3 Comments

  1. I will try to answer your questions as best I can, but you should know that I’m Australian, and therefore speaking from an outsider’s perspective when it comes to US politics…

    I don’t know what showrunner Bruce Miller’s political leanings are and how that will be reflected in Season 2, now that the series has run out of stuff from the book to adapt, I suppose Miller will be the main driving force behind the narrative…. I hope that the series becomes more even handed in its critique of present day politics, showing the left, right and centre as we know it today in a warts n’ all fashion. If the series’ depiction of the rise of a theocratic, totalitarian society is to ring true then it has to show how all sides of the current system either enabled these oppressive ideas to take hold (be it through malice or incompetence) and/or alienated a sizeable portion of the general population enough that fascism seemed an attractive alternative. The Sons Of Jacob’s powerbase cant have plausibly come from nowhere.

    Margaret Atwood’s politics I find hard to fathom from interviews but she seems to be a believer in “horseshoe theory” – that the extreme left and extreme right are often closer to each other than they are to the centre.

    I think the character of Holly was originally intended as a case in point. In the 1980s, when the novel was written, left-leaning feminist groups and religious conservatives both seemed to be in agreement over the need to censor pornography. Also, both groups were fond of protesting against literature they deemed insensitive to views…. in the novel, both Holly and Serena express a desire to see a seperate “women’s culture” instituted – and there is a passage of internal monologue where June reflects that they both got that with the rise of Gilead, but it didn’t turn out to be exactly what either of them hoped for.

    In “The Handmaid’s Tale” both left and right leaning people advocate for limitations on freedom of expression, and this is shown to be part of the slippery slope that leads to the restrictive ideas of this regime becoming accepted… it seems to me today there are both “liberal” and “conservative” advocates for restriction of speech in the real world and both sides are very shrill and strident in promoting their agenda, especially on the internet. Is this the beginning of a slippery slope to totalitarianism? I doubt it. For that to happen there’d have to be other destabilising factors
    (like the environmental catastrophe and nuclear war that happens in “The Handmaid’s Tale”) before people become so keen on trading liberty for security.

  2. Thank you so much for a breakdown/ book perspective. Do you think, to try to sway the idea the show isn’t so left leaning, they may increasingly criticize liberal ideas/ideals? Or the show is fully committed to its political statement and Holly is just an exception? Perhaps just used to show that June is capable, and knowledgeable on how to be a radical, or leader, but chooses not to do so for she has seen the sacrifices it takes and doesn’t want to pay that cost?

  3. Hmmm, I wondered how they were going to handle the “econopeople”.
    In the novel they aren’t a seperate religion, but a seperate class or caste… basically “the working class”, people who do menial jobs that are not connected to an elite household.

    Gilead is a colour coded society in that each class is given a uniform to distinguish themselves… government and military personnel (the elite class) wear black… the wives of the elite wear blue… the consorts of the elite (Handmaids) wear red… servants of the elite (Marthas) wear grey…. and the working class labourers wear brown.

    In the novel “econowives” (the wives of working class men) wear striped multi-colour dresses that symbolise the fact they are expected to fulfill the duties of wife, servant and handmaid to a working class man, as well as doing whatever menial labour they are capable of. So presumably their attire contains stripes of red, blue, grey and brown

    The Aunts as a class… they are rather like the Jews which the Nazis employed to perform administrative and guard duties in Ghettos and prison camps… they are a transitional class really, the political logic behind it being much the same – that it is easier to subjugate a minority if a privileged few of that group are enlisted to subvert it… but really, how effective such schemes have proved to be is very debatable. Certainly, in both the novel and film of “The Handmaid’s Tale” the regime’s implementations of tried and true political strategies has often been incompetent and ineffective – which ultimately leads to the downfall of the regime in the novel.

    Yes, the makers of this series are going in their own direction, but it’s good to see that they included the bits with June’s mother… critics of the TV series have sometimes accused it of being “left wing propaganda”, when Atwood’s book is critical of both the left and right side of politics.

    In showing the negative aspects of left wing politics through Holly’s character, they also show the unattractive sides of the old world that enabled the Sons Of Jacob to find a following.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.