The Handmaids Tale [OFFICIAL]
Gilead’s power relies on an omnipresent yet ambiguous surveillance network. The “Eyes” are everywhere and nowhere; they could be the grocery store attendant or the Commander’s wife. Atwood draws from Foucault’s concept of the panopticon—a prison design where inmates cannot know when they are watched, thus disciplining themselves. Offred notes, “We learned to see in fragments… The ordinary things, like the street, the store, were full of Eyes” (Atwood 23). This uncertainty eliminates the need for constant policing. Public salvagings (executions) and the Particicution (where Handmaids tear apart a supposed rapist) transform violence into spectacle, ensuring that terror becomes communal self-regulation.
Margaret Atwood’s dystopian novel The Handmaid’s Tale (1985) imagines the Republic of Gilead, a theocratic regime that strips women of autonomy, reducing them to reproductive vessels. This paper argues that Atwood uses the mechanisms of surveillance—physical, technological, and psychological—not merely as tools of control, but as a narrative device to expose how patriarchal power internalizes oppression. By examining the role of the Eyes, the ritualized Ceremony, and Offred’s fragmented memory, this analysis demonstrates that true subjugation occurs when the oppressed internalize their own surveillance. Ultimately, the paper contends that Atwood’s novel serves as a timeless warning against complacency in the face of creeping authoritarianism. The Handmaids Tale
Atwood, Margaret. The Handmaid’s Tale . McClelland and Stewart, 1985. Gilead’s power relies on an omnipresent yet ambiguous