Atwood By The Time Of The Flood, Essay

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Atwood By the time of the Flood, human beings have so thoroughly and inextricably interfered with the natural process of evolution that hybrid animals and plants are commonplace. The names of the genetically modified organisms are part of the common vernacular, uttered in the same sentence as their counterparts that had evolved slowly over the course of the past several million years. Most times, Atwood's descriptions of the life forms on Earth during the Flood are sardonic to underscore the sinister nature of the genetic intervention. For example, in Chapter 6, Toby reflects on her childhood in the "semi-country, before the sprawl had rolled over that stretch of landscape." Within that sprawl comingle the creatures of natural and forced evolution: "there were squirrels, and the first green rabbits. No rakunks, those hadn't been put together yet," (Chapter 6). The reader can easily assume that a rakunk is a raccoon-skunk, but for what purpose one would have been "put together"...

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Toby works in the garden and on the "delicate carrot frond she finds two bright-blue kudzu-moth caterpillars," which had been "developed as a biological control for invasive kudzu," (Chapter 3). Atwood cleverly juxtaposes the natural with the unnatural here, early in The Year of the Flood. What truly makes the kudzu-moth caterpillars remarkable, though, is the way "their designer gave them a baby face at the front end, with big eyes and a happy smile, which makes them remarkably difficult to kill," (Chapter 3). Undoubtedly, their designer purposefully placed those "cutie-pie masks" on them (Chapter 3).
Toby also encounters pigs, which she assumes are "escapees…from some experimental farm or another," (Chapter 3). Also in Chapter 3, the reader meets the green rabbits and the bobkittens, which "weren't numerous before the Flood" but…

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