Thursday 7 February 2013

The Handmaid's Tale - Synopsis

Going over Margaret Atwood's works I chose 'The Handmaid's Tale' as my main focus. Here is a brief summary of  this novel:

This dystopian story about the near future is a woman's story of her being a handmaid and her struggle to survive the totalitarian government of Gilead. As a handmaid she has been deprived of her name, which is one's identity, and legal rights. She is assigned to a commander for reproductive purposes only. She is in a virtual household prison under constant surveillance. As a woman and handmaid she forbidden to read and write or to form any friendships or relationships with other people. Her only outings are for shopping purposes or attending public events such as Prayvaganzas, Salvagings and Birth Days. Once a month she has to undergo an impregnation ceremony  where the commander sleeps with the handmaid with the wife beneath her. 

Although freedom is non-existent Offred, our main character, chooses the freedom of refusal, meaning she refuses to believe in what Gilead is about, she refuses to forget her past and most importantly she refuses to be silenced by the oppressive regime.

Throughout the novel there is a sense of double vision, for Offred is always facing ways as she recounts her story, shifting between the present and the past (flashbacks). She talks of her meetings with the commander where they play Scrabble and she allowed toread the magazines he gives her, we as readers/audience learn about her illegal love affair with Nick the Commander's chauffeur. 

Offres manages to tell the tales of secret women in this tyrannic government, such as Moira, the rebel who manages to escape from the Rachel and Leah center (Red center) and then reappears as a whore working at Jezebel's. There is the story of Offred's predecessor at the Commander's house who hung herself and left a secret message on the wall ("Nolite te bastardes carbormdorum"). There are also stories about  Serena Joy (Commander's Wife) who used to be a TV personality on a gospel show.

At the end, Offred makes her exit from the Commander's house in a black not knowing whether she is heading for her death or an escape from Gilead ("And so I step up, into the darkness within; or else the light"). 

One might think that that is the end of the novel but there are the infamous 'Historical Notes' which are set  in the year 2195 going 200 years beyond Gilead. Of course Offred is dead and Gilead itself has fallen. The 'Notes' fill in a lot of the background information about Gilead and how Offred's story came to be discovered. The novel ends with a question: "Are there any question?" which creates a challenge for the reader, it invites the reader to participate in interpreting the multiple and contradictory meanings of what we have just finished reading.  

This video offers a brief summary about what the book is about, the struggle for survival of one
woman (Offred):
 

This hyperlink will direct you to a synopsis of the book through image:
These links refer you to websites which offer more detailed summaries of each section of the novel:

Margaret Atwood Biography

Biography:
Margaret Eleanor Atwood was born on November 18th 1939 in Ottawa Canada. She is an award winning poet, novelist, essayist and an environmental activist. Some of her best known works such as 'The Handmaid's Tale', 'The Tent', 'The Robber Bride' and so on, they have been translated into 30 languages.



She spent her early childhood moving around rural Ontario and Quebec with her family, as her father was a field entomologist.  Her schooling was done at the Victoria College, University of Toronto, B.A., 1961; Radcliffe College, Cambridge, Mass., M.A., 1962; Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass., 1962-63, 1965-67. She first experienced the US in 1961, when she went as a graduate student to Harvard University, where she studied American Literature and also learned about 17th century Puritan New England , and realised how little Americans knew about Canada. As her literary reputation grew, Atwood traveled to give readings and lectures and she also won many literary prizes.


Margaret Atwood currently lives in Toronto with writer Graeme Gibson.

All her works:

Novels:
  • The Edible Women, 1969
  • Surfacing, 1972
  • Lady Oracle, 1976
  • Life Before Men, 1979
  • Bodily Harm, 1981
  • Encounters with the Element Man, 1982
  • Murder in the Dark, 1983
  • Unearthing Suite, 1983
  • The Handmaid's Tale, 1985
  • Cat's Eyes, 1988 
  • The Robber Bride, 1993
  • Alias Grace, 1996
  • The Blind Assassin, 2000
  • Oryx and Crake, 2003
  • The Penelopiad, 2005
  • The Year of the Flood, 2009
  • Maddaddam, 2013


Short fiction collections
  • Dancing Girls, 1977
  • Bluebeard's Egg, 1983
  • Wilderness Tips, 1991
  • Good Bones, 1992
  • Good Bones and Simple Murders, 1994
  • The Labrador Fiasco, 1996
  • The Tent, 2006
  • Moral Disorder, 2006

Poetry collections:
  • Double Persephone, 1961
  • The Circle Game, 1964   
  • Expeditions, 1965
  • Speeches for Doctor Frankenstein, 1966
  • The Animals in That Country, 1968
  • The Journals of Susanna Moodie, 1970
  • Procedures for Underground, 1970
  • Power Politics, 1971
  • You Are Happy, 1974
  • Selected Poems, 1976
  • Two-Headed Poems, 1978
  • True Stories, 1981
  • Love Songs of a Terminator, 1983
  • Snake Poems, 1983
  • Interlunar, 1984
  • Morning in the Burned House, McClelland & Stewart, 1995
  • Eating Fire: Selected Poems, 1965–1995 (UK,1998)
  •  "You Begin." , 1978   
  • The Door, 2007
E-books:
  • I'm starved for you, 2012
  • Choke Collar: Positron, Episode Two, 2012
  • Erase Me: Positron, Episode Three, 2012


Anthologies Edited:
  • The New Oxford Book of Canadian Verse, 1982
  • The Canlit Foodbook, 1987
  • The Oxford Book of Canadian Short Stories in English, 1988
  • The Best American Short Stories 1989, 1989
  • The New Oxford Book of Canadian Short Stories in English, 1995


Children's books:
  • Up in the Tree, 1978
  • Anna's Pet, 1980
  • For the Birds, 1990
  • Princess Prunella and the Purple Peanut, 1995
  • Rude Ramsay and the Roaring Radishes, 2003
  • Bashful Bob and Doleful Dorinda, 2006
  • Wandering Wenda and Widow Wallop’s Wunderground Washery, 2011

Non-fiction:
  • Survival: A Thematic Guide to Canadian Literature, 1972
  • Days of the Rebels 1815–1840, 1977
  • Second Words: Selected Critical Prose, 1982
  • Through the One-Way Mirror, 1986
  • Strange Things: The Malevolent North in Canadian Literature, 1995
  • Negotiating with the Dead: A Writer on Writing, 2002
  • Moving Targets: Writing with Intent, 1982–2004, 2004
  • Writing with Intent: Essays, Reviews, Personal Prose--1983-2005, 2005
  • Payback: Debt and the Shadow Side of Wealth, 2008
  • In Other Worlds: SF and the Human Imagination, 2011


Television scripts:
  • The Servant Girl, 1974
  • Snowbird, 1981
  • Heaven on Earth, 1987

 
These links will lead you to more in depth biographies of Margaret Atwood: 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_Atwood#Works
http://www.notablebiographies.com/An-Ba/Atwood-Margaret.html 
http://www.margaretatwood.ca/bio.php