
Atwood's Men Meet the Screen
Author(s) -
Joe Montenegro Bonilla
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
revista de lenguas modernas (san josé. en línea)/revista de lenguas modernas (san josé. impresa)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2215-5643
pISSN - 1659-1933
DOI - 10.15517/rlm.v0i33.40907
Subject(s) - dystopia , vision , masculinity , viewpoints , miller , shadow (psychology) , context (archaeology) , archetype , sociology , aesthetics , history , gender studies , literature , art , psychoanalysis , psychology , visual arts , anthropology , archaeology , ecology , biology
Margaret Atwood’s famous work, The Handmaid’s Tale, offers innovative and intriguing perspectives on gender and gender roles, as they are dramatized and problematized in the context of a dystopian society that in many ways is a projection of our own. Particularly interesting in the novel are the roles on men, represented by the principal male characters: the Commander, Nick, and Luke. As Atwood employs these personae to describe at least three different manifestations of masculinity —all with their own conflicts and possibilities—, the first season of the television version of the novel, created by Bruce Miller and resealed in 2017, explores, expands, and exploits various visions of manhood that help understand not only the protagonist’s but also the reader’s/viewer’s world. This paper is an attempt to establish a dialogue of sorts between Atwood’s and Miller’s viewpoints on masculinity through their portrayals of these three characters and their interactions with their protagonist and their context.