Margaret Wente

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    In Margaret Atwood’s dystopian world of Gilead in The Handmaid’s Tale, we are introduced to a totalitarian world in which fertile women are captured and it is their duty to have children for elite couples. Throughout the novel, the primary handmaid and protagonist, Offred, reminiscences on her former life as she reveals the realities of her new life with a somber tone. I argue that Offred being stripped of her purpose and being suppressed into someone she is not intensifies her desire for…

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    When a You Becomes an It Women are far too often torn to shreds, their personalities, their minds, and their bodies. The Handmaid’s Tale takes women, splits them a part, and pulls out their control, leaving the remains to be seen as an object. Throughout The Handmaid’s Tale, Margert Atwood satirizes the body of women in order to illustrate the notion that all they are, is an it. The Handmaid’s were once considered “an instrument,” in which they played a tune of good nature and choice (Atwood…

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    The narrator, Offred, describes how she and other handmaids slept inside a gymnasium in the new nation of Gilead. There are two Aunt, Sara and Elizabeth, who has cattle prods around their waist in order to put fear into the handmaids. The women are not allowed to speak with one another so they must resort to lip reading when the aunts are not looking. The handmaids were allowed two walks a day around the former football field. While the women are walking , the guards stand with their backs…

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    Xavier Vazquez Ms. Milliner EES21QH-04 October 18, 2016 The Handmaid’s Tale The Handmaid’s Tale is a book about a man dominated old testament inspired theocratic military government, called Gilead. In Gilead there is a hierarchy of women and the women are categorized to do different roles, the different categories are the wives, aunts, econowives, marthas, handmaids, and the unwomen. The handmaid's wear red colored clothing and are only used to produce children for the wives who can’t produce…

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    Edwin Chadwick Summary

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    NOTEs Edwin Chadwick Relevant Background Information • “Clear-thinking man of action” • 1832 - English government appointed the Royal Commission - inquire workings of Poor Law and how to improve it. • Leading commissioner • Made it known that system needed to be reformed to stop the citisens from demanding public funds – usually unnecessary Controversy • 1834 – measure passed, Chadwick didn’t get what he wanted (thought he would take charge of New Poor Law) • Only made secretary –…

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    In “Beloved”, author Toni Morrison uses these reoccuring mentionings of milk that are always followed by a description or dialogue of Sethes need to nurture her child. Sethe, first, refers to it as “stolen” when speaking to Paul D about what happened in the barn with “schoolteacher.” It is brought up again, when nurturing Denver after the killing of Beloved. As well as later in the novel, when Sethe could no longer bear milk in her breast, but instead provides warm glasses of milk for Denver…

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    In a world where a society oppresses women to feel less than the opposite gender and where men are often given the allusion that they are the superior sex, is destined to become a dystopian society. In Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale, an imaginary dystopian world is built by extremist religious beliefs. As soon as the revolution in Gilead started and terrorism destroyed the government, bank accounts were drained and women were found jobless. After this, women find all liberties being…

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    In the novel, Oryx and Crake, written by Margaret Atwood, a dystopian society is shown, with a background story explaining how this world came to be. In the novel Atwood shows that through human interference and corruption the world has taken a negative turn and do to the decisions the humans make nature is effected and cannot act the way as it originally has. While this novel is an exaggerated version of our world, it shows that if we keep making the decisions we are making, in areas such as…

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    Handmaid’s Tale is set in a theocratic nation known as The Republic of Gilead, defined by its significant social boundary between males and females. Influenced by the strict and traditional lifestyle of the seventeenth century American Puritans, Margaret Atwood based her narrative on the disparity between the role of the man and woman in their culture. Especially in the 1970s, America was swept by rising movements based upon the Republican party ideals which heavily supported the values of…

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    The Pill Summary

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    1. In the documentary movie “The Pill” the speaker spoke about Comstock Act or “Chastity” Laws. Andrew Comstock did not like the idea of women taking contraceptives because it promoted the idea of people having sex before marriage. Comstock worked for to pass the bill to make it illegal to receive contraceptives or to have abortions. The Act also made receiving the Pill through the postal service or through commercial trade. No one challenged the Act until Margret Sanger opened up her first…

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