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The Role Of Women In The Canterbury Tales By Geoffrey Chaucer

Decent Essays

The idea of a woman’s place in society is as controversial now as it was over six hundred years ago. Geoffrey Chaucer first explores this in his famous collection of stories The Canterbury Tales. In Chaucer’s tales, he explores the situations of multiple individuals of varying backgrounds in the medieval time period. Each character tells a story that reveals some aspect of their morality and personality. Quite often, their tale also reveals their opinion of a certain overlying subject; such is the case with many character’s opinions of women and their place in society. Chaucer has commonly been described as a feminist and though that is partly true, there is a much more beneath the surface. Chaucer does not agree with the general …show more content…

The most controversial aspect of Chaucer’s opinion of feminism is his figurative spectrum of the embodiment of a woman. His depiction of a woman goes from one extreme to the next with no middle ground. Women in the sense of The Canterbury Tales are either perfect and or outrageously flawed. Chaucer creates character in the theme of absolutes, both physically and emotionally. Women are also considered to be either young and beautiful or old and ugly. In The Wife of Bath’s Tale, a knight rapes a young maiden and the queen wants to decide his fate. She gives him a year to find out what women truly want in life. He finds the answer from an old ugly woman who agrees only to help if he marries her. When he does, she gives him the option of either having her as a young and beautiful wife who will not be faithful or as an old and ugly wife who will be loyal. He tells her that because she is his wife, that the decision belongs to her, but the only reason he agrees to this trade-off in power is because of his newfound resignation. He is solemn because he thinks he cannot have the “ideal” wife: young, beautiful, and loyal. In the end of the Wife of Bath’s Tale, she eventually gives him this “perfect” significant other, which only undermines the theme of sovereignty and makes readers question whether he truly learned his lesson or not. One of Chaucer’s opinions of women

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