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    Attitudes Toward Marriage in Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales demonstrate many different attitudes toward and perceptions of marriage. Some of these ideas are very traditional‚ such as that discussed in the Franklin’s Tale‚ and others are more liberal such as the marriages portrayed in the Miller’s and the Wife of Bath’s Tales. While several of these tales are rather comical‚ they do indeed give us a representation of the attitudes toward marriage at that time in

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    The Canterbury Tales: The Tabard Inn In the Canterbury Tales‚ written by Geoffery Chaucer‚ the Tabard Inn is an extremely important setting. This is where the pilgrimage to Canterbury starts. This short essay will summarize and analyze every aspect of the Tabard inn in order to paint a picture of the setting in the readers mind. The Tabard Inn is an actual inn in Southwark‚ a town south of London. In one season‚ and on one particular day‚ Chaucer happens to go to this inn. From there‚ he is getting

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    In most of the tales (the ones we read)‚ practically all of the women’s roles were traditional; getting married young‚ having kids‚ working around the house‚ and being subservient to their husbands. Chaucer of course represents this aspect of society in such a way that at first it seems like he supports these roles‚ but upon closer inspection they are so overly expressed that it’s clear that Chaucer is critiquing them. Fairness barely exists either in these tales‚ either the man gets his way

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    ScholarWorks@UNO University of New Orleans Theses and Dissertations Dissertations and Theses 8-8-2007 Geoffrey Chaucer ’s The Canterbury Tales: Rhetoric and Gender in Marriage Andrea Marcotte University of New Orleans Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.uno.edu/td Recommended Citation Marcotte‚ Andrea‚ "Geoffrey Chaucer ’s The Canterbury Tales: Rhetoric and Gender in Marriage" (2007). University of New Orleans Theses and Dissertations. Paper 591. This Thesis is brought

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    figures may seem ahead of their times‚ yet further analysis reveals that the appearance of being revolutionary is a charade. “The Canterbury Tales” by Geoffrey Chaucer tells the story of a group of characters who go on a pilgrimage during the Middle Ages. Pilgrimages lead to either a shrine or a holy place‚ and in this story‚ the pilgrimage leads to Canterbury. In the tale‚ one of the characters on the pilgrimage‚ the Wife of Bath‚ has sparked a debate among people about whether Chaucer addresses modern

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    PROLOGUE :9 PROLOGUE TO THE CANTERBURY TALES COMIC REALISM Q. Write a brief essay on Chaucer’s Realism in The Prologue to the Canterbury Tales and add a note on the Comic Realism in it. (2005‚ 2009). Ans: Realism in literature implies portraiture of life‚ people and things as they really are without idealizing them. True to this idea‚ Chaucer is basically a realist and is interested in people and things around him and the atmosphere and activities of England in the fourteenth century. His

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    The Canterbury Tales: A Character Sketch of Chaucer’s Knight Geoffrey Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales‚ written in approximately 1385‚ is a collection of twenty-four stories ostensibly told by various people who are going on a religious pilgrimage to Canterbury Cathedral from London‚ England. Prior to the actual tales‚ however‚ Chaucer offers the reader a glimpse of fourteenth century life by way of what he refers to as a General Prologue. In this prologue‚ Chaucer introduces all of the

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    Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales centers itself around an eclectic selection of pilgrims who swap stories with one another on their collective journey to visit the relics of Saint Thomas Becket in Canterbury Cathedral. The Wife of Bath is one such storyteller. An older‚ experienced‚ well-traveled woman‚ she begins her story with a prologue stuffed with sexually explicit personal anecdotes before starting her tale about a knight of King Author’s court raping a young maiden. Some scholars make

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    In Geoffrey Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales “The wife of Bath” is one of the most captivating stories. This is primarily because the main character Wife of Bath or otherwise known as Alisoun is the complete opposite of how someone with a medieval mindset would think the role of a woman should be. In medieval times‚ women were viewed as being submissive to their husbands and kept most of their thoughts and ideas to themselves. The wife of bath defies the medieval mindset of who a woman should be by being

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    the ear of the child next to them‚ and down the line it goes. At the end of the game the final child speaks aloud what was whispered into their ear‚ often times it is a far-off rendition of the saying the initial child spoke. Similarly‚ In the Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer has a narrator‚ supposedly Chaucer himself‚ settling at the Tabard Inn preparing to go on a pilgrimage‚ to visit the altar of Archbishop St. Thomas Becket‚ along with twenty-nine others; whom he introduces in detail from their

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