Yahoo Suche Web Suche

  1. Erhalten Angebote für {kewyord:ähnliche artikel} auf Amazon. Entdecken tausende Produkte. Lesen Kundenbewertungen und finde Bestseller

    • Angebote

      Entdecken Sie unsere Angebote und

      sparen Sie beim Kauf von Amazon.

    • Amazon Prime

      Bei Amazon ist für jeden etwas

      dabei. Registrieren Sie sich jetzt!

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. 1. Jan. 2001 · The handmaid, then, is a slave-woman with a gestational surrogacy role, whose sole value is her uterus. Offred’s story takes place in an authoritarian society — the U.S. turned into a totalitarian regime, where infertility is widespread, and men have the upper hand. In a nutshell: a nightmarish theocracy.

  2. The Eyes of the Lord—or just the Eyes—are the secret police of the Gileadean regime. They spy on ordinary citizens, and when they detect signs of rebellion or dissent they abduct the culprits, torture them and hand them over to be killed by hanging or Particicution. Eyes, real and symbolic, are a recurring motif in The Handmaid’s Tale.

  3. Der Report der Magd. Der Report der Magd (Originaltitel: The Handmaid’s Tale) ist ein dystopischer Roman von Margaret Atwood aus dem Jahr 1985. Das Buch wurde 1990 unter dem Titel Die Geschichte der Dienerin von Volker Schlöndorff verfilmt, seit 2017 in Form der Fernsehserie The Handmaid’s TaleDer Report der Magd umgesetzt.

  4. Offred is the first episode of the first season of The Handmaid's Tale. A woman is abducted by a powerful theocratic dictatorship and undergoes forced brutal conditioning to become a Handmaid, and her struggles to fit into the mold of the role. A woman flees from a group of men with guns, but she is captured and separated from her young daughter and her husband is presumably killed (gunshots ...

  5. 26. Jan. 2022 · This article analyzes how Offred, the protagonist of The Handmaid’s Tale, reconstructs her fragmented self through storytelling in a dialogic thought process that is connected to the intertextual references. She recollects her memories and engages in a parodic critique of Gileadean propagandistic discourse.

  6. The Handmaid’s Tale is told by a first-person narrator, Offred. The details of her current life are told in the present tense, while flashbacks to her earlier life are told in the past tense. Both the first-person narrator and the use of the present tense help to create a sense of confinement. We can only see what Offred chooses to show us ...

  7. Analysis. As Offred waits in her room, she thinks about the household’s previous Handmaid. When she first arrived, she began her slow examination of every nook and cranny in the room, and found evidence of its previous resident. Offred gets sidetracked into another memory: she remembers looking hastily through hotel rooms, when she used to ...