The handmaid's tale.

AuthorSchwartz, Amy E.

The Handmaid's Tale.

Margaret Atwood. Houghton Mifflin, $16.95. Are gains in women's rights cumulative or cyclical? Much as one wants to believe in a slow, steady, dependable progression, the evidence makes it hard to be too confident. Women, after all, were doing pretty well with the vote, visibility, and a measure of "liberation' well into the Roaring Twenties, only to see that status crumble along with the economic fortunes of the country. They achieved what seemed like solid respect and independence along with men's jobs during World War II, only to disappear once the war was over into the long eclipse of fifties domesticity. The current bonanza (in relative terms) of equity seems fairly solid too, but for those who expect it to exhibit real staying power, here is Margaret Atwood's sixth and most politically sharp-edged novel to remind us that it could all vanish tomorrow.

Feminism has been the main philosophical influence on a raft of novelists in the last generation or so. As happens with any political movement, many of the novels produced have been position papers. Atwood, by contrast, is a mature artist, and The Handmaid's Tale, though more politically explicit than most of her previous work, is by no means doctrinaire. ("I have never written a trapped housewife novel,' she told an interviewer in 1983.) In its picture of a Bible-based, viciously anti-feminist dictatorship in this country circa 1990, The Handmaid's Tale does explore the eventual implications of current attitudes among religious fundamentalists, certain feminists, and well-meaning but essentially uncaring males. Its main thrust, though, is less philosophical and in the end more grippingly persuasive--to explore not just why women in the Republic of Gilead are so utterly oppressed but, vividly and rendingly, how that oppression feels.

Atwood's effectiveness in this regard, her delicacy of imagination and grimness of detail, shows the influence of her many years of involvement in Amnesty International and human rights issues. The main emotion we get from Offred, the disconsolate narrator, is numb shock. Offred still lives in the same town, passes the same buildings and crosses the same streets, as she did before "they shot the president and machine-gunned the Congress and the army declared a state of emergency. . . . They said it would be temporary.' Now, though, fundamentalists are...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT