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
Individualism and identity in The Handmaid's Tale
Establishing identity
The novel is entitled The Handmaid's Tale, not A Handmaid's Tale, so although we can never be entirely sure of the identity of this Handmaid - or, as Pieixoto points out in the Historical Notes, of her existence at all (even allowing for the fact that she is of course an invention of Atwood's) it is clear that we are focusing on one individual. And this is a significant part of Atwood's message. Whoever the Handmaid is, she is to be viewed as an individual, a person who is important in her own right. This means acknowledging her unique personality: Pieixoto and his colleague, Professor Wray, say that ‘our author was one of many.' They insist that they have tried to ‘establish an identity for the narrator', but in fact the core of her real identity - her thoughts and feelings - are ignored by them. Yet the novel focusses largely on her inner life: seven of the fifteen sections are entitled ‘Night' and Offred tells us, at the start of chapter 7, that:
In these sections, Offred explores her inner self, and her most personal memories. As Atwood has said in her book Negotiating with the Dead:
Her name
Although Offred does not reveal to us her real name, that name is of great significance to her. There are hints at several points that it may be June (see chapter 1) but Atwood never tells the reader. However, the narrator is clear that she does not see herself as Of-Fred: the name that Gilead assigns her makes her merely the property of a man, and one whom she does not choose herself. That identity has nothing to do with her as an individual: there have been Offreds before, and we see in chapter 44 that a Handmaid can be replaced at a moment's notice; Ofglen becomes a different Ofglen as soon as the régime decrees.
But our Offred tells us (in chapter 14 ) that:
She adds that,
Her need for love goes with her need to be recognised: ‘I want to be held and told my name,' she says in chapter 17. It is when she tells Nick her name (in chapter 41) that she feels a real relationship has started: ‘I feel that therefore I am known'.
Loss of individuality
Clothing
Gilead has attempted to remove the individuality of its citizens in many ways. Everyone is classified into a rigid hierarchy, with different uniforms in specific colours to denote their role within the state organisation. Without a choice of clothing, the differences in individual appearances are minimised.
Naming
In addition, names are limited. Although we know that the kitchen workers at the Commander's are Rita and Cora, his name is never given, and the Handmaids are specifically forbidden their own names: they are only known by the names of their ‘owners'. Handmaids are also identified by a number tattooed on their ankle, just as prisoners in Nazi concentration camps had a number tattooed on their arms. (See Social / political context > Political satire > Hitler and the Nazis.)
Economic status
For women, individual power is even more restricted, as they are no longer allowed to work in professions. Some of the women now at Jezebel's were once ‘a sociologist.. a lawyer.. in business, an executive position'. They cannot have bank accounts, or ‘hold property any more' (chapter 28). Every woman must be under the control of a male.
The importance of being an individual
In chapter 29, the Commander laughs at women's supposedly poor mathematical ability. ‘For them,' he says, ‘one and one and one and one don't make four.' But in chapter 30, Offred sees this as a great truth:
Throughout the novel Offred makes various attempts, even if only in small ways, to assert her individuality and the fact that she is a unique person. To begin with, she refuses to say ‘my' room (chapter 2) and later, when she does say ‘mine' (chapters 8 to 9), she asserts her right over it:
She creeps downstairs to steal a dead flower (chapter 17) - an apparently pointless gesture, but one which asserts her idea of herself, and reminds her ‘of what I once could do'. For Atwood, being recognised as an individual, a fully acknowledged self, is vital; she has aptly summed this up in her poem This is a photograph of me, where she at first appears to be describing a landscape, but then tells us that, if we look closely enough, we will be able to see her.
Seeing others as individuals
In asserting this need for herself, Offred also recognises the rights of others to be seen as individuals. Seeing the bodies of victims hung on the Wall, their heads covered to conceal their identity, she observes that ‘their heads are zeros' (chapter 6), but tells us that ‘if you look and look', you can see the outlines of the features under the cloth.' She goes on to say that:
In contrast, when she goes on her regular visit to the doctor's, (chapter 10), she is aware that he sees her as ‘a torso only', and that for the Commander she is ‘only a whim' (chapter 25). Worst of all, is the deliberate dehumanising which allows brutal murder by the régime: as Offred realises (in chapters 30 and 43):
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