The story of the maid is a warning to the society in which Margaret Atwood's famous science fiction "Maid's story" was written during the rise of the 1986 feminist movement. Native American Atwood is an avid supporter of this movement. The struggle between both women's rights issues stimulated her to write this piece. Since it is not clear what the final result of the feminist movement is, the author urged her readers to think of the end of the story from the beginning.
In the story of Margaret Atwood's maid, Atwood founded Orwell Society. Otherwise, Atwood will use the story of The Handmaid as a warning about what might happen in the future. Because of lack of freedom, gender discrimination, lack of privacy, today's society is easy to start the same path as the Giyado republic. Offred is our guide to guide us to the Orwell society. If you are not careful, you will be like Gilead Republic without freedom. Gilead's repressive regime limits all forms of freedom to certain forms of protection. "There is more than one freedom ... freedom and freedom ... now you have freedom" (Atwood, 24). The government is trying to prove that lack of freedom is a way to protect the whole society. But the lack of freedom is the only way for the government to maintain power and protect its best interests. The lack of freedom leads to more rebellion like Gilead
A story of a maid The problem of feminist in Margaret Atwood's "Maid Story" can be classified as a unique novel. The characteristic of the Gilead Republic in "Maid Story" is that it is not a prediction of the future of our society but a comment on the current social trends. Atwood founded this country, what she might think is the unprecedented aspect of two opposite factions (ie religion ...) in our society at the beginning of the "Maid Story" Are you presented with a place of control? Republic of Gilead is a fictional country and Margaret Atwood chose her gistopian novel "Maid's Story." From the first chapter you can guess that Gilead is in America. Because the "old" blanket is still talking about the United States. The first few chapters