Handmaid's Tale

624 Words2 Pages

Most of the Amendments are what some would call, Fair Weather laws. It is the

unspoken interpretation of the constitution for the government to deny the people their

“inalienable rights” in a time of crisis. During World War II, the Cold War, and the War in the

Middle East the amendments were violated for each corresponding crisis. Likewise, In the

Handmaids tale by Margaret Atwood, the 1st

particular crisis pertaining to reproduction. The Story engulfs the reader into a totalitarian

futuristic America. With that being said, despite the Country being in an absolute police state,

the founding principles of the Gilead are ironically the Bill of Rights.

In The Handmaids Tale, it is very evident that the 1st

made evident at the very beginning of the book were the handmaids are under surveillance while

they lay down in silence. “We learned to lip-read, our heads flat on the beds, turned sideways,

and watching each other's mouths. In this way we exchanged names from bed to bed:” (page 1)

The Handmaids are not criminals and are being retained simply because they posses...

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