Explore The Narrative Techniques Used By Atwood To Portray The Inner Life Of Offered In The HandmaidS Tale.
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The narrative style and structure of The Handmaids Tale is something very unique to the novel. Atwood has used a complex structure of four different time scales; the most prominent is the first person present tense, where she is a member of the Gilead community and living in the Commanders house:
“Nothing takes place in bed but sleep; or no sleep. I try not to think too much. Like other things, thought must be rationedI intend to last.”
This narrative allows experiences to be filtered through Offreds mind, and for the reader to empathise with her trials as she attempts to find confidence within herself and with her new found rebellion. In this way, we get to know her inner-most thoughts (“This is what I feel like: this sound of glass. I feel like the word shatter.”). For example, we get to know what Offred thinks about when she kisses the Commander in Chapter thirty-two:
“When I kiss him goodnight…his breath smells of alcohol, and I breathe it in like smoke, I admit I relish it, this lick of dissipation.”
Offred has had no physical contact with anyone since being a Handmaid, except with the Commander during the Ceremony. However, the Ceremony was cold and impersonal, whereas this meeting suggests how Offred indulges herself in the Commanders taste, which is almost as addictive as a cigarette. This method of writing also presents the possibility of narrator bias; the fact that Offred is female and Atwood a feminist enables Atwood to mask her ideas, thoughts and opinions within the story and characters. It suggests that women still retain some measure of authority, even within a male-dominated society. In the instance of women in the novel, this power comes from their indispensable role in the propagation of society (“A man is just a womans strategy for making other women”). Offred also gives a certain degree of detail that the third person narrative would not be able to achieve with effect:
“…on the white ceiling, a relief ornament in the shape of a wreath, and in the centre of it a blank space, plastered over, like the place in a face where the eye has been taken out.”
The fact that she has time on her hands lets her focus in on things that would normally be considered dismissive, such as the ceiling of her bedroom. Often it shows how bored she is of her life as a Handmaid.
The second and third time scales used are the recent and distant past tenses;
Red Centre flashbacks (recent past)
“Aunt Sara and Aunt Elizabeth patrolled; they had electric cattle prods slung on thongs from their leather belts.”
Pre-Gileadean flashbacks (distant past)
“Then Luke got back into the car…he began to drive very quickly, and after that there was the dirt road and the woods and we jumped out of the car and began to run.”
The opening sections supply details of life at the Red Centre. Much of the situation described is confusing and unfamiliar to the reader, giving us the impression that the novel is set far in the future. Yet with the addition of the Pre-Gilead flashbacks, the setting becomes increasingly familiar, thereby changing our perception of the time period to closer to the present. Much of Offreds narration is concerned not with events or action, but with her emotional state, which is often affected by the memories that well up from her happier past. Due to her lack of freedom, Offreds life is monotonous and uneventful. Her imagination, however, is still free, so she creates a secret life of sensory perceptions to survive the boredom. This usually happens in reoccurring sections named NIGHT. Seven out of fifteen sections are named NIGHT, which suggests Offreds frequent flashbacks are important to keep her grounded and is a form of rebelling perhaps (“I want to be with someone”). Here, Offred has time to muse and is at her most philosophical:
“Theres nobody here I can love, all the people I could love are dead or elsewhere. Who knows where they are or what their names are now? I too am a missing person.”
Hope is something Offred has little of, and when she does have a glimmer of hope, she is tormented by conflicting fears, usually for her husband, Luke. All three time scales often subtly shift from one to another:
“Are they old enough to remember anything of the time before, playing baseball, in jeans and sneakers, riding their bicycles?…Start them soon is the policy, theres not a moment to be lost – still theyll remember.”
In this phrase, theres the shift form the Pre-Gileadean memory to the motto used in the Red Centre, then back to the present. Offred often questions the situation or memory she finds herself in. This appeals to the reader, as it seems as though Offred is conversing with us, asking our opinion. The reader establishes that the three different time scales used in Offreds story are vital in understanding how and why she is where she is now. Pieces of the story fit like a jigsaw the more you read, and appears in a fragmented form because it has been pieced together by Pieixoto.
The fourth time scale is the Post-Gileadean narrative used in the Historical Notes, a transcript of a lecture given by Cambridge scholar Professor Pieixoto. Here we find out that Offreds story was in fact recorded on a set of unordered cassette tapes found in Maine. “This is a reconstruction”. A phrase repeated by Offred in her story, an underlying theme strengthened by the fact that the reader, for the first time in the Historical Notes, learns that the tale they have been reading is itself a reconstruction. We only need to read a few paragraphs of Pieixotos lecture to conclude that its style is very different to that of Offreds:
“She appears to be an educated woman…She does not see fit to supply us with her original name…”
The reader, emerging from the intense emotional experience of Offreds first person account of the Gileadean regime, is confronted by the detached, arrogant and impersonal tone of Piexoto. The purpose of his academic and authoritative style is to accentuate Offreds intimate and emotive style. He is not interested in Offred as a person at all, only in Gileadean history, and is frustrated with Offreds lack of information. What is evident from the Historical Notes is that the position of males in relevance