The Handmaid's Tale Contents
- Interpretation and the opening epigraphs
- Section 1: Night - Chapter one
- Section 2: Shopping - Chapter two
- Section 2: Shopping - Chapter three
- Section 2: Shopping - Chapter four
- Section 2: Shopping - Chapter five
- Section 2: Shopping - Chapter six
- Section 3: Night - Chapter seven
- Section 4: Waiting room - Chapter eight
- Section 4: Waiting room - Chapter nine
- Section 4: Waiting room - Chapter ten
- Section 4: Waiting room - Chapter eleven
- Section 4: Waiting room - Chapter twelve
- Section 5: Nap - Chapter thirteen
- Section 6: Household - Chapter fourteen
- Section 6: Household - Chapter fifteen
- Section 6: Household - Chapter sixteen
- Section 6: Household - Chapter seventeen
- Section 7: Night - Chapter eighteen
- Section 8: Birth Day - Chapter nineteen
- Section 8: Birth Day - Chapter twenty
- Section 8: Birth Day - Chapter twenty-one
- Section 8: Birth Day - Chapter twenty-two
- Section 8: Birth Day - Chapter twenty-three
- Section 9: Night - Chapter twenty-four
- Section 10: Soul scrolls - Chapter twenty-five
- Section 10: Soul scrolls - Chapter twenty-six
- Section 10: Soul scrolls - Chapter twenty-seven
- Section 10: Soul scrolls - Chapter twenty-eight
- Section 10: Soul scrolls - Chapter twenty-nine
- Section 11: Night - Chapter thirty
- Section 12: Jezebel's - Chapter thirty-one
- Section 12: Jezebel's - Chapter thirty-two
- Section 12: Jezebel's - Chapter thirty-three
- Section 12: Jezebel's - Chapter thirty-four
- Section 12: Jezebel's - Chapter thirty-five
- Section 12: Jezebel's - Chapter thirty-six
- Section 12: Jezebel's - Chapter thirty-seven
- Section 12: Jezebel's - Chapter thirty-eight
- Section 12: Jezebel's - Chapter thirty-nine
- Section 13: Night - Chapter forty
- Section 14: Salvaging - Chapter forty-one
- Section 14: Salvaging - Chapter forty-two
- Section 14: Salvaging - Chapter forty-three
- Section 14: Salvaging - Chapter forty-four
- Section 14: Salvaging - Chapter forty-five
- Section 15: Night - Chapter forty-six
- Historical notes
- Human relationships in The Handmaid's Tale
- Mothers and children in The Handmaid's Tale
- Individualism and identity in The Handmaid's Tale
- Doubling in The Handmaid's Tale
- Gender significance and feminism in The Handmaid's Tale
- Power in The Handmaid's Tale
- Survival in The Handmaid's Tale
- Hypocrisy in The Handmaid's Tale
- Myth and fairy tale in The Handmaid's Tale
- Structure and methods of narration
Section 12: Jezebel's - Chapter thirty-three
Synopsis of chapter thirty-three
Offred and Ofglen walk to a women's meeting - a Prayvaganza. They kneel down in an area reserved for Handmaidens, from where they can see others come in. Janine (Ofwarren) arrives looking unwell, and with a new partner. Ofglen tells Offred that Janine has been moved to a new place; her baby was, after all, a ‘shredder', an imperfect child.
Offred remembers an incident at the Red Centre where Janine seemed to be in a trance, and spoke as if she was still a waitress. Moira slapped her face to bring her round before the Aunts saw her.
Commentary on chapter thirty-three
The Prayvaganza - This portmanteau word derives from prayer and ‘extravaganza', suggesting that there will be an elaborate ceremony based on prayer. In the next chapter we discover that it is in fact a mass wedding, such as those arranged in the late twentieth century by ‘Moonie' leader Sun Myung Moon, in which thousands of couples were married. (See Religious and philosophical context.)
The building's former name, some dead President they shot - Both Abraham Lincoln (assassinated in 1865) and John Kennedy (assassinated in 1963) have had public buildings, including University buildings, named after them.
God is a National Resource - This slogan seems to suggest that God is on the side of Gilead, and indeed is virtually controlled by the régime.
kneeling … on the cement floor - The physical position which the Handmaids have to adopt reinforces their subservient situation in Gilead's hierarchy.
Janine … had an eighth-month miscarriage – We discover that Janine has already failed to carry a baby to term. The fact that the next, much-wanted baby, which at first gave Janine some status as Ofwarren, was imperfect has instead only emphasised her repeated failure to produce a healthy child as required.
I'm your waitperson - in her trance-like state (whether real or assumed), Janine reverts to her role as a waitress - or ‘waitperson' as she was known in the politically correct post-feminist world just before the new régime seized power in Gilead.
They won't mess around with trying to cure you - Moira is fierce in order to save Janine. Whether Janine's mental state is real or assumed, it could lead to her execution - there is no tenderness in Gilead.
Investigating chapter thirty-three
- The main theme of John Wyndham's 1955 novel The Chrysalids is that chemical and other disasters lead to the birth of malformed babies, and that this is seen as a punishment from God. As in The Handmaid's Tale, he describes an imaginary American society with fundamentalist Christian views in which individuals who do not conform to the idea of genetic perfection are killed or banished to ‘the Fringes'.
- Read Wyndham's novel to look at how another science fiction writer treats one of Atwood's central themes, or use the internet to read a synopsis of The Chrysalids.
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