Fall 2013 Paper Number 1: The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer The Canterbury Tales-The Wife of Bath The Wife of Bath is a character that Chaucer presents as an attractive female in its prologue. She is a headstrong and very self-confident woman of her time who thinks highly of herself. Chaucer’s descriptions of her facial and bodily features are sexually suggestive. In the Prologue‚ Chaucer’s narrative involves her physical appearance describing her clothes‚ legs‚ feet‚ hips‚ and her gap-tooth
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General Prologue At the Tabard Inn‚ a tavern in Southwark‚ near London‚ the narrator joins a company of twenty-nine pilgrims. The pilgrims‚ like the narrator‚ are traveling to the shrine of the martyr Saint Thomas Becket in Canterbury. The narrator gives a descriptive account of twenty-seven of these pilgrims‚ including a Knight‚ Squire‚ Yeoman‚ Prioress‚ Monk‚ Friar‚ Merchant‚ Clerk‚ Man of Law‚ Franklin‚ Haberdasher‚ Carpenter‚ Weaver‚ Dyer‚ Tapestry-Weaver‚ Cook‚ Shipman‚ Physician‚ Wife‚ Parson
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In Canterbury Tales‚ Chaucer gives a description oftwenty-nine people in a pilgrimage. Each has different personalities which we can relate to how people behave today. The wife of Bath stands out more than the other characters. In the prologue‚ the wife of birth is described in a way that makes one wonder how well she fits the rules made by Christian authorities regarding the behavior of a woman. According to the church‚ women are categorized as saints or angels. The wife of thebath is a bravewoman;
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Dhruv Bhatt – Canterbury Fails The story revolves around a very generic kind of man Who lived in a cottage with his wife in Kazakhstan. Used to be happily married‚ loved his wife dearly His love was very palpable‚ seen clearly. But as years passed his feelings towards her began to wither Because the arguments they had were getting bigger and bigger They would scream and shout and yell the night away To the point where they’d wake up their neighbors‚ all of whom were gay. As their emotional feelings
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The Canterbury Tales Thomas Becket – Thomas Becket was the archbishop and Canterbury in the 1100s. It was his duty and right to coronate the new King of England. When three other bishops tried to coronate a new king of England‚ Becket refused to sign the appropriate paperwork and the other three coroneted the new king‚ Henry‚ without him. When the King found out that Becket had done this‚ he said something that could be loosely interpreted as “Oh‚ that’s annoying” so the King’s guards‚ hearing
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Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales reflect the various ways of navigating and perceiving society in the British Middle Ages. One of the great merits of this collection is Chaucer’s intent to expose the eyes of the readers to an overview of medieval life. Starting with the General Prologue‚ he expands on the various characters that are representative of the various tiers of society‚ from the nobility to the working class. His descriptions provide firsthand knowledge about the social‚ economic‚ and moral
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In Geoffrey Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales‚ each character tells their tales based on their experiences or beliefs. Although they may all be different‚ some stories do share similarities. As we see in the knight’s tale he shares a story full of chivalry‚ passion and courage. Since those are his beliefs and what he stood for it makes sense why he choose to tell a story with these qualities. As for the Wife of Bath‚ she too tells a story of a soon to be knight who is arrogant‚ superficial and vein but
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Hugvísindasvið Chaucer’s female characters In the Canterbury Tales: Born to thralldom and penance‚ And to been under mannes governance Ritgerð til B.A.-prófs ENS401G Særún Gestsdóttir Maí 2010 Háskóli Íslands Hugvísindasvið Enskuskor Chaucer’s female characters In the Canterbury Tales: Born to thralldom and penance‚ And to been under mannes governance Ritgerð til B.A.-prófs Særún Gestsdóttir Kt.: 131178-4099 Leiðbeinandi: Jóhanna Katrín Friðriksdóttir Maí 2010 Abstract
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Chaucer and The Canterbury Tales I. Chaucer’s Career Born into the growing middle class‚ son of a wine merchant (c. 1340). Served in the royal household (page to 2nd son of Edward III) and later held a series of administrative posts under Edward and Richard II. Visited France and Italy on behalf of the crown during the 1360’s and 1370’s‚ exposing him to the literature of Europe‚ particularly the French Roman de la Rose and Boccaccio’s Decameron. Chaucer’s career illustrates the economic
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Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales plays an important and admirable role in the literary world. Chaucer portrays the controversial relationship between the roles of men and women in the middle ages. Norm Klassen indicates “Inaugurated at the very start of the first tale‚ tyranny recurs as a theme throughout The Canterbury Tales‚ the project that occupied Geoffrey Chaucer for approximately the last fifteen years of his life before his death in 1400” (77). Hence‚ the patriarchal society in the
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