Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Serena will be tempted next week. I'm very excited to see what she chooses.
I'm pretty sure she won't betray her husband and Gilead, even if she is tempted. Remember she is one of the architects of this world, even if she has suffered in its execution.
Yes, but I think she will take the deal. I'm not sure she was ever beaten before. Right now she is embarrassed and sad, but soon she will be pissed.
I don’t know about never been beaten before— she seemed to know exactly what she was expected to do.
Yep.
But it’s ritualized violence so she might know the ritual without having been subjected to it before, right? Even in today’s world, there are these wacky “Christian” sects that preach a form of ritualized violence to train women and children to be obedient. I would imagine Serena is familiar with their version of that literature (and maybe even wrote it), but she’s never been disobedient before so never had to be disciplined in that manner. I agree that it may result in a long-term rage, as she feels that Gilead’s goals (promoting live births and punishing “bad” women) have been twisted. I wish there was a way to show her those state run whore houses—that would really piss her off!
Anonymous wrote:In the book I thought there was a STD that had left the majority of the population infertile? I'm going to go grab my book and double check.
We know Mexico had a similar problem when they came to visit in Season 1 of the show.
"Most of those old gusy can't make it anymore," he says. "Or they're sterile."
I almost gasp: he's said a forbidden word. Sterile. Ther is no such thing as a sterile man anymore, not officially. There are only women who are fruitful and women who are barren, that's the law.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Serena will be tempted next week. I'm very excited to see what she chooses.
I'm pretty sure she won't betray her husband and Gilead, even if she is tempted. Remember she is one of the architects of this world, even if she has suffered in its execution.
Yes, but I think she will take the deal. I'm not sure she was ever beaten before. Right now she is embarrassed and sad, but soon she will be pissed.
I don’t know about never been beaten before— she seemed to know exactly what she was expected to do.
Yep.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ahhh next week's preview! Anyone think something is going on with Eden and the guard?
I think we need Eden's backstory to figure her out. I assume she is the daughter of a handmaid who was separated from her family around age 8, and raised by the ruling class? If she was from an eco-family, I don't know that she would be so indoctrinated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Loved this episode. The cracks are starting to show around Gilead.
Gilead’s whole raison d’etre, per Serena, is to ensure healthy babies are born and the human race lives on. In Serena’s mind, everything she does serves to justify that purpose. Of course, as they are starting to figure out, a society where women can’t thrive is one where children can’t thrive either. It’s becoming increasingly obvious that the men ruling Gilead care more about asserting their power over everyone else than about producing healthy babies - this is why Fred refused to allow the female neonatologist to see Charlotte. Also, when Serena was confronted by Fred and she said “I did this to help a child; what greater duty is there?” Frank replied, “Obeying your husband.”
Serena is a proud woman, but I think she will turn against Gilead in the future once she realizes what Gilead is *really* about (men, not children). All she wants is to save the children. They’re showing her in a more sympthetic light now, and she appeared more empathic to the Handmaidens as mothers in this episode.
Side theory: I suspect Serena is not infertile after all. We know that Fred couldn’t get June/Offred pregnant. How are we to know that Serenaded is infertile when she hasn’t been with any other men? I see the “barren woman” label potentially pushing her over the edge somehow.
I thought we knew she was infertile bc she got shot in the stomach earlier. She knew she could never get pregnant.
Why are they against IVF to produce healthy babies?
Generally anti-technology and advocates of returning to "nature." One nonsensical piece though is the idea that the commanders wouldn't simply have their sperm tested to determine fertility.
Anonymous wrote:Ahhh next week's preview! Anyone think something is going on with Eden and the guard?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Loved this episode. The cracks are starting to show around Gilead.
Gilead’s whole raison d’etre, per Serena, is to ensure healthy babies are born and the human race lives on. In Serena’s mind, everything she does serves to justify that purpose. Of course, as they are starting to figure out, a society where women can’t thrive is one where children can’t thrive either. It’s becoming increasingly obvious that the men ruling Gilead care more about asserting their power over everyone else than about producing healthy babies - this is why Fred refused to allow the female neonatologist to see Charlotte. Also, when Serena was confronted by Fred and she said “I did this to help a child; what greater duty is there?” Frank replied, “Obeying your husband.”
Serena is a proud woman, but I think she will turn against Gilead in the future once she realizes what Gilead is *really* about (men, not children). All she wants is to save the children. They’re showing her in a more sympthetic light now, and she appeared more empathic to the Handmaidens as mothers in this episode.
Side theory: I suspect Serena is not infertile after all. We know that Fred couldn’t get June/Offred pregnant. How are we to know that Serenaded is infertile when she hasn’t been with any other men? I see the “barren woman” label potentially pushing her over the edge somehow.
I thought we knew she was infertile bc she got shot in the stomach earlier. She knew she could never get pregnant.
Why are they against IVF to produce healthy babies?
Anonymous wrote:Loved this episode. The cracks are starting to show around Gilead.
Gilead’s whole raison d’etre, per Serena, is to ensure healthy babies are born and the human race lives on. In Serena’s mind, everything she does serves to justify that purpose. Of course, as they are starting to figure out, a society where women can’t thrive is one where children can’t thrive either. It’s becoming increasingly obvious that the men ruling Gilead care more about asserting their power over everyone else than about producing healthy babies - this is why Fred refused to allow the female neonatologist to see Charlotte. Also, when Serena was confronted by Fred and she said “I did this to help a child; what greater duty is there?” Frank replied, “Obeying your husband.”
Serena is a proud woman, but I think she will turn against Gilead in the future once she realizes what Gilead is *really* about (men, not children). All she wants is to save the children. They’re showing her in a more sympthetic light now, and she appeared more empathic to the Handmaidens as mothers in this episode.
Side theory: I suspect Serena is not infertile after all. We know that Fred couldn’t get June/Offred pregnant. How are we to know that Serenaded is infertile when she hasn’t been with any other men? I see the “barren woman” label potentially pushing her over the edge somehow.