Fahrenheit 451 And The Handmaid's

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Do you ever stop and think about what the world has come to? How power and technology have developed our reality into a slightly oppressed dystopia? The enduring relevance of dystopian literature is explored in the fictional novel ‘ relentlessly violent’ by Ray Bradbury (Bradbury, 1976/2008) and the dystopian film series ‘The Handmaid's Tale’ (Miller & Morano, 2017) episodes 1,2 & 3. It dives into the theme of oppression through the use of power and technology as well as exploitation, which appears frequently throughout these texts and links back to how it is relevant in our world today. The use of technology and even power has significantly impacted our society today, which is why these dystopian texts that show the effects of oppression, …show more content…

Although the novel is set in an American society, Bradbury makes it so readers can visualise that the story could take place anywhere and any part of the world can be affected by power and media oppression. Bradbury's novel highlights the protagonist's, Montag’s, internal moral and ethical dilemma with his desire for knowledge while living in a society that censors information and pushes compliance (Holmes, 2023). The Handmaid's Tale also is set in an American society, where women's rights are taken away from them. It focuses on the protagonist, Offred, and shows her struggles in a totalitarian society where her identity, fertility and freedoms are suppressed (The Handmaid’s Tale, …show more content…

The significance of the eye as a symbol, as well as ‘Farenheit 451’, appears throughout ‘The Handmaid's Tale’, also highlighting oppression in the dystopian society. In the series, there are men who are named ‘The Eye’ and watch what the women are doing to make sure they are not doing anything forbidden, this is symbolic as the men being named ‘The Eye’ serves readers a reminder that the way men look at women can be a form of control and even violence, even in society today. It is also notable as it restricts the girls from being able to trust anyone as they never know who could be watching them.“The eyes go around and arrest others (Miller 2012-a 49:10). (Image - Markus, 2022) They also make the girls watch over and report each other's actions if doing something forbidden ‘she's my spy and I'm hers' (Miller 2012-a,12:06) which is significant as it makes it difficult to trust one another, further showing oppression in the society. They make the girls expose each other so they don’t have a sense of belonging or develop friendships. In episode 3 there is a flashback when the women are just starting to get their rights taken away and the bosses told the women while taking their jobsI don't have a choice” (Miller 2017-b, 6:00), which is set to confuse the women as the male bosses only

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