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Essay / Journal Topics for The Handmaid's Tale by Erica Joan Dymond spread them throughout the book and drives the plot. Dymond uses a plethora of concrete details and quotes from the text, using them to analyze the meaning of this theme and this oyster/pearl relationship. Erica Dymond's goal is to explain the prevalence and significance of this theme in the novel in order to show its importance to readers of the book who may have overlooked this crucial aspect. Dymond directs this criticism to those who read The Handmaid's Tale and did not recognize the significance of the oyster and the pearl. Its tone is erudite, but not too scholarly to appeal to a wider audience. Erica Dymond's critical essay accurately describes the weight and symbolism Atwood places on the oyster/pearl relationship in the book. Using many concrete details, she creates a philosophy and shows her in-depth knowledge of the book. References to oysters and pearls may go unnoticed by one who is not looking for them as they are lightly sprinkled throughout the book and, although the focus is not on them, are of great significance.Journal 2 , Option 2The gender roles assigned in The Handmaid's Tale are hyperboles of the traditional roles that genders play. In Gilead, women stay at home and men run important things like government, which includes business and the military. The assignment of roles and their strictness seem legitimate to the majority of the population of Gilead, and for them they are the accepted result of the physical differences between men and women. Almost all women in the population and many men have been sterilized because of...... middle of paper ......r women in society, but she yearns for her freedom and life that she once lived. Because she was caught running away to Canada at first, she is afraid of trying to run away again. When the Commander first shows interest in Offred, he, much to her surprise, wants friendship from her and not just a sexual relationship. He hides with her and they play board games, which is doubly forbidden because women are strictly not allowed to read, and normal friendships between men and handmaids are also forbidden. The Commander's wife cannot have children, so his relationship with her is meant to be solely sexual and solely for the good and existence of the people. Offred is happy to rebel against the rules of Gilead and happy to do so with the Commander. He gives her forbidden gifts and asks her for romantic gestures to convey his true feelings towards her..
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