-
In Margaret Atwood's near-future novel,
"The Handmaid's Tale,"
-
a Christian fundamentalist regime
called the Republic of Gilead
-
has staged a military coup
and established a theocratic government
-
in the United States.
-
The regime theoretically
restricts everyone,
-
but in practice a few men have structured
Gilead so they have all the power,
-
especially over women.
-
The Handmaid's Tale is what Atwood calls
speculative fiction,
-
meaning it theorizes
about possible futures.
-
This is a fundamental characteristic
-
shared by both utopian
and dystopian texts.
-
The possible futures in Atwood's novels
are usually negative, or dystopian,
-
where the actions of a small group
have destroyed society as we know it.
-
Utopian and dystopian writing
tends to parallel political trends.
-
Utopian writing frequently depicts
an idealized society
-
that the author puts forth as a blueprint
to strive toward.
-
Dystopias, on the other hand,
-
are not necessarily predictions
of apocalyptic futures,
-
but rather warnings about the ways
in which societies can set themselves
-
on the path to destruction.
-
The Handmaid's Tale was published in 1985,
when many conservative groups
-
attacked the gains made
by the second-wave feminist movement.
-
This movement had been advocating greater
social and legal equality for women
-
since the early 1960s.
-
The Handmaid's Tale imagines a future
in which the conservative
-
counter-movement gains
the upper hand
-
and not only demolishes the progress
women had made toward equality,
-
but makes women completely
subservient to men.
-
Gilead divides women in the regime
into distinct social classes
-
based upon their function
as status symbols for men.
-
Even their clothing is color-coded.
-
Women are no longer allowed to read
-
or move about freely in public,
-
and fertile women are subject
to state-engineered rape
-
in order to give birth to children
for the regime.
-
Although The Handmaid's Tale
is set in the future,
-
one of Atwood's self-imposed
rules in writing it
-
was that she wouldn't use any event
-
or practice that hadn't already
happened in human history.
-
The book is set
in Cambridge, Massachusetts,
-
a city that during
the American colonial period
-
had been ruled by the theocratic Puritans.
-
In many ways, the Republic of Gilead
resembles the strict rules
-
that were present in Puritan society:
-
rigid moral codes,
-
modest clothing,
-
banishment of dissenters,
-
and regulation of every aspect
of people's lives and relationships.
-
For Atwood, the parallels
to Massachusett's Puritans
-
were personal as well as theoretical.
-
She spent several years studying
the Puritans at Harvard
-
and she's possibly descended from
Mary Webster,
-
a Puritan woman accused
of witchcraft who survived her hanging.
-
Atwood is a master storyteller.
-
The details of Gilead,
which we've only skimmed the surface of,
-
slowly come into focus through the eyes
of its characters,
-
mainly the novel's protagonist Offred,
-
a handmaid in the household
of a commander.
-
Before the coup that established Gilead,
-
Offred had a husband, a child, a job,
and a normal, middle-class American life.
-
But when the fundamentalist regime
comes into power,
-
Offred is denied her identity,
-
separated from her family,
-
and reduced to being, in Offred's words,
-
"a two-legged womb for increasing
Gilead's waning population."
-
She initially accepts the loss
of her fundamental human rights
-
in the name of stabilizing
the new government.
-
But state control soon extends
into attempts to control the language,
-
behavior,
-
and thoughts of herself
and other individuals.
-
Early on, Offred says,
-
"I wait. I compose myself.
-
My self is a thing I must compose,
as one composes a speech."
-
She likens language
to the formulation of identity.
-
Her words also acknowledge
the possibility of resistance,
-
and it's resistance, the actions of people
who dare to break the political,
-
intellectual,
-
and sexual rules,
-
that drives the plot
of the Handmaid's Tale.
-
Ultimately, the novel's exploration
of the consequences of complacency,
-
and how power can be wielded unfairly,
-
makes Atwood's chilling vision
of a dystopian regime ever relevant.