Wife of Bath Essay

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    Chaucer's Influences

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    In the “Wife of Bath’s” tale, Chaucer shows multiple flaws in the way women were treated. People recognized these flaws, and recognized Chaucer’s support towards women’s rights. One person even stated,” Where treated as a fictive character, she is often read in

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    Walter, saying, “If only it pleased you to go find a wife.” (281) Walter takes them up on their request, and only requires that they do not disprove of his choice. “Promise me that you will always honour / Whichever wife I take.” (282) He could have chosen any woman in the land, but he chooses the poorest girl, daughter of the poorest beggar, described as “Luxurious pleasures were to her unknown.” (284) Notice how Walter does not seek his wife under

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    Sex in The Canterbury Tales Essay

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    marital bond of “making love” makes evident Chaucer’s skewed views of love and marriage with underlying tones of misogyny. He expresses these views throughout the work, however, the theme of love and sex is most evident in the sub-stories of The Wife of Bath and The Miller’s Tale. Chaucer breaks the topic of sex into two basic parts: carnality and romanticism. Although carnal love is a controversial topic, Chaucer dives into the subject by creating characters with ferocious appetites for sex and the

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    the church was during that time. However he revealed many other things along the way. Lastly, in The Wife of Bath’s Tale/Prologue, the gender issues are addressed through satire. The Wife of Bath is an experienced and very independent woman, which at the time, was rare to come by. Brewer backs up my statement by saying, “The Wife is an independent, middle-aged, pleasure-loving weaver from Bath. A major character in the Canterbury Tales, she is a rich, complex woman.” (Brewer, W, Gwen). Furthermore

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    because they considered wives to be gold diggers in which men would pay for their fancy lifestyle. The “Wife of Bath’s Tale,” was written around the year 1386, by Geoffrey Chaucer who tells a tale about a wife that wants sovereignty over her husbands. Book 18 of “Le Morte d’Arthur,” was written by Thomas Malory, he tells a tale about Queen Guinevere who wanted to follow the traditional role of a wife, who wanted to marry Sir Lanucelot but never could and have happiness because of the tragic that she

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    Katherine, as well as Chaucer’s Wife of Bath, display great intelligence, vitality, and a strong sense of personal independence. The similarities in the roles of women in the stories presented in Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales and Shakespeare’s Henry V are striking.

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    Women and Love In Chaucer

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    . . he accepts uneasily the medieval view of women as either better or worse than men, but never quite the same." (Green 3) This is evident in Chaucer's portrayal of women in such poems as "The Wife of Bath" and "The Clerk's Tale" which assault the reader with antithetical views of women. The Wife of Bath is one of the most memorable characters Chaucer ever created. She is considered, in view of Diamond's statement, to be better than the men in her life. Patient Griselda

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    ENG 305 Dr. Alice Villaseñor Qing Li October 05, 2015 The “Dette” of the Wife of Bath Written in Middle English, the Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer is more readable to modern readers and its expressions and grammars are simpler than the Middle Ages, Anglo-Saxon and Anglo-Norman literatures. It contains “sondry” Middle English terms that are way different from the expression in nowadays. Such as “sondry” stands for “various”, “eek” means “also” and “ilke” is “same”, “fader and mooder” refers

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    The Canterbury Tales

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    stereotypes and separates his characters from the social norm by giving them highly ironic and/or unusual characteristics. Specifically, in the stories of The Wife of Bath and The Miller’s Tale, Chaucer examines stereotypes of women and men and attempts to define their basic wants and needs. In the Miller’s Tale, the story tells of a carpenter and his wife, Allison and how she is pursued by multiple men. The first man to pursue her is Nicolas, a man boarding with the Miller. When the carpenter is away he

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    women in the stories is only in a sexual aspect. The author makes it seem that women are only good for sex and nothing else.In the wife of bath and women have sex with any and every man that comes into sight. Alisoun states, “though he wrote and said that he wish everyone would take him as example, he only advises virginity. And he gave me full permission to be a wife; therefore it is no sin”(page 167). Basically

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