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Misogynistism In The Wife Of Bath

Decent Essays

In Geoffrey Chaucer’s literary works, The General Prologue and The Wife of Bath’s Tale, Chaucer questions misogynistic ideas of the time. Within the General Prologue, Chaucer uses each tale to convey how some people of the time did not act as they should, most of them were corrupt and question the ideas of the church. The Wife of Bath’s Tale is mostly about a Knight who rapes a young woman, and learns his lesson by listening to the women around him. One of his characters, the Wife of Bath, is portrayed to be confident, sexual and independent, which is the opposite of what women were expected to be. They were expected to be timid, dependent solely on men and were unable to voice their own opinions. Within his literary works, Chaucer portrays women to be powerful and manipulative, but all for the common good. Chaucer questions misogynistic ideas by portraying women to be manipulative but intelligent. A prime example of this is how the queen manipulates the king in order to obtain the Knight’s case “ So ceaselessly, he gave the queen the case, And granted her his life, and she could choose, Whether to show him mercy or refuse” (72-74). This shows the queen's strategic manipulation and ability to take power away from the king and give it to herself instead, which is the opposite of what women would usually do. Women were expected to let the man hold all of the power because they were less civilized at the time, but this shows how Chaucer portrayed a woman that was

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