Download Summary, Analysis, and Review of Margaret Atwood's 'The Handmaid's Tale' AudioBook Free
Please Notice: That is a key takeaways and research of the e book and not the original e book. Summary, Research, and Overview of Margaret Atwood's 'The Handmaid's Tale' carries a overview of the e book, review, research & key takeaways and specific "About the writer" section. Preview: In an substitute version of America, a neo-conservative, alt-right type terrorist group required over in a coup - they shot the Chief executive, machine-gunned Congress, received the army to declare circumstances of disaster, instituted martial law, suspended the Constitution, and instilled a totalitarian theocracy. Although this group claimed their overtaking was only momentary, America became the Republic of Gilead. And because these were able to blame an internationally fertility crisis (in which babies had a one-in-four chance of being given birth to with deformities that could make them unable to survive beyond your womb), the Gileadean plan could reverse women's rights, claiming it had a solution to the crisis via a go back to so-called traditional worth. The Commanders of the plan restructured contemporary society and limited women matching to reproductive ability, as well as class status, so that girls were prohibited from reading, from having property, from having careers and from being 3rd party. Feminists and certain infertile women of low position were grouped as "Unwomen," and some were sentenced to labor camps called the Colonies. Certain privileged women already wedded to the Commanders are the Wives, and wear blue. Less privileged women are assigned roles, according to their fertility - those still able to tolerate children are chosen as Handmaids and wear red, while those unable to tolerate children are chosen as Marthas and wear inexperienced....