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The significance of Scrabble in the handmaid's tale

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The significance of Scrabble in the handmaid's tale

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  • 7 mei 2022
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Balemans-Højberg 1
Cecilie Balemans-Højberg

Dr. Dara Downey

Contemporary Dystopian Fiction (ENG10170)

13 December 2021

2153 words

The Duality of Scrabble in The Handmaid’s Tale

Gilead is a theocracy where women only have one function: to bear children for the nation. For

women, certain actions like reading and writing are strictly forbidden; their language, and with that,

their power and autonomy, is taken away from them (Atwood 45 & Namjoo 89). Because reading

and writing are illegal for Offred, it is kind of ironic that the Commander asks to play a game of

Scrabble with her (Atwood 144). When the Commander asks this, Offred’s initial response is

wanting to burst out laughing, as she expected to be summoned to fulfil a sexual desire of his,

instead of playing an old people’s game (Atwood 144). However, as Offred starts to think about it

more, Scrabble now brings a level of excitement. The game has become desirable as Offred is

offered something she used to have access to, and she feels empowered upon being able to use

language again (Atwood 145). There is a duality when it comes to the game of scrabble in The

Handmaid’s Tale. To Offred, playing Scrabble is a way to regain a bit of the power she used to have,

whereas for the Commander, the game of Scrabble is another means to assert his power over Offred

and subject her to his desires.

The game of Scrabble brings Offred freedom; it allows her to have power over her own

language use to the point where she feels empowered to tell her life story through the words she

plays in her games with the Commander. Namjoo notes that offering Offred to play Scrabble gives

her access to use language which was previously forbidden to her (Namjoo 92). Once Offred has

access to the language, she uses it to “overthrow the patriarchal language” by using the scrabble

tiles to spell out words that symbolise her tragic story (Namjoo 89). In her first round of Scrabble,

, Balemans-Højberg 2
Offred spells the words larynx, valance, quince, zygote, limp and gorge (Atwood 145). The words

larynx, the part of the throat that contains the vocal cords, and gorge, “the external throat,” may

represent the same message to Offred (“Larynx” & “Gorge”). As both refer to the throat, these

words may be representing the idea that women in Gilead are not allowed to use their voices

(Atwood 45). It could be interpreted as Offred using her newfound freedom, her access to language

through the game of Scrabble, to tell her story, which is something she has not been able to do

before (Atwood 145). The word valance has two definitions, which could each refer to a different

part of Offred’s tale. One meaning of the word is “[a] flap attached to a head-dress, [especially] as a

protection against the sun” (“Valance”). This could refer to “the white wings and the veil” that the

handmaids are wearing (Atwood 15). The shielding of the sun and protecting of the head could be a

metaphor for Offred needing to shield her thoughts from the outside world as she cannot speak

freely without severe consequences (“Valance”). However, a valance can also be a “drapery hanging

round the canopy of a bed” (“Valance”). This could refer to the “canopy of Serena Joy’s […] bed,

and thus the word valance could be a reference to The Ceremony that Offred’s forced to part-take

in (Atwood 100). The word zygote also ties into Offred’s referring to her role as a handmaid.

Because a zygote is a fertilised egg, think links to Offred being one of the few fertile women who is

forced to bear children of the nation as she refers to the handmaids as being “two-legged

wombs” (“Zygote” & Atwood 142). Not only does Offred tell the story of her life as it is now, but

she also tells the story of her life before Gilead through the word quince. A quince is a fruit of the

Cydonia oblonga tree, which, by itself, could refer to Offred as being the tree, the handmaid, that is

bearing fruit, children, for the nation (“Quince”). However, Applebaum notes that the forbidden

fruit in the Biblical story of Adam and Eve might have been a quince as the Latin word malum

refers to “any tree-fruit fleshy on the outside and having a kernel within” and is often interpreted as

being an apple (Applebaum 224). In the story of Adam and Eve, where they ate from the forbidden

fruit, Eve is portrayed as a seductress (Glenn 180). Like Eve, Offred was also marked as a

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