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Similarities Between 1984 And The Handmaid's Tale

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Language is a major themes in both novels “1984” by George Orwell and “The Handmaid’s Tale” by Margaret Atwool. Language are heavily reshape in both novel in order to crave a goal to control individuals. “1984” creates authority over citizens through altering and reducing the English language to its most basic form. To “return” to the root of English, the Party have to eliminate the complexity of the language - synonyms and subtle meaning of words -from the existence of the people minds in the apparent belief that there is no justification from antonyms and ‘shades of meanings’, and only one concept should only subsist . However the true purpose of simplifying language and destroying words is to eliminate concepts that might led to the idealism of rebellion and disobedience; The Party does not want the thoughts of rebellion and disobedience to exist therefore they have to destroy and simplify to a huge extent. By doing this, humans would be deprived from differentiate good or bad and eventually lose their conception. The Party’s ultimate goals is to eliminate …show more content…

Through the environment of the Handmaid’s Tale, where women lived in a constantly patrolled zone and an area where they are not even allow to communicate conveys how the government of Gilead controls individuality through restriction of language. By removing women from their past identity and rewriting it with a new identity, represents the symbolism of palimpsest. Just like a palimpsest even though women identity have overlapped with a new given character, leftover of their name still persist in their memory as you can see when they exchanged names, silently, to each other - ‘Alma. Janine. Dolores. Moira.

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