The Handmaid’s Tale: anti-Christian contraband or a teaching tool?

<h2><em>Margaret Atwood’s dystopian novel <a href&equals;"http&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;huffingtonpost&period;com&period;au&sol;2017&sol;03&sol;26&sol;handmaids-tale-trailer-is-terrifying-but-we-cant-look-away&lowbar;a&lowbar;22012182&sol;">has long been on the syllabus in Canada and the USA&comma;<&sol;a> with history of mild opposition&period; In Australia&comma; it is more ignored than opposed&comma; but could the new TV series be a history and social sciences resource for senior students&quest; Or is it just too confronting&quest; <&sol;em><&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>This week&comma; I finally succumbed to the temptation to watch <em>The Handmaid’s Tale<&sol;em> &lpar;I tend to get easily traumatised by this sort of drama &&num;8211&semi; especially in the context of commentary repeatedly suggesting <em>The Handmaid&&num;8217&semi;s Tale<&sol;em> be treated not as science fiction&comma; and even as a warning&rpar;<em>&period;<&sol;em> I expected gripping content&comma; but what I hadn’t anticipated was how it would haunt me – how images of Offred would follow me to the washing line&comma; as I imagined flapping walls of blue&comma; red and green &lpar;the &OpenCurlyQuote;uniform’ colours for wives&comma; handmaids and Marthas – domestic servants&rpar;&comma; against the backdrop of anachronistic scenes of manor houses and shrouded maids&period; Shaking my head&comma; trying to shudder off the images&comma; I would head back to my desk&comma; look at my keyboard and remember that&comma; in that dystopian world&comma; this would &OpenCurlyQuote;forbidden’&period; I could not write&comma; nor read&comma; nor work&period;  My children would have been taken&comma; and my life decided&period; As with most topics&comma; I eventually arrive at what&&num;8217&semi;s in it for educative purposes&period; Knowing that the book is read in North American English classes&comma; I wondered how it would fit with the objectives of educating young adults in Australia&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Many say it is anti-Christian&comma; though anti-fundamentalism would be more accurate&period; Scenes depicting the demolition of churches and persecution of nuns illustrate that this is not a broadly Christian government&semi; rather a totalitarian fundamental sect is in charge&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<blockquote>&NewLine;<p>Critics of the North American curriculum inclusion want to know why their kids need to read words they are not allowed to say at school&comma; be exposed to explicit sexually violent scenes and they can’t see why it’s relevant&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<&sol;blockquote>&NewLine;<p>However&comma; many have argued that dystopian fiction offers opportunity for reflection on society and what can go wrong &&num;8211&semi; just as with George Orwell’s <em>1984&comma; <&sol;em>or<em> Animal Farm<&sol;em>&period; Commentators speak of the novel &lpar;and TV show&rpar;’s relevance to current world politics and events&comma; such as this <em>Sydney Morning Herald<&sol;em> article by Wendy Squires&comma; called <a href&equals;"http&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;smh&period;com&period;au&sol;comment&sol;a-handmaids-tale-isnt-science-fiction-its-a-warning-20170721-gxfrut&period;html">&OpenCurlyQuote;Praise be&comma; I’m a mess’&period;<&sol;a><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>So what’s in it for our senior students to learn from&quest; <&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>There are themes that can be recognised in other areas of society&period; The lack of agency women in Gilead have with regard to their reproductive decisions could be seen as the end of a road that begins with U&period;S&period; President Donald Trump’s recent encroachment on women&&num;8217&semi;s reproductive rights in the USA&comma; and anywhere the US aid dollars reach – <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;theguardian&period;com&sol;global-development&sol;2017&sol;jul&sol;21&sol;trump-global-death-warrant-women-family-planning-population-reproductive-rights-mexico-city-policy&quest;CMP&equals;soc&lowbar;567">&OpenCurlyQuote;the global gag rule’<&sol;a>&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The depiction of fertility management can also be contextualised within factory farming&comma; &lpar;the ear tagging&comma; the timing of the forced insemination&comma; the systems&comma; the captivity&rpar;&period; The manipulation of others&&num;8217&semi; fertility reminds of ongoing ethical debate around genetic engineering to improve health outcomes&comma; as well as ongoing discussion about the ethics of surrogacy&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In the first episode&comma; the protagonist&comma; June&comma; who is to become &&num;8220&semi;Offred&&num;8221&semi; &lpar;Of Fred &&num;8211&semi; her commander&rpar; is pursued through the woods as an animal in a hunt&period; Once caught&comma; has her five-year-old daughter is torn from her arms&period; They are separated&comma; and she is reassigned to serve the state as the white men in charge dictate&period; The child is lost to her &&num;8211&semi; she has no power&comma; no recourse&period; This scene echoes depictions of films and stories about The Stolen Generations in Australia and the lack of agency&comma; forced breeding&comma; and livestock status can be found in accounts of American slavery&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So is this pure fiction&quest; Is it historical&quest; Indeed&period; Margaret Atwood made a point of mining real events for ideas for Gilead&period; She said that much of this occurred in 17<sup>th<&sol;sup> century Puritan New England&period; and <a href&equals;"http&colon;&sol;&sol;ew&period;com&sol;books&sol;2017&sol;03&sol;08&sol;margaret-atwood-handmaids-tale-reality&sol;">&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;nothing in the book that didn’t happen&comma; somewhere”&period;<&sol;a><&sol;p>&NewLine;<blockquote>&NewLine;<p>Is this book appropriate for use in a senior high school class discussion&quest; Or is it best left for university and&sol;or self-discovery as an adult&quest; Is it anti-Christian&comma; alarmist&quest; Or a harbinger of things that might come if human rights are eroded any further&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<&sol;blockquote>&NewLine;<p><a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;theconversation&period;com&sol;guide-to-the-classics-margaret-atwoods-the-handmaids-tale-75062">An article published<&sol;a> in <em>The Conversation&comma;<&sol;em> written by Linda Wight&comma; Senior Lecturer&comma; Literature and Screen Studies&comma; Federation University Australia offers a further reason why history students could benefit from the text&period; She says&comma; &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Offred’s story is transcribed&comma; annotated and published by two male academics&comma; who refuse to give her story the status of official history and dismiss it as &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;crumbs”&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<blockquote>&NewLine;<p>Women’s experiences in history have remained as obscured as the insidious meaning of the &OpenCurlyQuote;his’ in history&period; The &OpenCurlyQuote;historical’ notes alone can provoke discussion about whose version of events is accepted as &OpenCurlyQuote;history’&period; History of wars are controlled by the victors&comma; and in the case of the fictional Gilead&comma; the history of the males who were permitted to author their accounts is privileged by the male students&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<&sol;blockquote>&NewLine;<p>Women’s experiences have been marginalised in Australian culture and history studies&comma; but things are not always as they seem&period; The fact that Aboriginal women were seen as disconnected from spiritual practice largely occurred because the anthropologists were mostly male&comma; so could never access even limited information about women’s business&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>For those students deemed emotionally ready by parents and teachers&comma; perhaps even beginning with the historical notes at the conclusion of <em>The Handmaid’s Tale <&sol;em>could offer some perspective&comma; perhaps encouraging young historians-in-training to do more than scrape the surface of any &OpenCurlyQuote;crumbs’ of a primary source they encounter&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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Suzy Barry

Suzy Barry is a freelance education writer and the former editor of School News, Australia.

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