Atwood Feminist Quotes

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I sink down into my body as into a swamp, fenland, where only I know the footing…. I’m a cloud, congealed around a central object, the shape of a pear, which is hard and more real than I am and glows red within its translucent wrapping. Inside it is a space, huge as the sky at night and dark and curved like that, though black-red rather than black.
Margaret Atwood (The Handmaid’s Tale (The Handmaid's Tale, #1))
The more women writers I read, from Margaret Atwood and Octavia Butler to Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Toni Morrison, the less alone I felt, and the more I began to see myself as part of something more. It wasn’t about one woman toiling against the universe. It was about all of us moving together, crying out into some black, inhospitable place that we would not be quiet, we would not go silently, we would not stop speaking, we would not give in. *
Kameron Hurley (The Geek Feminist Revolution)
So, the book is not 'anti-religion.' It is against the use of religion as a front for tyranny; which is a different thing altogether.
Margaret Atwood (The Handmaid's Tale)
A lot of people call you a feminist painter." "What indeed," I say. "I hate party lines, I hate ghettos. Anyway. I'm too old to have invented it and you're too young to understand it, so what's the point of discussing it at all?
Margaret Atwood
I never made dough women, because after they were baked I would eat them, and that made me feel I had a secret power over men.
Margaret Atwood (The Testaments (The Handmaid's Tale, #2))
However, this does not make The Handmaid’s Tale a “feminist dystopia” except insofar as giving a woman a voice and an inner life will always be considered “feminist” by those who think women ought not to have these things. (Scientific Romancing)
Margaret Atwood (Burning Questions: Essays and Occasional Pieces, 2004 to 2021)
Thus possibly our rape and subsequent hanging represent the overthrow of a matrilineal moon-cult by an incoming group of usurping patriarchal father-god-worshipping barbarians. The chief of them, notably Odysseus, would then claim kingship by marrying the High Priestess of our cult, namely Penelope. No, Sir, we deny that this theory is merely unfounded feminist claptrap. We can understand your reluctance to have such things brought out into the open “ rapes and murders are not pleasant subjects “ but such overthrows most certainly took place all around the Mediterranean Sea, as excavations at prehistoric sites have demonstrated over and over.
Margaret Atwood (The Penelopiad)
Atwood is the first author to contribute to The Future Library Project, which takes one writer’s contribution each year for the next hundred years. Unfortunately, we will not know what she has contributed until the year 2114!
Rhiannon Lee (The Science of Strong Women: The True Stories Behind Your Favorite Fictional Feminists)