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The Handmaid's Tale: A Biblical Allusion


Imagine a country where choice is not a choice.  One is labeled by their age and economical status.  The deep red cloaks, the blue embroidered dresses, and the pinstriped attire are all uniforms to define a person's standing in society.  To be judged, not by beauty or personality or talents, but by the ability to procreate instead. To not believe in the Puritan religion is certain death.  To read or write is to die.  This definition is found to be true in the book, The Handmaid's Tale (1986) by Margaret Atwood.  It is a heartbreaking story of one young woman and her transformation into the Gilead society, the society described above. In the book, we meet Offred, the narrator of the story.  This story is not the first to create a society in which the only two important beliefs in a society are the ability to procreate and a strict belief in God.  It is seen several times in the Old Testament, the Bible.  The Biblical society is not as rigid as the Republic of Gilead, which Margaret Atwood has built, but it is very similar.  The Handmaid's ... [to view the full essay now, purchase below]

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