18. The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood (Part One)
Part One: The Structure of Gilead.
A totalitarian regime. A patriarchal theocracy. A world where power is absolute and entirely male.
You’ve heard the arguments before . That the problems of modern society can be traced back to women. To feminism. To giving women too much freedom, too much voice(hello manosphere). But what if those ideas were taken to the extreme?What if women lost everything?
Welcome to Gilead, where men have taken control. Society is rebuilt on 'traditional values', with religion (careful selection and strategic interpretation of the Bible) as its foundation. Men become providers, warriors, protectors. Women are reduced to roles: wives, servants, vessels for reproduction, and of course, the occasional sexual objects. Existing purely for the service of men.
How is this sustainable? Women are stripped of their rights, but not equally. Instead, they are divided into classes, each given just enough status to envy the other, but never enough to unite. Solidarity is replaced with suspicion. Resistance becomes almost impossible. And perhaps most disturbingly, the system doesn’t just control women, it recruits them. It turns some into enforcers, into believers, into architects of their own oppression. Because when patriarchy requires control and subservience, it sends a woman.
It sounds impossible, right? But Gilead, as imagined in The Handmaid’s Tale, is not built from fantasy. Every element of its oppression has existed somewhere, at some point in history (even today); across governments, religions and regimes. It is not an invention. It is a synthesis. This is a cautionary tale.
This is part one, where we explore the power structure and governance of Gilead. How and why did this happen? Why was it successful? And if it failed, what ultimately led to that failure?
Part two: Offred will be out soon, where we follow one woman's story as a handmaid under Gilead.