The Handmaid's Tale, Part 1: Crash Course Literature 403

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  • čas přidán 28. 06. 2024
  • In which John Green teaches you about Margaret Atwood's speculative fiction novel, The Handmaid's Tale. John looks at some of the themes in this classic dystopian novel, many of which are kind of a downer. The world of Gilead that Atwood created looks at a lot of the issues that we deal with today, and the very human impulse to return to an imagined golden era, thereby solving all of our modern world's problems. Yeah, it doesn't work like that.
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Komentáře • 1,1K

  • @TheGabador
    @TheGabador Před 6 lety +1921

    Atwood said in an interview that everything in the Handmaid's tale is based off of something that did happen before. Every torture, situation, punishment, is something that is brought back from History into her story.

    • @GustavoRodriguez-qr5po
      @GustavoRodriguez-qr5po Před 5 lety +46

      Louis Bélisle or Saudi Arabia today

    • @robynsun
      @robynsun Před 5 lety +43

      Yeah my English lit teacher doesn't shut up about that part but doesn't actually teach the novel

    • @rebecca4680
      @rebecca4680 Před 5 lety +12

      That message by Atwood was in the writer’s notes at the beginning of my copy of Handmaid’s Tale

    • @thethrowawaythatstayed7055
      @thethrowawaythatstayed7055 Před 5 lety +12

      She did! It makes it all the more scary

    • @aritrabha
      @aritrabha Před 4 lety +34

      Similar things did happen with Yazidi women under the ISIS regime

  • @justopher8487
    @justopher8487 Před rokem +163

    John Green, 2017: Because reading isn’t illegal…yet
    The Handmaid’s Tale in 2022: *on a ban list*

  • @Mimi-xi1bm
    @Mimi-xi1bm Před 6 lety +1368

    As an English Literature university student, I wish everyone taught novels like John Green

    • @eventsteven7921
      @eventsteven7921 Před 6 lety +12

      Mimi Well he also pushes the left agenda sadly

    • @Mimi-xi1bm
      @Mimi-xi1bm Před 6 lety +102

      Awww yeah I know. It's so sad that he cares about other people and encourages others to do so too ;)

    • @Isaiah_McIntosh
      @Isaiah_McIntosh Před 6 lety +27

      As an A level literature student john is not teaching in these videos. He is summarizing and along the way introducing topics of interest to research, ponder or discuss. You should have at least read the book before coming here regardless however it is necessary to study the book and its relating literature critically due to the purpose of this format and the need for multiple critical perspectives.

    • @Mimi-xi1bm
      @Mimi-xi1bm Před 6 lety +35

      That's true, but I was thinking about the tone he uses :) My A-Level teacher went through line by line and it turned these extraordinary texts into the dullest things. It's not possible to cover every aspect of the book in these 10-15 minute videos obviously, but he still manages to get you excited about the texts and he stresses why it's impotant to learn about them :)

    • @rebeccamacpherson8820
      @rebeccamacpherson8820 Před 6 lety +18

      The great thing about Crash Course Literature is that you shouldn't have to read the book before you watch the video. John Green discusses the text to a level that gets anyone intrigued to read further; inspiring humanity to value the opportunity we have to reading and critiquing the world around us. Maybe as an A Level Literature student you would know to spell John with a capital.

  • @centreoftheselights
    @centreoftheselights Před 6 lety +3109

    The first time I read the Handmaid's Tale, I was quite young - around 14 - and I had found the book in my school library. Fatefully, it had been misshelved in the non-fiction section. As the book is written in documentary style, I spent the whole experience of reading uncertain of whether the story was fiction, as I hoped, or whether this was a true tale of some far-off country I had never heard of. I think it says a lot about the quality of the writing that in spite of the extremes depicted, I still wasn't entirely convinced that the story wasn't real.

    • @Mimi-xi1bm
      @Mimi-xi1bm Před 6 lety +89

      Wow that's so interesting. Thank you for sharing!

    • @merrittanimation7721
      @merrittanimation7721 Před 6 lety +71

      That's disturbing

    • @ceroman
      @ceroman Před 6 lety +37

      The book sought you

    • @dreamdarts6401
      @dreamdarts6401 Před 6 lety +36

      actually, the story did happen in the U.S when they were in slave times

    • @nyxxu9967
      @nyxxu9967 Před 6 lety +20

      I was 13 when I read the book and it horrified but fascinated me on so many levels

  • @elizaashley2110
    @elizaashley2110 Před 6 lety +3769

    It's okay John, you can say J. K. Rowling

  • @AndromedaKai
    @AndromedaKai Před 6 lety +846

    This story terrified me even more then 1984 because it was from a perspective of a woman. It made me feel alone and vulnerable and very much scared of the future.

    • @americancitizen748
      @americancitizen748 Před 5 lety +12

      Liberals wan't you to be scared. Then you are more easily manipulated by Democrats.

    • @vinceknox4425
      @vinceknox4425 Před 5 lety +83

      Agreed, there was a different kind of terror. As a man, I had no perspective of what horrors could happen to women in a dystopia. Atwood didn’t use anything that happened that didn’t already happen. The history of how women were treated is horrendous.

    • @vinceknox4425
      @vinceknox4425 Před 5 lety +75

      American Citizen Conservatives constantly use fear tactics, it especially appeals to their lower-educated base. All politics have to have a type of fear - it’s one of the strongest instincts we have. It’s not just one group doing it.

    • @shirleycarpenter9610
      @shirleycarpenter9610 Před 4 lety +34

      To Andromeda and All of you who missed the obvious....... This is not fiction nor dystopia...This happened here in America.......It's called SLAVERY.....I've been waiting for someone to pick up on this for 2 years. You missed all of the earmarks of this horrible history that Blacks had to endure:
      l. Changing of your name
      2. Hangings
      3. Your children taken away from you
      4. Raping of the Black Women
      5. Forced worship/ religion
      6. You need papers in order to leave your commanders home
      7. The resistance is/was the Underground Railroad
      8. It happend in America
      9. Etc....

    • @liberalbias4462
      @liberalbias4462 Před 4 lety

      @Reg Eric no its not.

  • @aymeahrens1283
    @aymeahrens1283 Před 6 lety +2811

    What's always creepy about dystopian fiction are the little whispery echoes of reality you read between the lines of the story. I keep thinking about how much our culture prizes, even worships, women's power to bear children, yet elevates infant and fetal care over maternal, and marginalizes and dehumanizes mothers.

    • @cjemmeson109
      @cjemmeson109 Před 6 lety +136

      An example is the general (note: general - I'm not saying this happens everywhere) lack of paid paternal leave. This means that after a woman has had a child, she must stay home to care for the child herself, or outsource the responsibility to a family member or childcare centre. It is difficult for her husband (I'm only talking about heterosexual relationships here, please excuse the oversimplification) to care for the child unless he actually quits his job. This means that for any employed woman who is reluctant to palm her child off on anyone outside the immediate family, she has little choice but to take leave herself - thus removing herself from her work, and making advancement more difficult. This has been cited as a reason for the gender imbalance in powerful positions such as CEOs or politicians.

    • @aymeahrens1283
      @aymeahrens1283 Před 6 lety +133

      As a mother myself I have been struck by how little my own opinions, values, and yes, even rights, mattered once I conceived. The hospital and insurance company dictated when I would give birth, and where and how, and what my prenatal care looked like, and what would be done to my baby afterward. Outside the hospital, the way people treated me changed immediately; I became a vessel for a baby that belonged to everyone, and I could be criticized or questioned by anyone about the choices I was making. I'm fortunate enough to get to stay home with my kids, but if I couldn't I would have faced a cruelly short maternity leave, putting my baby into daycare where his psychological and physical needs are unlikely to be met. I would have been placed back into a job where expectations of me had not changed despite the lasting effects of birth, lack of sleep, and nursing, not to mention the emotional trauma of being separated from my child. The icing on the cake is thr expectation that women look "back to normal" as quickly as possible after birth.

    • @oliveoconnor5589
      @oliveoconnor5589 Před 6 lety +33

      Ayme Ahrens you have always a last say about medical decisions. also do doctors "decide" the right time by how birth is safest for you and your child. dont make them out as dictators over your life when they are indeed saving it

    • @VickiTakacs.
      @VickiTakacs. Před 6 lety +20

      Olive Boy are you naive. They push for caesarean because they get paid more and many do act just like dictators. Don't you have any idea of the war going on here against Holistic Doctors? It is crazy how many have magically died in just the last year.

    • @IkeOkerekeNews
      @IkeOkerekeNews Před 6 lety +2

      Ayme Ahrens
      Luckly, dystopias can never happen, just like utopias.

  • @Jason-mg3fk
    @Jason-mg3fk Před 5 lety +375

    English classes in high school and college: spend an hour to slowly drone on about a book.
    John Green: spends 10 minutes gripping my attention and making me want to, and in many cases, actually read these books.
    Why can’t professors make us this excited about books

    • @armedwombat6816
      @armedwombat6816 Před 5 lety +28

      For starters: John only has to do this once and knows it will mostly be watched by those who are already interested in the subject.
      A teacher has to do it every year for an at least partially unwilling and uninterested audience. Even if you started motivated and excited, sonner or later the enthusiasm will start to fade.

  • @kkhar1589
    @kkhar1589 Před 4 lety +732

    Wait!... He’s THAT John Green?

  • @unktheunk1428
    @unktheunk1428 Před 6 lety +284

    john's admiration for Margret Atwood is palpable

  • @Summer-qv6mf
    @Summer-qv6mf Před 5 lety +197

    I HAVE BEEN WATCHING THIS MAN FOR YEARS AND NEVER REALIZED HE WAS THE JOHN GREEN. ALL HAIL TO THIS LEGEND WHO TAUGHT ME 8TH AND 9TH GRADE HISTORY.

  • @horseenthusiast1250
    @horseenthusiast1250 Před 6 lety +803

    By the way, Margaret Atwood is definitely a literary genius. Her prose is absolutely gorgeous, and if you’ve only seen the tv show, go read a copy of the Handmaid’s Tale. It’s horrifyingly beautiful.

    • @recklessroges
      @recklessroges Před 6 lety +3

      Long before the tv show there was also the film of the book.

    • @likeastarbaby
      @likeastarbaby Před 6 lety +20

      the tv show is much better than the book. the book was frustratingly lacking in detail of the world she was trying to build, yet each scene was painfully over descriptive and tedious. the tv show is actually answering all the questions i had and has consequently made the story a lot more interesting and the characters a lot more three dimensional. the offred in the show is actually rebellious and thinks and sounds like a real person whereas the one in the book was just a robot who did what she was told. just my opinion anyway.

    • @Jarod-vg9wq
      @Jarod-vg9wq Před 6 lety +3

      I’ll go to the bookstore right away, also what other cool books has this amazing women written?

    • @valhalla1240
      @valhalla1240 Před 5 lety +28

      The true genius of Atwood isn't even that she wrote about something so daring, but rather that she managed to decunstruct storytelling in order to serve a more meaningful plot. When I tried writing a novel about my own experinces with sexual assault, I realized very quickly, how little my tale lived up to established plot-devices and storytelling-rules. I was often told a good plot consisted of an "active" protagonist, who felt "in charge of his/her destiny", who's life felt less circumstantial and rather l"ike a direct result of his/her actions". I was also told to never write about my own experiences, considering "most lives are too boring to read about". But who are the ones, who's stories match these criteria? Mainly straight white middleclass able-bodied cis-men of course. They're the ones who rule most aspects of life, they're the ones, who's actions are the most consequential, for themselves AND others. They're also the ones so blatantly ignorant to presume no one could possibly live through something worth reading about...
      Atwood's genius is that she spotted heroism in the quietest character-trait: resilience. She values inner conflict over outer. She shows the most vibrant rebellion in an act as small as spreading butter over your hands. This isn't just an attack on patriarchy outside of literature, it is a direct affront to the patriarchy hidden in the history of storytelling itself.

  • @paularodriguez726
    @paularodriguez726 Před 6 lety +971

    This book completly broke my heart. I truly had to recover before reading another book. I believe it's fantastic and enjoyed it sooo much

    • @Angela-pj5xy
      @Angela-pj5xy Před 6 lety +13

      I don't understand how this can be understand except as deranged anti-Christian screed how are people so ignorant as to take this serious at all.

    • @davidnmorrismorrisactor7117
      @davidnmorrismorrisactor7117 Před 6 lety +7

      Paula Rodriguez the book resembles too much like Scientology you don't have to believe me compare the handmaidens tale to Scientology and judge for yourself when art imitates life

    • @leaveme3559
      @leaveme3559 Před 6 lety +5

      Can someone suggest another good dystopian book to me

    • @davidnmorrismorrisactor7117
      @davidnmorrismorrisactor7117 Před 6 lety +3

      Paula Rodriguez its too much like War of the Worlds and Scientology

    • @davidnmorrismorrisactor7117
      @davidnmorrismorrisactor7117 Před 6 lety

      The Kamal Kartik ya Scott Fitzgerald

  • @oliverpaszkowski2457
    @oliverpaszkowski2457 Před 5 lety +900

    Offred
    She is Of fred
    She is Offered
    Handmaidebs wear red, she is off-red.

  • @FirstRisingSouI
    @FirstRisingSouI Před 6 lety +297

    Why wasn't I required to read this in school? It sounds awesome!

    • @rozempire2843
      @rozempire2843 Před 5 lety +4

      It is

    • @armedwombat6816
      @armedwombat6816 Před 5 lety +71

      Because it's reading, it's critical of moral values people would associate with Christianity so it would make conservatives angry, it was written by a woman...

    • @ricksaeta1975
      @ricksaeta1975 Před 5 lety +12

      We read it in 10th grade...

    • @makaylamariehutzel9723
      @makaylamariehutzel9723 Před 5 lety +7

      In school what age do you mean because there is sexual content in the book. As well as saying it sounds awesome, that’s kinda a disrespectful way to put it I know you didn’t mean it like that but it kinda is because of what is going on in the book.

    • @catherinemiller5994
      @catherinemiller5994 Před 5 lety +17

      ​@@armedwombat6816 I live in a conservative town in Texas. We read it in school. Gilead's doctrine is henpecked Christian text used support their religion of misogyny. In fact, they tend to detest people of other Christian denominations (killed Catholic priest and nuns, Baptist family run out of town).

  • @qtheplatypus
    @qtheplatypus Před 6 lety +637

    Reading is not illegal yet.
    Fahrenheit 451 .?

    • @aukluk
      @aukluk Před 6 lety +53

      Reading was illegal in Handmaid's Tale too.

    • @megashley1963
      @megashley1963 Před 6 lety +15

      That's the point. It's only in fiction that reading is illegal in the US (as of yet).

    • @merrittanimation7721
      @merrittanimation7721 Před 6 lety +11

      aukluk Only for women. The men can read though it's difficult to actually find anything to read.

    • @mjones2431
      @mjones2431 Před 6 lety

      Have you ever heard of a (I don't know how to pronounce it...) L...I...B...R...A...R...Y?

    • @rubiebarker5152
      @rubiebarker5152 Před 6 lety +11

      M Jones That is an irrelevant point. In the book they burn books and destroy many. And of course the people you sent this to have heard if libraries, they 're just saying that they could imagine in the future of the US it becoming illegal.

  • @armorsmith43
    @armorsmith43 Před 6 lety +295

    Is there a noncreepy word for having a professional crush on someone? Like where you are all “ohmygod I want to learn all the things from you”, but in an entirely boundary-respecting way? Because I feel like John has that about Atwood.
    I want there to be a word for this, because I’ve felt it.

  • @Kaotiqua
    @Kaotiqua Před rokem +6

    Handmaid's Tale was always horrifying. In the current climate, it's _terrifying_ .

  • @plinioamaral6736
    @plinioamaral6736 Před 6 lety +445

    Hey, where's "Young me from the past"??? He used to attend the literature classes.

    • @Aleph-Noll
      @Aleph-Noll Před 6 lety +31

      i think those are only for books he read when he was in highschool or otherwise young

    • @plinioamaral6736
      @plinioamaral6736 Před 6 lety +19

      Guess so, miss him though...

    • @joshbobst1629
      @joshbobst1629 Před 6 lety +9

      And World History. Maybe since this is Lit 400, he's too mature to be a comic foil now.

    • @micaelaroyo4837
      @micaelaroyo4837 Před 6 lety +5

      Lol, maybe he graduated 😂

    • @TheLadyRochester
      @TheLadyRochester Před 5 lety +6

      He must have skipped class today

  • @amy-fe1pp
    @amy-fe1pp Před 6 lety +143

    Covering two of my favourite books back to back... so satisfied

  • @merrittanimation7721
    @merrittanimation7721 Před 6 lety +189

    I read this book early this year and it horrified me to learn how closely it resembled Afghanistan under the Taliban. Mostly because when the book was written they were just one of many groups in the Mujahideen and had as much chance to be in power as the others

  • @thatjillgirl
    @thatjillgirl Před 6 lety +61

    I read this novel for the first time recently in preparation for this series. Earlier this year, I read Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi. I was feeling a lot of eerie echoes of Persepolis when reading The Handmaid's Tale. Even more reminder that it could happen.
    Also I found the part near the beginning when a group of Japanese tourists is visiting the town to be particularly chilling. It was even more evidence that Gilead wasn't some weird isolated dystopia that had totally stopped having interaction with the rest of the world. The rest of the world was still very much there. And yet the government takeover was so thoroughly successful that it didn't matter that life was proceeding normally in other countries. It was to me a very clear reminder that Gilead was not to be regarded as some strange phenomenon that could never actually happen but a very real threat.

    • @merrittanimation7721
      @merrittanimation7721 Před 6 lety +1

      thatjillgirl Happily Iran as described in Persepolis isn't as extreme as Gilead, though not in their methods. But the scene with the tourists was pretty disturbing, even compared to the wall of the executed later that chapter.

    • @thatjillgirl
      @thatjillgirl Před 6 lety +6

      Oh yeah, Gilead is worse for sure. But the sudden change in what women could wear, how men could interact with women, what items were legally available for sale, etc. all reminded me of Persepolis.

  • @kayeeelelwhyyy
    @kayeeelelwhyyy Před 6 lety +15

    second year doing this book in my lit class and its so life changing. favourite quotes are when she goes off on a tangent and then says 'that didnt actually happen, heres another version' or 'you dont tell a story to yourself, theres always someone, even when there is no one' also the PLOT TWIST in the historical notes

  • @liamdude5722
    @liamdude5722 Před 6 lety +32

    The ending of the Handmaids Tale kinda reminds me of Lemony Snicket, the way he constantly says that he wishes he could end his story with the Boudelaire orphans happy and with Count Olaf in jail.

  • @CharlesAbell
    @CharlesAbell Před rokem +6

    ….4 years later..we are still getting closer to this…

  • @johns4314
    @johns4314 Před 6 lety +9

    I’ve read a dozen of Atwood’s novels, two collections of short stories and two books of poetry. She is one of the giants of literature and a world treasure.

  • @angelfahlife6000
    @angelfahlife6000 Před 6 lety +20

    It took me a second to realise this was John Green, I started freaking out and I wanted to tell someone but then I realised it was 3am and I live alone 😂.

  • @lovelysan
    @lovelysan Před 6 lety +324

    Handsmaids Tale was one of the books that I was always happy to have read. It's terrifying in many ways, but also a great read. Thank you for this video giving it a highlight!
    Also, yeah, I know there's a Hulu series, but I haven't gotten around to watching it yet. I'm just kinda scared I'll be constantly comparing it to the book. haha. Glad it's getting good exposure though!

    • @jordanrenee9415
      @jordanrenee9415 Před 6 lety +8

      we read it in class & watched some of the series. it’s actually a pretty accurate representation of the book.

    • @horseenthusiast1250
      @horseenthusiast1250 Před 6 lety +22

      I found out about the book by watching the show (then I read the book bc I’m not an animal), and while the prose couldn’t be translated to the screen, I think the cinematography is a good substitute, and the show really holds up

    • @mcsmaria28
      @mcsmaria28 Před 6 lety +1

      lovelysan I love this book! I also haven’t watched the Hulu series for the reasons you stated.

    • @valchior4
      @valchior4 Před 6 lety

      Ok

    • @DQABlack
      @DQABlack Před 6 lety +2

      Moira fares a little better in the hulu version (although it is still similar) and the series is so popular that it looks like it may be continued from here, but generally speaking it's pretty true to the book

  • @dorothybloomberg9144
    @dorothybloomberg9144 Před 6 lety +67

    I bought 8 copies of his new book because guess what all my family members are getting for Christmas

  • @goldenleaf8256
    @goldenleaf8256 Před 6 lety +256

    JUST BECAUSE SOMEONE WRITES A GOOD BOOK DOESN’T MEAN THEY MUST WRITE MEANINGFUL AND ELOQUENT TWEETS. THEY’RE HUMANS WHO JUST WANT TO COMPLAIN LIKE A REGULAR PERSON.

  • @nutsaboutnames3805
    @nutsaboutnames3805 Před 6 lety +12

    When I first heard about 'The Handmaid's Tale', I read that it's about women trying to use agency, and I expected them to use way more agency than they did. So having that expectation, the book was even more heartbreaking than it would have been without it.

  • @freya7016
    @freya7016 Před 6 lety +40

    Love The Handmaid's Tale, love CrashCourse and love John Green but one thing that might be considered petty to point out is that in the Thought Bubble, Luke and Hannah are depicted like in the TV show, non-white, and additionally there is a black Handmaid, despite the fact that in the book, non-whites are sent to the Colonies as mentioned in this video. I feel like the animations were modelled on the TV show, which might be confusing for some when discussing the original work.

  • @whitneyl149
    @whitneyl149 Před 6 lety +97

    BRUH just read it it's worth your time it's SO GOOD

    • @9786oof
      @9786oof Před 6 lety +2

      Whitney L who will I analyze it w tho

    • @quleughy
      @quleughy Před 6 lety +2

      Agreed. Just finished reading this a few months ago. Well worth the read.

  • @noemielisep
    @noemielisep Před 5 lety +8

    Theres two seasons in the backwoods of Québec:
    1) Giant hoards of bugs trying to suck out your soul season and
    2) Minus 40 degrees freezing depth of winter season.
    You cant win.

  • @ariannemaskey9371
    @ariannemaskey9371 Před 6 lety +1

    Gosh, this is one of the best episodes of CrashCourse Lit I've seen yet. Great job team.

  • @triple0731
    @triple0731 Před 6 lety +8

    Oh my gosh thank you, I've been needing this video since I started studying it at A Level. Thank you so much, your videos are a great help! ❤

  • @Prince-wr5ou
    @Prince-wr5ou Před 5 lety +26

    Anyone else here the day before their A-Level Exam on the book?:)))))))

    • @shreyaseebs
      @shreyaseebs Před 4 lety

      Lmfao how did it go? I'm curious.. Bc im studying it at school for my A levels :")

  • @17spyguy
    @17spyguy Před 6 lety +55

    I feel like realistically enslaving a whole class of people and running a theocratic patriarchy would be really counter productive to curing a dangerous global low birth rate epidemic. It's a great book highly worth the read

    • @thatjillgirl
      @thatjillgirl Před 6 lety +28

      I'm not sure the declining birth rate was global in the book though. The infertility issues were implied to have stemmed from pollution and toxic materials. Presumably less polluted countries were not suffering the same fate.

    • @AoiLucine
      @AoiLucine Před 6 lety +26

      I think that's part of the point though. It's a cognitive dissonance you see in a lot of thoughts like that.

    • @Albinojackrussel
      @Albinojackrussel Před 6 lety +11

      That's the point. And those in charge know it. But they're in charge so who cares right

    • @sara_sah-raezzat5086
      @sara_sah-raezzat5086 Před 6 lety +41

      I think that's part of the cautionary tale; don't look to fanatics to solve real problems. It doesn't matter what form of fanaticism, fanatics only make things worse. I think that's part of why the last chapter is historians looking back so we can see how brief Gilead's rule was, how it was doomed to faliure.

    • @soapygirl83
      @soapygirl83 Před 6 lety +15

      theocratic patriarchies rarely act in a rational or practical manner

  • @berniekatzroy
    @berniekatzroy Před 6 lety +2

    Omg, I have been waiting for a handmaids tale crash course!

  • @nathanielbrown5791
    @nathanielbrown5791 Před 6 lety

    I'm so glad this show is back.

  • @fangirlfortheages5940
    @fangirlfortheages5940 Před 6 lety +6

    This is one of my favorite books. Thanks for doing an episode on it!

  • @ayla6123
    @ayla6123 Před 6 lety +3

    I would love to see John talking about his own books. That would be awesome!

  • @violetmoon1587
    @violetmoon1587 Před 6 lety +444

    The puff is reemerging

  • @maryhildreth754
    @maryhildreth754 Před 4 lety +2

    Its wonderful to find a video that discusses its topic without inserting political opinion about US politics after 2016. I have so much respect for those creators and I hope they stay around for a long, long time

  • @charlottex5936
    @charlottex5936 Před 5 lety +4

    Im using this for A Level revision so thank you!!! xx

  • @user-th3lm9gd2u
    @user-th3lm9gd2u Před 6 lety +26

    I'm studying this book for English A-Level. Am I alone in thinking that though an outstanding premise, the book is considerably flawed in execution? Don't get me wrong, the political parallels are fascinating and the world building is remarkable. But for me, I find that's pretty much it. Atwood seems so intent on creating an authentic world that she forgets to make anything happen in it. And I don't just mean in terms of action. Because when I have made these criticisms to my classmates the response is always 'nothing happens? but that's the point'. As John says in the video, the hero's journey isn't available to Offred and maybe that is the point. Firstly, I get that, but a good point doesn't always make a good story. And secondly, it's not so much that nothing happens, but rather that the story is unengaging because everything that happens, does just that: it happens - and nothing more. I understand that in such a repressive society, the novel's events cannot really be caused by the novel's primary characters; but it would be possible for Atwood to make these events have lasting consequences for the characters even if they weren't active in orchestrating them. I understand that this is a story which isn't character driven, but if that's the case, then surely you must make an even greater effort to make the characters engaging. And the characters in the novel aren't engaging. They have no real defining qualities, no aspects of their character which explain their actions. Why does Offred suddenly become outrageously reckless towards the novel's conclusion, "taking stupid chances" while visiting Nick, when any prior rebellion has been either forced by an external character (e.g. fear of reprimand from the Commander if she does not visit him in his study) or entirely internal (merely thinking about the past and dreaming of a return to it)? The only reason I can find is her visit to Jezebel's - maybe seeing Moira no longer rebellious inspires her to be more rebellious. Even if this implicit reasoning is true, my issue is this: we know from the Historical Notes that Offred does make it out alive. So in what way does she pay for her recklessness? In what way does she pay for any of the decisions she makes throughout the entire novel? Other than perhaps Ofglen, in what way does any character pay for any of their decisions. Every uncomfortable or tragic event is caused by the society that was shaped by events external to the narrative of the story, which though sad and interesting as a political allegory, doesn't make a good story.
    I know my thoughts are disordered, but does anyone have any response to my issues with the text and could maybe help me start to enjoy it and see the 'genius' in it that I'm clearly missing.

    • @meatpuppet2136
      @meatpuppet2136 Před 6 lety +5

      You are right that the book is flawed in execution, and incorrect that it is based upon an outstanding premise. It sucks in every respect.

    • @eddiewillers1
      @eddiewillers1 Před 6 lety +5

      You are right - there are some searing flaws in the narrative. However, it's because of those flaws that, I believe, Atwood used the framing narrative device to present Offred's story from a point many, many years after it happened; this presents an easy way to avoid explaining some of the anachronisms and inconsistencies in the main text. For example, we are told that there was massive environmental degradation that led to dangerously low fertility levels - so why not use IVF?
      Framing narratives can be a lazy author's 'get out of jail' card in the same way as the deus ex machina.

    • @moriahjmiller
      @moriahjmiller Před 5 lety +6

      I thoroughly enjoyed the beginning of the book - I wanted to binge read it all! However, about halfway through I began noticing the things you mentioned (among others) that took me out of the story. I found myself not enjoying it, and finishing it just to finish it. It was very disappointing because I started off loving it!
      I also felt a disconnect with the books having been originally tapes. I can see how the style could have been spoken, but that also made me think, “Wait, really?” Granted, the professors could have edited it...minor complaint, but a complaint nonetheless.
      Not really impressed with the book, but I could recommend it. I would say culturally it’s a necessary read right now in this political and social climate

    • @robynsun
      @robynsun Před 5 lety +1

      What novel are you studying it with?

  • @joyrowancasey788
    @joyrowancasey788 Před 6 lety +1

    I adore both the book and the film The Handmaid's Tale and I am so hyped for season 2

  • @ohyeah6729
    @ohyeah6729 Před 4 lety

    Excellent analysis, John. Thank you.

  • @bandgeek9723
    @bandgeek9723 Před 6 lety +5

    I have a first edition of this book. I am proud of it.

  • @miriambradsell7473
    @miriambradsell7473 Před 4 lety +3

    All UK schools are shut so John Green is now my English teacher

  • @kimberlymartin7498
    @kimberlymartin7498 Před 5 lety

    I love your videos. I watched them every day in every class. You do them so well

  • @arielaguilera96
    @arielaguilera96 Před 6 lety

    I will never get tired of John Green teaching me stuff

  • @asherteddington1694
    @asherteddington1694 Před 4 lety +8

    For anyone who wants to get through the beginning, he actually starts summarizing the book at 4:26.

  • @marianaribeiro8830
    @marianaribeiro8830 Před 6 lety +16

    I love the Handmaid's Tale, haven't read the book but the series is amazing! Thanks for this video!

    • @lucykeegan6303
      @lucykeegan6303 Před 6 lety

      Mariana Ribeiro the series is very different from the book..they have obviously taken her ideas and built upon them. I really enjoyed both

  • @englishmuffin7
    @englishmuffin7 Před 4 lety +2

    I love your book, even though the anxiety i deal with isn't the same, it's similar. Ava captured me from her first words and had me on an emotional roller coaster and i relate with her mentally most of all. I get her way of thinking and how the things she was going through doesn't go away like magic. It's a real issue that will always be there, but can be lessened, snd this gave me hope during my first year in college. I love this book so much💖

  • @Gabhrienne
    @Gabhrienne Před 6 lety +1

    omg! I'm so happy you made this! You're awesome!

  • @theisadiaries
    @theisadiaries Před 4 lety +4

    this book is just pure, unadulterated genius

  • @lami2909
    @lami2909 Před 6 lety +16

    The Handmaid's tale is so terrifying it makes me cry.

    • @AnthonyRobinson-rc9yd
      @AnthonyRobinson-rc9yd Před 5 lety +2

      Why it's just a book

    • @elijahidemudia1607
      @elijahidemudia1607 Před 4 lety +6

      @@AnthonyRobinson-rc9yd You must be dense.

    • @paulchristian7693
      @paulchristian7693 Před 4 lety +1

      Mae here....🙋🏻‍♀️ I stated reading it in 1984 but couldn’t finish it because it frighten me. It seemed too real. 😫

  • @nancypineda3973
    @nancypineda3973 Před 6 lety +1

    I know that John would never read this, but I Just love his personality, I know nothing about literature and I dont have much interest about it but doesnt stop me from enjoying this content and learn something way different than my field

  • @RougeRavenDesigns
    @RougeRavenDesigns Před 6 lety +1

    This is my favorite novel! Thank you for covering it :)

  • @kimberlyrobinson3992
    @kimberlyrobinson3992 Před 5 lety +3

    Good analysis of the book. I have to quibble, though, with your comparison of Offred and Winston, from "1984", regarding retention of self-identity. It's an apples to oranges comparison. Winston Smith has never known what normal life is, whereas Offred certainly does. Winston was born during the wartime chaos that led to the party of Big Brother taking over. So, he's spent most of his life in the Party system and hasn't known another way of life. Freedom is something he can only dimly imagine, the same way a fish is dimly aware that there's life moving around on the beach but can't quite envision a way of life that doesn't involve being surrounded by water. Offred was an adult when Gilead was created. She had a fully formed Ego; she was a wife, a mother, an educated individual. It's not impossible to break a person like that down but it is harder. Plus, as a fertile woman, Offred does have inherent value. Winston really has none. What is terrifying is what will happen to the second generation, all the children in Gilead being born at the present time. They will be like Winston is. They'll have a vague hatred towards the system but they won't know how to act out against it. They'll be reduced to childish acts of rebellion like scribbling bad words against the government in a notebook -- the ones who ever learn how to read and write, that is.

  • @noahv7528
    @noahv7528 Před 5 lety +8

    Dear authors’ twitter accounts: why did you have to ruin my perception that an author I love isn’t a TERF?

  • @stormyuniverse97
    @stormyuniverse97 Před 6 lety +1

    I love this!
    I have read the book, but I really enjoy how you pulled it apart!

  • @dmknight08
    @dmknight08 Před 4 lety +1

    Off to read this book!

  • @Ilichburger
    @Ilichburger Před 6 lety +30

    I miss when John had the twinkle in his eye (like in Crash Course World History)

    • @Ilichburger
      @Ilichburger Před 6 lety

      I really wonder what happened

    • @thickerthanwater42
      @thickerthanwater42 Před 6 lety

      Ilichburger He aged by like 7 years maybe?

    • @Ilichburger
      @Ilichburger Před 6 lety

      Ageing doesnt necessarily make you sadder

    • @YvonneKa
      @YvonneKa Před 6 lety +4

      He speaks slower in these videos (that was a criticism of many in the earlier videos) so it may be that this is what your conflating with being down/defeated/without twinkle?

    • @Ilichburger
      @Ilichburger Před 6 lety +2

      Oh that may be it! You are right!
      I have to admit, I loved that fast pace he used to have when he talked, so full of energy, but you are right there! Not tiredness, just a more gentle rythm

  • @Nexusfighter
    @Nexusfighter Před 6 lety +6

    I know you've probably already recorded everything...but please do an episode on something from Ursula K. Le Guin! She's written so many amazing novels :)

  • @hermionepurni9
    @hermionepurni9 Před 6 lety +2

    my dad was an activist for the people affected by the Bhopal gas leak. I was gonna read the handmaid's tale anyway, but now I'm even more excited

  • @clarity1984
    @clarity1984 Před 6 lety +1

    What a superb crash course! Margaret Atwood is truly a genius, though I must say THT broke my heart and shook me entirely. It's terrifying.

  • @skyhunterloveu
    @skyhunterloveu Před 5 lety +9

    1:55-2:00 is Harry Potter fans when they read J K Rowling's or Pottermore's tweets

  • @kristalcampbell3650
    @kristalcampbell3650 Před 5 lety +3

    I think not only CAN it happen but it HAS happened. Particularly in the USA enslaved women were handmaids. My ancestors were legally barred from reading and retaining their language and customs (under threat of torture and death) and we were separated from our children and partners to be systematically raped and "bred" like animals sometimes by other slaves under the direction of masters and other times by the master's themselves. Reading this to some extent felt like a window into what my great grandmother experienced right down to the editorializing that boils the attrocity down to "it was a different time we need to understand it", "some of them weren't treated badly", and " but it's interesting how it all worked as a system isn't it?". This was a difficult one to get through.

  • @leslie6757
    @leslie6757 Před 5 lety

    The show is so much more enthralling and detailed, but I did enjoy the book as well!

  • @roochiepoo
    @roochiepoo Před 6 lety

    Just spotted the 'Turtles all the way down' title of your book Greene.
    Nice Sagan / Hawking reference.

  • @Autofill120
    @Autofill120 Před 6 lety +12

    Is there any chance "Pedro Paramo" by Juan Rulfo can be featured one of these days on the Literature Crash Course? It's a short read, but one of the most important in mexican literature (yes, more magical realism).

  • @rebeccakay2320
    @rebeccakay2320 Před 5 lety +3

    I love John green and Margaret Attwood 😍😍

  • @teriyama
    @teriyama Před 6 lety

    I love love the sticker on Johns monitor

  • @fantasticbeck3938
    @fantasticbeck3938 Před 6 lety +1

    I find this video very helpful as I have to read The Handmaid’s Tale for my grade eleven English class. Very interesting and insightful.

  • @gemmaohlemacher
    @gemmaohlemacher Před 6 lety +23

    I know this is being picky, but Luke is not black in the book. That was changed in the show. I feel it is important to specify because they use the baby girl against Offred later showing that she is healthy and happy with a family. All POC in the book were banished.
    I haven't seen the show yet. I am sure there is a good twist on it for the show but we are talking about the book here. Hopefully we discuss this in later episodes.

    • @lucykeegan6303
      @lucykeegan6303 Před 6 lety +5

      Gemma Ohlemacher in the TV show there are various people of colour, obviously to appeal to modern audiences. They don’t make any mention to POC being banished in the show. Seems the Thought Bubble artist was heavily influenced by it because all the Characters look like their TV counterparts.

    • @taliakellegg5978
      @taliakellegg5978 Před 6 lety +2

      i feel like pandering to the left is something you want to do in a ultra conservative distopia

    • @thatboringone7851
      @thatboringone7851 Před 6 lety +5

      Lucy Keegan
      It wasn't to appeal to modern audiences, the people working on the show just thought it would make more internal sense for Gilead to try to maximize how many births happen under them (after all, their justifications early on hinged on "this is what we need to do to keep the birth rate stable"). From what I've heard, they aren't opposed to showing more of the racism element from the book later on.

  • @j00nebug
    @j00nebug Před 6 lety +6

    I know this is a small detail, but I can't help but bump on John saying Moira was sterilized when she was re-captured. I'm pretty confident she says to Offred that she had her tubes tied ages ago. I'm sure many of the women in the club were, but that was a particular piece of agency Moira had excersied before it could be forced upon her.

    • @eveitsnotthatserious1677
      @eveitsnotthatserious1677 Před 5 lety +2

      You got me thinking now. I don't remember, I'm gonna have to dig up my book and look it up.
      But if Moira had her tubes tied previously how could she have been in training to be a handmaid? Her whole purpose as a handmaid is to bear children. She would've been sent to the Colonies, with the other "un-women".
      But , again, I dont remember. Time to re-read the book 😉

  • @Vesnicie
    @Vesnicie Před 5 lety

    Always appreciate John's hair-by-wind-tunnel look.

  • @smartpig555119
    @smartpig555119 Před 4 lety +1

    If we consider as well the origins of "speculative" it provides us with an insight into how clever Atwoods self titled genre is; specifically in the case of The Handmaid's Tale. "Speculum", can refer to an instrument used to dialate a canal or orifice; a highly polished or reflective surface or can describe the colourful plummage of exotic or domestic birds. Atwood's a genius in layering meaning.

  • @iBreatheCarolina91
    @iBreatheCarolina91 Před 5 lety +5

    I finally read this, and that’s because it was required in my English class. So happy to have read this at the age of 27! Any younger, I would’ve been more confused. And older, I would’ve been sad that I waited so long.
    Such a fantastic book, and scary look at a dreary future for women. I’m excited to read the sequel!

  • @johnspence8141
    @johnspence8141 Před 4 lety +3

    4:30 you're welcome

  • @northwestrain
    @northwestrain Před 6 lety

    I just finished the two Earthseed books and this review reaally made me want to read the Handmaid's Tale. I guess that is up next!

  • @leonietrzeba6778
    @leonietrzeba6778 Před 6 lety

    I'm reading this book atm thanks John

  • @thelionskiln
    @thelionskiln Před 5 lety +5

    This book left me feeling haunted and almost lost, with my foundation shaken. All that said, It's a beautiful, and I enjoyed it so much. Has to be a top shelf keeper.

  • @RGld-jg8rs
    @RGld-jg8rs Před 6 lety +5

    I was reading Throne of Glass series by Sarah J Maas, it's one of my favourite series. I was on Goodreads and was looking for similar books. I looked at a list called Strong Female Leads. The Handmaid's Tale was listed and reading the description and reviews was horrifying. The premise was abhorrent due to the fact it makes you consider a horrible situation which is completely possible. The following year the T.V series was released. My Literature teacher recommended it to us. She said "we are women who are studying literature, I want you to look at a world where you have the right to read taken away from you"

  • @paularodriguez726
    @paularodriguez726 Před 6 lety

    The narration from audible is delightful

  • @limedelta8
    @limedelta8 Před 5 lety +1

    I have to do a one-pager in English class on a book I’ve read. I decided on this book, because it’s just amazing.

  • @crabyman3555
    @crabyman3555 Před 6 lety +8

    well this is depressing.......I would fight and die, rather than let this sort of thing happen to my country

  • @km1dash6
    @km1dash6 Před 5 lety +4

    Offred is also off red. She's not just another Handmade dressed in red. She's different. We get to hear her story.

  • @meg5762
    @meg5762 Před 6 lety

    Thank you for making this!

  • @deniseglines1705
    @deniseglines1705 Před 6 lety

    I was in high school when this books came out, I couldn't finish it. It was too close to home, too much like my home. Thanks to Crash Course for explaining parts I never read, maybe I will someday.

  • @fairyofdoom5009
    @fairyofdoom5009 Před rokem +2

    im so scared

  • @phoebehoward8398
    @phoebehoward8398 Před rokem +3

    3.50 of the video feels too real now

  • @NaumRusomarov
    @NaumRusomarov Před 6 lety +1

    Wow, the book really is soul crushing.

  • @yaumelepire6310
    @yaumelepire6310 Před 6 lety

    Hi from Québec everyone! It's fun getting our little piece of home mentionned...

  • @VTUL92
    @VTUL92 Před 5 lety +3

    Ok why did I cry through this whole episode? I know its just a book but my heart feels burdened by all the years of oppression that the women who came before me, even the women I share this world with today and I have gone through. My heart aches for you, for us, I hope for us a world where we will never have to go through the spectrum of pain and suffering inherited with being a woman. I wish for you the best kind of pain and challenges for a whole and complete life. I know its just a book, but I can see myself and my experiences in the storytelling. You are my sisters, we are united in our joys as well as our pain. I forgive you for the wrong you have done to me, i love you for all the right and nurturing. I thank all the brave or silently brave women who came before me.

  • @famitory
    @famitory Před 6 lety +6

    "This machine kills fascist" just the one, though.

  • @rhiannonsm4230
    @rhiannonsm4230 Před 6 lety

    YES!! This is on the HSC text list for next year and I can't wait to get started

  • @ehert6964
    @ehert6964 Před 6 lety

    I literally just ended my unit on this novel today (I handed in my assignment today). Perfect timing!