Friday, May 15, 2020
Representation of Different Social and Cultural Forces in...
Representation of Different Social and Cultural Forces in The Handmaids Tale by Atweeon and Hard Times by Dickens â€Å"Masses of labourers, organised like soldiers, are daily and hourly enslaved by the machine, by the over-looker and above all by the individual bourgeois manufacturer himself†, Karl Marx in his Manifesto of the Communist Party 1848 here highlights the state portrayed through Charles Dickens’s ‘Hard Times’. Margaret Atwood highlights the similarity with her book saying â€Å"it is a study of power, and how it operated and how it deforms or shapes the people who are living within that kind of regime†. Defined as an act that prevents the natural or normal expression, activity or development;†¦show more content†¦Atwood, in the 1980’s aimed to write about â€Å"what happens when certain casually held attitudes about women are taken to their logical conclusion†(Atwood), therefore offering a vision; a warning. Atwood’s writing stems from social movements familiar to herself – the treatment of women from the 196 0’s liberation movements and civil rights appear dominant in her novel; population control also takes a major theme. Dickens, in 1854 likewise attempted to offer a vision; a vision that challenged the utilitarian philosophy of the time in Industrial Britain. From the 1820’s-1850’s â€Å"Benthamism represented of the prominent exemplar of scientific and materialistic reasoning with respect to social and government activity†[ii]. Benthamism, named after the work of Jeremy Bentham sought to develop a scientific legislation to effect social progress – it has been directly linked by many critics to the instigation of social reforms in industrial Britain such as the reforms act of 1832. Dickens’ novel is therefore a product of this period; a â€Å"novel that uses its characters and stories to expose the massive gulf between rich and poor and to criticize the unfeeling self-interest of the middle-upper classes†[iii]. From a Structuralist out look using binary opposites, Dickens highlights the battle between utilitarianism and individualism, similar to Atwood who, following a binary
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