Riviere, Lit Log #1, Confronting The Wall
Confronting The Wall
College English Ms. Pahomov Beau Riviere September 29, 2025
Six chapters into the Handmaids Tale I encountered one scene that made me take a new look and perspective on how humans are intrigued by different sightings. When I read the scene where Offred first describes The Wall and what she was seeing I was in disbelief.
She described such a horrific and gruesome image that they were looking at. When she describes it as “there are six more bodies hanging, by the necks, their hands tied in front of them, their heads in white bags tipped sideways onto their shoulders”(32). The detail Offred goes into on how their bodies are positioned after execution is very graphic and gruesome for one to imagine by just reading a book let alone actually seeing this happen right in front of you.
Then she says “We stop, together as if on signal, and stand and look at the bodies. It doesn’t matter if we look. We’re supposed to look: this is what they are there for”(32). Offred describing how dragged in they got by this scene and how they starred and looked at it made it seem as if it were something impressive to look at, but there was nothing impressive or good about this scene displayed before them to look at. This scene before them was horrendous and I think that's exactly why they were so dragged in to look.
As humans when we see something in life that we may think is difficult to view or watch we tend to look at it more and become more intrigued by it. I think this scene is a perfect example of that because just reading this book I got intrigued by a scene that was so graphic and I know I wouldn't want to see it in real life but here I am writing about it because while it is horrifying it is also gravitating and I think Gilead uses this to their advantage.
Gilead wants to use these executions and bodies in public as a way to scare the people of Gilead into behaving well and complying with their rules. They want everyone to know that if they get rid of babies or the chance to have a baby that they will be killed and killed in public for everyone to see.
Now another way Gilead could go about enforcing the rules about abortion is by giving jail time to people to break them but they know that wouldn't have the impact that execution has. When people go to jail and serve time it's not difficult for people on the outside to see that and accept that and it wouldn't scare them into behaving well and complying with them. On the other hand, execution leaves a mark that makes it so people can't get it out of their heads and they can't quite get enough of it to stop looking. So by having a punishment that people can't stop looking at and consuming it leaves a print of fear and understanding of consequence in their heads.
Offred says “They have committed atrocities and must be made into examples, for the rest”(33). This quote shows that executions make these men good examples for the rest of what not to do. When the people of Gilead stare at them, and they will, they get this idea that becomes imprinted in their brains that if they ever try to break the rules and orders of the society that they will pay the ultimate price with their lives.
Another thing that execution does in favor of Gilead waiting control is it almost brainwashes the people in society into thinking the way that the government thinks. By showing such gruesome consequences for actions done by these doctors it creates a connection between abortion and terrible consequences for the onlooker to have to the point where the person who keeps looking at The Wall will eventually get the idea that if you are in favor of or have the idea of having an abortion you are thinking the wrong way and committing a terrible act. This helps Gilead get the people under their control to start to think the way they do which will allow them to not have as much resistance from the citizens.
Overall the scene in Chapter 6 where Offred talks about her observing the wall provided me with a new and intriguing view on how big groups of power use violence to persuade and convey the people they are looking to control.
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