handmaids tale- context Flashcards

1
Q

what is the overarching feminist view of the novel

A

feminist critique is that there is a objectifying male gaze and the binary logic that undergird’s patriarchal society

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2
Q

where did atwood write the novel?

A

West Berlin and Alabama in the mid-1980s.

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3
Q

what year did she write the novel?

A

mid 1980’s

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4
Q

what do dystopian novels do?

A
  • present imagined worlds and societies that are not ideals, but instead are terrifying or restrictive.
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5
Q

what feminist vision is presented?

A

Atwood’s novel offers a strongly feminist vision of dystopia.

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6
Q

what elections inspired this novel?

A

shortly after the election of Margaret thatcher, the first woman british prime minister of Britain.

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7
Q

what did the growing power of ‘religious right mean?’

A

The growing power of this “religious right” heightened feminist fears that the gains women had made in previous decades would be reversed.
-the criticised the ‘sexual revolution of the 60’s and 70’s’

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8
Q

what is the ‘american right wing movement’?

A

-This 1980s American movement had conservative ideas about moral behaviour and the role of women in society, which are mirrored in Gilead

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9
Q

how are ideas of ‘american right wing movement’ seen in novel?

A

Gilead’s ideas on religion are reminders of the fundamentalist views of the American New Right movement.

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10
Q

how is satire used?

A

-Atwood uses the dystopian genre to satirise the extreme views of American 1980s conservatism.

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11
Q

who is mary webster?

A
  • Atwood’s own ancestry lies in Puritanism: her relative, Mary Webster, was hanged as a witch in 1683.
  • novel as attributed to mary webster
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12
Q

evidence of puritan ideals within the novel?

A
  • theocracy and patriarchy are features of oppression

- The strict rules of dress and behaviour forced upon Offred are symbolic of the Puritan view of women as inferior. pg18

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13
Q

how do buildings in gilead show evidence of puritanism?

A
  • Puritan New England, first buildings were a prison and gallows – symbols of oppression like the Wall, and the University where Salvagings take place.
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14
Q

how are the new names given to the women reminiscent of puritan ideals?

A

because in puritan new England women were given new names to show ownership e.g. virtue, justice =offred, offgeln

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15
Q

how does she subvert the masculine dystopia?

A
  • Atwood subverts the genre of masculine dystopia by handing the story to a female;
  • the novel can be interpreted as critiquing women’s marginalisation in a patriarchy.
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16
Q

how are stories of early feminists echoed in the novel?

A
  • Offred’s mother- Women’s Liberation Movement, which campaigned for women’s sexual freedom in America in the late 1960s.
  • Early feminists burnt pornographic books and organised pro-abortion rallies;
17
Q

a feminist interpretation for role serena joy?

A

-Serena Joy may be modelled on Phyllis Schlafly, an extreme right activist who travelled America urging support for her conservative views on women.

18
Q

how does this theme of abortion relate to today?

A
  • currently much debate about abortion in today’s society, where it is still banned in some countries (southern ireland)
  • pg.129
19
Q

what are attitudes to sexuality?

A

ugh

20
Q

What would be a feminist interpretation of the fact that the book was written by a woman

A
  • the fact that the whole book comes from the one perspective of a female
  • she was able through all the oppression to get her story out