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Bachelor Thesis from the year 2024 in the subject English Language and Literature Studies, grade: 1,0, Karlsruhe University of Education (Fakultät 1), course: Literary and Cultural Studies, language: English, abstract: This paper thoroughly examines the profound analogies between At-wood's dystopian universe and the ongoing debates over abortion rights in the U.S. It illustrates how the fictional world of Gilead functions as a reflection of real social anxieties and political controversies. To support this thesis, various sources and literary works are drawn upon to explore key features that…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Bachelor Thesis from the year 2024 in the subject English Language and Literature Studies, grade: 1,0, Karlsruhe University of Education (Fakultät 1), course: Literary and Cultural Studies, language: English, abstract: This paper thoroughly examines the profound analogies between At-wood's dystopian universe and the ongoing debates over abortion rights in the U.S. It illustrates how the fictional world of Gilead functions as a reflection of real social anxieties and political controversies. To support this thesis, various sources and literary works are drawn upon to explore key features that will substantiate the argument throughout the paper. Since abortion laws in the United States are a highly controversial and dynamic issue, constantly subject to change, current developments must always be taken into account. By the time this work is read, new legal or societal changes may have already occurred. On June 24, 2022, news shook the United States (U.S): The Supreme Court had overturned the historic Roe v. Wade ruling. In an instant, the decades-long guarantee of the right to abortion was over. This led to massive protests, especially among women, who used the slogan "My body, my choice" as a powerful symbol of women's self-determination and bodily autonomy. Abortion, the medical termination of an unwanted pregnancy, is not only a legal issue but also deeply rooted in the feminist movement. Feminism, which advocates for "[...] social, economic, and political equality of the sexes", sees control over one's own body as a central human right. The overturning of the ruling seemed to call into question many of these hard-won women¿s rights and fueled the debate about gender equality as well as the role of women in American society. The withdrawal of this freedom and control over one's own body by the state is contrasted in Margaret Atwood's dys-topian society Gilead in her novel The Handmaid's Tale (1985). "The story follows Offred, a handmaid who is forced to bear children for her commander in a society where women are stripped of their rights and treated as property". Gilead is a world in which women are stripped of their rights and freedom and their bodies are viewed as state property. They are not only classified according to their social status and usefulness to society but also subjected to an extreme control over their reproductive functions. The Handmaids act as "breeding machines" for the ruling elite to combat the low birth rate. Their bodies and fertility are rigorously controlled and instrumentalized, taking incapacitation and objectification to a terrifying extreme.
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