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      • The results of this study reveal that "The Handmaid's Tale" intricately explores themes of gender inequality, reproductive r ights, and the patriarchal control exerted over women's bodies. Atwood's dystopian society of Gilead serves as a stark warning of the potential consequences of eroding women's rig hts and dismantling feminist progress.
      www.researchgate.net › publication › 373349282_The_Feminist_Dystopian_Themes_in_Margret_Atwood's_Handmaid's_Tale_A_Reflection_of_the_Social_and_Political_Issues
  1. Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale presents a dystopian world in which women have lost all individualism and have been reduced to breeding machines. This paper analyzes the patriarchal characteristics of The Handmaid’s Tale by using a Darwinian feminist theory to

    • Morgan N Petersen
    • 2020
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  3. This paper explores the feminist themes present in Margaret Atwood's seminal novel, "The Handmaid's Tale," and analyzes their resonance with contemporary political and social issues.

  4. An American scholar Cynthia Enloe defines feminism as the belief in the significance of gender equity, nullifying the ideology of gender hierarchy as a socially-constructed concept. Feminist moments have proceeded and continued to fight for women’s rights, including the right to vote, to hold public office, to work, to earn fair wages or ...

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  5. Jun 17, 2023 · Abstract. Popularized by Hulu’s television adaptation, the allegories and iconography of The Handmaid’s Tale have been used in women’s reproductive rights activism around the world. However, at the same time, the series has been recognized and critiqued as offering white, conservative feminism.

    • Amy Boyle
  6. Apr 27, 2017 · In a recent piece for the New York Times, Margaret Atwood tackled the question of whether or not her 1985 work The Handmaid’s Tale ought to be considered a feminist novel: “If you mean an ideological tract in which all women are angels and/or so victimized they are incapable of moral choice, no.

    • Glosswitch
  7. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, the feminist movement in the Western world was divided by debates over the future of sex and sexuality. Many feminists saw the West’s increasingly liberal attitudes to sex as posing a threat to women’s rights.

  8. The handmaid’s tale is a dystopia that builds upon the dystopian imagery of feminist texts from 1970s. Atwood’s novel was written in direct reaction to the growing political power of the American religious right in the 1980s (Atwood).

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