The Role Of Women In The Handmaid's Tale

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Throughout The Handmaid’s Tale, the author Margaret Atwood gives the reader an understanding of what life would be like in a theocratic society that controls women’s lives. The narrator, Offred gives the reader her perspective on the many injustices she faces as a handmaid. Offred is a woman who lived before this society was established and when she undergoes the transition to her new status she has a hard time coping with the new laws she must follow. There are many laws in this government that degrade women and give men the authority of each household. All women are placed in each household for a reason and if they do not follow their duties they are sent away or killed. Atwood bases the irrational laws in the Gilead republic on the many In Gilead handmaid's are seen as female servants that have one duty, which is to bear children. The government does not care for Offred’s personal needs, they are only taking care of her body because they have to be healthy enough to have children. At some point Offred has to steal butter just to keep moisturized and feel like she has a reason to take of her skin, she then states,”We are containers, it's only the insides of our bodies that are important...as long as we do this, butter our skin... we can believe that we will some day get out, that we will be touched again, in love or desire” (96). Offred tries to take care of herself as much as she can by maintaining her beauty in hopes of one day going back to her normal life. Gilead has deprived handmaids of many personal necessities one of them being basic face lotion. Offred has to steal butter to moisturize her face and when she does this it gives her some type of faith that one day she'll be able to feel the love she once had. The control over handmaids is very extreme, and shows how low they must be perceived in society to not be able to have such necessities they used to have before these strict

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