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The Role of Women in Medieval Literature

Satisfactory Essays

"The assumption of anti-feminism 多as become something of an article of faith" when interpreting medieval English literature like Sir Gawain and the Green Knight and The Canterbury Tales (Morgan 265). Heng concurs that there are "textual assumptions that we now recognize, with the unfair judgment of hindsight, as implicated in a fantasy of textual closure and command," (500). The privilege of hindsight, does, however, offer the opportunity to explore the connections between historical social codes and those embedded in the literature of the corresponding epoch. The seeking, and finding, of misogyny in medieval English literature depends on a skillful critical understanding of textual and contextual factors. These factors include the reader's own epoch and experience of gendered identity and gendered textuality. Even hindsight does not proffer some special privilege upon the reader, for some textual circumstances can be interpreted with the truth that transcends moral relativism. When Gawain "turns on women and blames them," his actions are unequivocal (Morgan 265). Regardless of whether Gawain himself is a misogynist, and it seems apparent that he is, women feature prominently in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight as well as in The Canterbury Tales. The roles of women in these medieval texts is supportive at best; the presence of females serves to bring out the features and highlights of the male protagonists rather than to become solid and self-sustaining beings of their own.

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