in the UK and Ronald Reagan in the USA. The setting of the novel portrays the antithesis of the feminist sexual revolution of the 1960s and 70s, with males in complete control of women and their sexual lives. In one article Margaret Atwood herself explains that her story is “a study of power, and how it operates and how it deforms or shapes the people who are living within that kind of regime”
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