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Summary Of Geoffrey Chaucer's 'The Canterbury Tales'

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Nasty (Wo)men In “The Canterbury Tales,” Geoffrey Chaucer depicts all women as trying to subvert the patriarchy, whether consciously or unconsciously, which leads to men’s misfortune. Since the story was written in a time where wives were seen as property, the narrative voice of the females characters gives the reader a unique perspective on the motivations of women. Chaucer's message is made even more clear by the stories of women from multiple social classes. Undeniably, the Wife of Bath is the most obvious example of a woman ruled by her desires. She does not try to hide her desire to control men; the whole message of her tale was that “women desire to have dominion / over their husbands as well as their lovers, / and to be above them in mastery” (The Wife of Bath’s Tale 181-84). Furthermore, it should be noted that the Queen spared the Knight for this answer, yet it was provided by an old hag in a forest. It is implied, therefore, that all women regardless of beauty, status, and age have the same desire. In her prologue, it is evident that she is the root cause of her marriage problems, as she practices what she preaches. From the “Intimate Relationships” article, the Wife of Bath is controlling her husbands only through fate control. She uses sexual favors to gain power in her first three marriages, all of which were with old men. In her fourth marriage, she resented her husband for having affairs and in response made his life like “purgatory on

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