Word: atwoods
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...HANDMAID'S TALE by Margaret Atwood. This chilling cautionary fable postulates a future U.S. ruled by Fundamentalist Christians and offers an oppressed heroine strong enough...
None of these triumphs has yet produced a solid profit for the News. Despite McClatchy's first-ever monthly profit, in May, the paper will probably end the year in the red. The Times's publisher, Robert Atwood, 79, says that he is far from abandoning the war. "We're in a position to buy them out and relieve them of their losses," he says. But more quietly, Atwood offers a notion that seven short years ago would have been unthinkable: the Times might contemplate a joint operating agreement with the News. "I guess McClatchy's pockets are deeper than...
Canadian Author Margaret Atwood's sixth novel will remind most readers of Nineteen Eighty-Four. That can hardly be helped. Any new fictional account of how things might go horribly wrong risks comparisons either with George Orwell's classic or with Aldous Huxley's Brave New World. To a remarkable degree, these two books have staked out the turf of contemporary antiutopias. Which punishment is it to be this time? Relentless, inescapable totalitarianism or the mindless, synthetic stupors of technology? As it turns out, Atwood's look at the future takes place under conditions that Orwell would recognize. Repression...
...Handmaid's Tale will be taken in some quarters as a feminist parable or rallying cry. What is Offred, after all, if not an embodiment of woman subjugated to the power of men? In truth, Atwood's vision is considerably more complex than that. For the Republic of Gilead has come about, in part, with the help of women. Offred's memories of childhood include the time that her mother, an ardent feminist, took her to a ceremonial burning of pornographic magazines...
...cautionary tale, Atwood's novel lacks the direct, chilling plausibility of Nineteen Eighty-Four and Brave New World. It warns against too much: heedless sex, excessive morality, chemical and nuclear pollution. All of these may be worthwhile targets, but such a future seems more complicated than dramatic. But Offred's narrative is fascinating in a way that transcends tense and time: the record of an observant soul struggling against a harsh, mysterious world...