preview

Misogyny In The Canterbury Tales

Decent Essays

The Church during the Middle Ages was responsible for generating a great deal of the anti-feminist theology, which perpetuated the subjugation of women. The Medieval Church taught that women were inferior to men and that they should be compliant and obedient to their fathers and husbands. The Canterbury Tales give insight into the society of the time including social structure, relationships among different genders and classes, and the cultural rules and limits. By depicting the disproportionate relationship between men and women during the fourteenth century, Chaucer confirms his beliefs of misogyny and the portrayal of women as passive objects.
In The Man of Law's Tale, Constance an abstinent Christian woman is to wed Sultan, who is willing to convert to Christianity for her. Sultan's mother, agitated by his conversion heaves Constance into the sea. Regardless of her misfortune, Constance …show more content…

She is not a proper, submissive wife, but instead uses her traditionally feminine powers to lie and manipulate men. In her tale, a knight rapes a woman and is sent on a quest to find the “thing women most desire”(Chaucer, 172).The ending of the tale, like most Chaucerian fiction, safely returns to a more suitable alignment of the sexes. The rapist not only saves his own life, but earns the promise of a faithful and obedient wife.The hag who granted him the answer, who had all the power, gave it up. Transforming herself into a more ideal woman stating, "If I am not a wife as good and true...then you can deal just as you like with me" (Chaucer, 181). Thus implying the Wife herself lacks confidence in the female's powers of speech.Her struggle is not one of domination in the relationship, as both her Prologue and Tale show. It is a struggle for love. The heroine relinquishes her power and dissolves into literal silence and alleged submission, the archetypal

Get Access