Episode Details

Back to Episodes
The Handmaid’s Tale Ch. 9-10: Someone Lived Here Before Me | Why Books Get Banned

The Handmaid’s Tale Ch. 9-10: Someone Lived Here Before Me | Why Books Get Banned

Season 11 Episode 8 Published 5 days, 13 hours ago
Description

The Handmaid discovers a message scratched into her cupboard floor by someone who came before her — four Latin words left for a stranger who might never find them. 

Banned Camp is a comedy podcast where we read banned books chapter by chapter — we don't read ahead, so you're discovering the story with us.

Things To Listen For:

  • The moment Jennifer identifies the passage that becomes the episode's thesis: "Ignoring isn't the same as ignorance. You have to work at it."
  • Robot's fact-check on Hannah Arendt's "banality of evil" and why you don't need a monster to destroy a society — just enough people willing to stop imagining what others are feeling
  • Moira's first full introduction: the underwhore party, the dorm room chemistry, and how laughter becomes resistance
  • The Faith cushion on the window seat and what it means that Offred spends tens of minutes reading a single word
  • The Latin message discovery: Nolite te bastardes carborundorum — and why someone risked punishment to leave it behind

Why was The Handmaid's Tale banned?

This chapter centers on two things book banners absolutely hate: empathy and female connection. The underwhore party, the affair discussion, the laughter between women — these are acts of resistance that the system is designed to prevent. The Latin message proves that even silence and control can't stop people from reaching out to strangers. That's what scares the people banning this book.

If this is your first episode, you're fine starting here. Our fact-checking Robot catches you up fast, then we read the next chapter (spoilers).

Banworthy to Bingeworthy

Stick around after this episode for recommendations on what to listen to next:

  • Here's The Scoop — A new podcast from NBC News with host Yasmeen Wassuging, diving deep into the day's top stories with NBC News' trusted journalists. Sharp, thoughtful, and informative.
  • Good News for Lefties — Hosted by Beowulf Rochlén. Exactly what the title promises: good news for people who care about progressive causes, civil rights, and cultural moments that matter. New episodes available wherever you get your podcasts.

Rate, Review, & Follow on Apple Podcasts

Rate, review, and follow us on Apple Podcasts to help other scary book people find us!

https://podca

Listen Now