How Does Margaret Atwood Represent Loneliness and Isolation in Chapter Two of âthe Handmaids Tale?
How Does Margaret Atwood Represent Loneliness and Isolation in Chapter Two of âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ?
In âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ, Atwood chooses to successfully represent loneliness and isolation in several different ways throughout the novel, but they are especially apparent in Chapter Two. Atwoodâs narrator, who we later learn is called Offred, is an enigma throughout the chapter, which adds to the altogether detached atmosphere already conveyed to us.
In the second chapter the author uses potent, poignant descriptions of the narratorâs environment in order to convey the total seemingly never ending monotony in her current life. The first example of this is the triadic noun structure employed with: âA chair, a table, a lampâ. This is a sharp, non-descriptive sentence, making use of unremarkable nouns to emphasise the crushing tedium the narrator is suffering through, the fact that she is resorting to listing mere objects in her room also suggests a kind of loneliness, as if she has no-one in her life to think of or care about, her mind is constantly blank and if left alone long enough, this will often lead to insanity. Subsequently, she is required to invent new ways to retain some sense of individuality, sanity and stability. The noun âwhiteâ is similarly made use of to great effect, as this colour is conventionally utilised to signify purity and innocence, however when we consider the events in the rest of the novel, including acts indicating what is essentially rape occurring in the very same room, we can conclude to a reasonable degree of certainty that an ironic device is being employed by Atwood. The passage: âA blank space, plastered overâ is understood to be a metaphor for the patriarchal new society of Gilead, where the old world was all but apocalyptically destroyed, leaving in its place a blank space, which the Gileadean civilisation has aesthetically plastered over. The fact that the old world is mentioned through the âblank spaceâ further illuminates our understanding of Offredâs longing and desperation for the continuation of what once was (implying clear lonesomeness), even with this new society of subjugation attempting to crush this will. âPlastered overâ implicates to the reader a ridicule of the work in replacing the old world, as if it was a slapdash, hurried process. Finally, there are understated albeit noticeable references to family when the narrator is engaging in a description of the house; âMotherly sitting room, Grandfather Clockâ; these proper nouns preceding the objects gives a sense of sardonicism to her narrative, in that the house she is residing in should be represented as welcoming, familiar and warm, but the subversion of these words, combined with the difficulties in the Commanderâs relationship with his wife (who we later learn is called Serena Joy) and the fact that