God's Plan In Gilead Playlist

God´s Plan - Drake

Book Quote ¨Nolite te bastardes carborundorum. ¨

Song Lyric: ¨Might go down a G.O.D. I go hard on Southside G¨ Drake

Drake’s God plan reflects the tension between fate and resistance that runs through The Handmaid’s Tale. The Latin phrase carved into Offred’s closet Don’t let the bastards grind you down ‘becomes her Mantra or survival. Similarly, Drake frames his entire path as both guided and personally defiant, pushing through obstacles with faith and persistence. His lyric about God’s plan resonates with Gilead’s obsession with religion and Destiny, but it takes it to another level through its perspective. The regime claims authority; however, her survival is on her own quiet resistance. While Drake’s Anthem celebrates success and blessings in the novel, it becomes ironic that God’s supposed plan is twisted into control. This mirrors Red’s resilience on memory solidarity and hope that can carry her forward, and a system that was made to break her down.

Wicked Games- The Weeknd

Book Quote: ¨When we think of the past, it’s the beautiful things we pick out. We want to believe it was all like that.¨ Chapter 23

Song Lyric: ¨Bring your love, baby, I could bring my shame.¨ Offred’s longing for her past her husband, her child, and her freedom contrasts with the shame that is imposed on her body by Gilead. The Weeknd’s confession of brokenness and using love as an escape aligns with Offrend’s moments of passion with Nick. It is love as rebellion, sex as survival, and memory as the only anchor. Atwood’s quote about remembering only the “beautiful things” mirrors how Offred clings to past intimacy with Luke, yet uses Nick as a present refuge. Like the song, her sexuality becomes both freedom and burden, a wicked game she cannot fully win but cannot abandon either.

Bad Religion- Frank Ocean

Book Quote: ¨Better never means better for everyone… it always means worse for some.

Song Lyric: ¨if it brings me to my knees, it’s a bad religion.¨

Frank Ocena’s song about unrequited love directly connects to Gilead’s corrupted theology. Religion has become the justification for oppression. Frank’s refrain about kneeling to ¨bad religion¨ becomes a beautiful metaphor for the forced prayers, ceremonies, and rituals that strip women of power. It’s a cry but also a critique of faith warped into oppression. Offred recognizes the lie in the Commander’s claim that their new world is “better.” For the women, this faith is not salvation but oppression. The song’s aching tone reflects Offred’s inner conflict: faith should uplift, but in Gilead it becomes a prison disguised as holiness.

Haunted- Beyonce

Book quote: ¨we were the people who were not in the paper.¨ Chapter 10

Song Lyric: ¨ I know if I’m haunting you, you must be haunting me¨

This track captures Offred’s constant feeling of being watched by the eyes of the commander and other handmaids. However, it also speaks to how the past haunts her. Her husband, Luke, and her daughter are like ghosts in her mind, haunting her daily existence. Beyoncé’s eerie delivery captures the tension between desire and fear that rules life under Gilead. Also, Beyoncé’s lyric about mutual haunting reflects the way Offrend and the system are locked in an unbreakable relationship. She resists silently, but Gilead itself haunts her every thought. The eerie tones of the song mirror the suffocating atmosphere of the novel, where silence, whispers, and the wretched eyes define existence.

Freedom Beyonce: Book Quote: “Better never means better for everyone… It always means worse for some.”

Song Lyric: “I’ma keep runnin’ Cause a winner don’t quit on themselves.”

Beyoncé’s Freedom embodies the resilience buried within The Handmaid’s Tale. The commander justifies Gilead as a better society, yet Offred realizes that this so-called progress is built on suffering. Beyonce’s lyric, ¨Imma keep runnin’ cause a winner dont quit on themselves, ¨ resonates as a rallying cry for the handmaids who endure oppression while holding onto fragmenst og hope. Though stripped of names, voices, and rights, they resist destruction by surviving. The rhythm of the song mirrors the suppressed march of women forced into silence. Offred’s daily acts of remembering her daughter, narrating her story, and finding moments of love echo Beyoncé’s refusal to surrender. Lines like ¨im telling these tears, go and fall away¨ capture the determination to endure the pain without letting it define identity. In Gilead, grief is constant, yet persistence is a form of rebellion. Kendrick Lamar’s verse about breaking chains directly parallels the Handmaid’s reality. Though trapped in ritual and law, they dream about freedom, cutting themselves loose. Beyoncé’s repeated cry ¨freedom Freedom I can’t move cut me loose!¨ becomes an anthem of all women in Gilead, always being silenced, controlled, but not broken. It is the sound of endurance that turns into resistance.

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