Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Offred
- Life before
Gilead
- We learn that she had a daughter who
was taken away from her, the symbolic
colour "white" in "she was wearing a
dress...white and down to the ground"
shows that she is now a Commander's
daughter
- Offred was made redundant from her
job as the Gileadean regime began to
take over, the cataphoric reference in
"It wasn't the army. It was some
other army" highlights the terror,
danger, and sense of the unknown
that people felt as Gilead began to
take power
- Offred's memories provide a clear insight
into her life before Gilead and the striking
resemblences to our society shocks the
reader into thinking about the problems
in our world today
- Her mother was part of a
strong feminist movement,
something that Gilead
quickly abolished, they
were "burning books" as
described on page 48
- The collective first person pronoun in "The
three of us in bed" shows a unity that
Offred no longer feels and shows a sense of
belonging that she can no longer have
- Role in Gilead and
in the novel
- The metaphor "two legged womb" sums
up Offred's significance in Gilead, purely
as a surrogate mother who is valued for
her ability to reproduce
- Fantasy Genre: no
freedom of sex
- Her role in the novel is the story teller, and
rebels against the state. The asyndetic list
"subversion, sedition, blasphemy, heresy"
shows how she defies the oppression put
on her by the state. This rebellious attitude
of the protagonist is conventional of the
fantasy genre
- She is the narrator and the
narrative is filtered through
her point of view which
questions her reliability as we
don't hear opposing
viewpoints
- Homodiegetic narration
- Character
- "I am thirty-three years old. I have brown hair. I stand
five seven without shoes". This is the only clear
description we get of Offred and we see her not as a
Handmaid but an individual
- The drastic change in Offred's appearance when she goes to
Jezebels wearing a costume "covered in sequins...tiny stars" is
suggested to be a "power trip" for the Commander, and she is
objectified
- This is how Serena Joy finds out about the Commander's affair with Offred after she finds "lipstick" on her cloak, this signifies
what Offred thinks is the end for her in Gilead, and she thinks Serena Joy was responsible for alerting the Eyes
- Offred is rebellious
- The mental process "imagine" shows
how Offred's thoughts are a way of
rebelling and taking back intellectual
control from Gilead. Doing this in her
head is safe
- She has affair with both the Commander and Nick, and the
Commander gives her luxuries such as "hand lotion"
- Ofglen gives her the confidence to
openly rebel against Gilead, for
example at Soul Scrolls and when
"may day" is mentioned
- Relationships with
other Characters
- Nick
- She trusts him enough to tell his her
real name, something she doesn't even
tell the reader
- However it
seems to the
reader that tis
trust isn't a
mutual feeling
- She loves Nick and he gives her a reason to stay in Gilead
- The Commander
- They satisfy each others need for companionship
- "his wife doesn't understand him"
- Could be seen as a "power trip" for the
Commander or a way to assert his power
- Moira
- Best friends from college
- Moira's story of rebellion inspires Offred and she
wants to do more to fight the subjugation that
Gilead impose upon her
- Chapter 15
- Serena Joy
- She gets pleasure from pressing Offred
- Shows how Gilead use women to oppress other women
- "I want to see as little of
you as possible"
- Ofglen
- Shopping partner
- They form a close enough
bond to discuss "may day"
- Offred feels defeated
and lost when Ofglen
kills herself "I
feel...their true power"
- Luke
- Their relationship exists in her memory
- She finds comfort
from it
- Had a daughter together