The Handmaid’s Tale (Visually) Retold
The Handmaid’s Tale (Visually) Retold
Author(s): Oana-Celia Gheorghiu, Michaela PraislerSubject(s): Language and Literature Studies, Literary Texts, Fine Arts / Performing Arts, Fiction, Studies of Literature, Novel, Film / Cinema / Cinematography, Theory of Literature
Published by: Editura Casa Cărții de Știință
Keywords: Atwood; dystopia;
Summary/Abstract: Owing largely to the political situation in the United States, which seems to head, dangerously so, towards a dystopian Gilead, Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale gets, at the end of the 2010s, to be re-told by many voices: that of her original creator – by her writing a sequel, The Testaments (2019) –, but also those assumed in successful transmedial adaptations – the homonymous graphic novel authored by Renee Nault (2019) and the TV series that has taken Offred beyond her final step “into the darkness within, or else the light” (Atwood 2010: 307) into the second, third and fourth seasons. Aside from Season 1, which follows closely the convoluted structure of Offred’s monological testimony, the TV series seems, at a glance, less a multimodal adaptation and more an appropriation of a late 20th-century novel that has become a political and cultural phenomenon. Part of a project concerned with the many re-tellings of The Handmaid’s Tale, this paper aims to analyse the TV series’ fabric beyond the plot departures from its hypotext, as well as the latter’s ‘translations’, with a view to proving its unquestionable indebtedness to the ‘mistressmind’ of contemporary speculative fiction.
Journal: Cultural Intertexts
- Issue Year: 11/2021
- Issue No: 11
- Page Range: 60-70
- Page Count: 11
- Language: English