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Chaucer's Oppression Of Women In The Catholic Church

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“The women should keep silent in the churches. For they are not permitted to speak, but should be in submission, as the Law also says. If there is anything they desire to learn, let them ask their husbands at home. For it is shameful for a woman to speak in church” ( BibleGateway). The Catholic Church turned this verse into a highly enforced guideline within society for the purposes of implementing patriarchy within the church and government. Chaucer was a pioneer in English literature that gave an insight on how women represented themselves while opening up the understanding that everyone has flaws within. The harsh suppressions that were brought upon the population by the church resulted in everyone being inadequate to the social hierarchy. …show more content…

The first is a nun whom is a forgery of society’s “quintessential” woman. With a smile so “simple and coy” ( Chaucer ), she presents herself as a graceful, delicate maiden of high class. She eats with proper manners, not letting a single crumb or drop fall from her lips. “...she would wipe her upper lip so clean That not a trace of grease was to be seen” ( Chaucer ). The Nun upheld her dignity and poise, but little did anybody know, she was a fraud. When entitled as a nun, there are certain requirements that are to be met. For example, they are to give up meaningful possessions and devote their lives to God. They would also sacrifice their wealth, and “took vows of poverty” ( Renato ).. The Prioress wore jewelry on her neck, arm, and wrist, and ate lavishly, which made her a Glutton ( Chaucer …show more content…

He first presents the Nun, a woman who is passive, beautiful, and, what the Catholic Church would consider, a perfect woman. Although he speaks good of her, he exposes her flaws to prove she is base idea of social perfection for each sex. When presenting the Lady of The Bath, he displays a clear paradox within the way she acts and what society expects of her. It is a captivative development because men typically expect nothing more than an empty brain and a full figured woman. However, Chaucer was able to accept the personality that was found within the Woman of the bath, by giving her more attention in the Canterbury Tales. The Nun and the Woman of the bath have the same personality, but are held accountable on different standards. The Nun is required to uphold the same purity as , andThe Virgin Mary, while the other is not held by the same values. She was a clear and realistic depiction of how women wanted to act. Without Chaucer's contribution to the understanding of women's suffrage, it would have taken decades to give women the respect they deserved during the middle ages. With way that Chaucer idealizes the woman of the bath, he can show that there is a major importance to the actions of the character. He views this embodiment of female freedom as a key factor to positive progression in the understanding of the way a woman should be seen in

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