
Service95 Book Club With Dua Lipa The Handmaid’s Tale: Margaret Atwood on Power, Possession & Political Origins
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Nov 4, 2025 In this engaging discussion, acclaimed novelist Margaret Atwood delves into the captivating origins of her iconic work, The Handmaid's Tale. She reflects on her experiences in Cold War-era East Berlin and the political climate of the 1980s that shaped Gilead. Atwood analyzes the significance of Offred's name, the role of women's agency, and the eerie parallels to today's society. With insights into Puritan roots and the complexities of societal control, she masterfully connects her timeless themes to modern political realities.
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Cold War Travels Shaped Gilead
- Margaret Atwood wrote The Handmaid's Tale in West Berlin while visiting East Bloc countries and observing surveillance-era fear.
- Those visits and Cold War context directly shaped her depiction of repression and secrecy.
Political Pushback Fueled The Premise
- The 1980s rise of the religious right proposed women belong solely in the home, prompting Atwood's 'what if' scenario.
- To enforce mass domesticity she imagined removing alternatives like jobs and credit access.
Literary Roots In Dystopian Fiction
- Atwood traces The Handmaid's Tale to her lifelong reading of science fiction and dystopia, especially Orwell's 1984.
- She wanted to write a story from the perspective of the female counterpart to Winston/Julia dynamics.






