The Operation of Hegemony in Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale
Abstract
The Handmaid’s Tale is a dystopian fiction setting up in the near future
where human population is facing its extinction due to the unhealthy and polluted
environment. The story is narrated from the point of view of a Handmaid, Offred,
who faces many difficulties, struggles, and oppression living in a totalitarian and
conservative country named the Republic of Gilead. This research aims to find the
operation of hegemony in the novel because the novel emphasizes the act of
controlling and manipulating from a certain group to another group using
religious ideology. Through Antonio Gramsci’s theory of hegemony, I reveal the
hegemony operation in the novel to find its political hegemonic position in the
real world. The analysis begins by textual analysis to find the five stages of
hegemony as what is explained by Gramsci. To find the ideological construction
of the text, I use discursive analysis with the author as the connector between the
text and context.
The result of this analysis shows that the novel constructs the operation of
hegemony from how the government indoctrinates religious doctrines to
legitimate the presence of Handmaids. From the discursive analysis, it is found
that the depiction of hegemony in the text is related to the hegemony of
neoconservative ideology and patriarchal society in the United States. Atwood
criticizes religiosity practice used for political purposes that is found in
neoconservative ideology through the depiction of women oppression in a
hegemonic society that uses religion as its political tool. Thus, as a social product,
The Handmaid’s Tale is a form of resistance to conservative and patriarchal
ideology.