ABSTRACT

Suggesting that politics and power are at the center of Margaret Atwood's fiction, Theodore F. Sheckels examines Atwood's novels from The Edible Woman to The Year of the Flood. Whether her treatment is explicit as in Bodily Harm and The Handmaid's Tale or by means of an exploration of interiority as in Cat's Eye and The Robber Bride, Atwood's persistent concern is with how the empowered act towards those who are constrained within the political, economic and social institutions that facilitate power dynamics. Sheckels identifies an increasing sophistication in Atwood's exposition of power over time that is revealed in the later novels' engagement with social class, postcolonialism, and a globalism that merges science and commerce as issues relevant to politics and power. Acknowledging that Atwood is not a political theorist but a novelist, Sheckels does not suggest that her work should be viewed as political commentary but rather as a creative treatment of the laudable but ultimately only partially successful ways in which women and other groups resist the constraints placed on them by institutionalized oppression.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

part 1|49 pages

Exteriority (I)

chapter 1|14 pages

The Edible Woman

chapter 2|13 pages

Surfacing

chapter 3|11 pages

Lady Oracle

chapter 4|7 pages

Life Before Man

part 2|34 pages

Politics Foregrounded

chapter 5|14 pages

Bodily Harm

chapter 6|18 pages

The Handmaid's Tale

part 3|26 pages

Interiority

chapter 7|11 pages

Cat's Eye

chapter 8|12 pages

The Robber Bride

part 4|47 pages

Exteriority (II)

chapter 9|10 pages

Alias Grace

chapter 10|10 pages

The Blind Assassin

chapter 11|10 pages

Oryx and Crake

chapter 12|10 pages

The Year of the Flood

chapter 13|5 pages

Atwood Overall