Saturday, October 26, 2019
What impressions have you formed of the narrator? How has Atwood created :: English Literature
What impressions have you formed of the narrator? How has Atwood created   these impressions? Give detailed evidence for your answer - The Handmaid's   Tale    What impressions have you formed of the narrator? How has Atwood  created these impressions? Give detailed evidence for your answer    The narrator of 'The Handmaid's Tale' is a woman who calls herself  Offred. This is not her real name, but a name that she has been given  by the particular husband and wife she is staying with. This makes the  narrator seem mysterious, and Atwood creates this impression by not  telling us the narrator's real name.    From the very start of the novel, Offred has given me the impression  that she is quite well educated by the way she speaks and expresses  things 'like the place in a face where the eye has been taken out'.  This type of simile, which she uses also, gives us the impression that  she isn't very happy about her surroundings because she is using  violent expressions and associating things, which are supposed to be  quite pleasant to things that sound very disturbing and of a violent  nature. 'Clouds like headless sheep', normally clouds are associated  with bright fluffy marshmallows and pleasant things like that, but the  narrator sees the clouds in the sky as disturbing images. All of the  way through the book she uses simile's like this to compare normal  looking objects or people. 'The smile of blood' is the phrase she uses  in chapter six, when she is describing the men, which are hanging on  the Wall. The phrase 'The smile of blood' is referring to a stain of  blood which has seeped through the white cloth which is covering up  the mans face, and she is saying it appears to look like a smile which  a child has drawn. This seems disturbing because smiles are meant to  represent happiness in people, and she turns that happiness sinister  with saying it is a smile made of blood. Also this phrase makes us  think about why it would be a smile, rather than and unhappy face,  because of him being dead. These violent associations certainly  indicates to us that the narrator is unhappy, and that is exactly why  Atwood created that quality about her, so that we know that Offred is  not happy about the situation she is in at all, and that she relates  to violence a lot of the time because she is used to seeing violence  going on around her.    At the very start of the novel the narrator was continuously slipping  in and out of the present tense, she would often talk in the past    					    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.