Handmaid's Tale Exile Essay

1330 Words3 Pages

In the two books that we have read this year there has been one common theme, exile. In The Book Thief and in A Handmaid’s Tale, important characters were exiled. For example in The Book Thief, Max was exiled from his country, and in A Handmaid’s Tale, Offred was exiled from the government. The character’s experiences with exile were both alienating and enriching, because they were both of them went through times when they felt out of place and times when they were enhancing their life. The character’s experiences were both similar in the way that they were both exiled by a larger power, such as the government of the country that they live in. But they were also very different because in Max’s situation it was life or death, and in Offred’s situation she had a required place to be, she was going to live. Also the experiences of Max and Offred shed a light on their books, because it gave a different meaning behind them something deeper that was not shown on the surface of the pages. Lastly, from the beginning of the books to the end, Max and Offred’s home place changed, and the home in the beginning became an other place to them.
In The Book Thief, Max’s exile was not unique, in which all of the Jews in Germany were being exiled at that time. Max was forced to leave his home in the middle of the …show more content…

But instead since she has been living the confined Handmaid’s life for so long, that it is her home. The Handmaid’s position for her is home, maybe not the home itself because those change frequently. But that style of living is home for her, the older way of living is dangerous and scary, the other life. She can’t believe she lived free like that for so long, and she accepts the way she lives. At the end of the book though, she gets more reckless, and doesn’t seem to care about the rules anymore. Offred gets less afraid of her other life less and

Open Document