Chaucer and Gender in the Canterbury Tales.
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ESSAY DETAILS
Words: 244
Pages: 1
(approximately 235 words/page)
Pages: 1
(approximately 235 words/page)
Essay Database > Literature > European Literature
Lee A. Zito
The women of the fourteenth century were expected to be beautiful, dainty creatures just as in any century. But with the religious outlooks that are presented in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales it seems as though women spent a huge part of the fourteen century apologizing for Even and original sin.
In many of the stories that deal with women, young women are punished, abused, taken advantage of, or brushed aside and assumed to
showed first 75 words of 244 total
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showed first 75 words of 244 total
showed last 75 words of 244 total
women characters are at fault. With his proclamation of blamelessness for ideas expressed in the Canterbury Tales, Chaucer was able to rebel against all of society and their ridiculous roles and rules. He utilized his character's emotions to express his own emotions. Chaucer kept his view real in the sense that he wrote his characters in the way that society viewed them, but in doing so he was able to show us our own mistakes.
women characters are at fault. With his proclamation of blamelessness for ideas expressed in the Canterbury Tales, Chaucer was able to rebel against all of society and their ridiculous roles and rules. He utilized his character's emotions to express his own emotions. Chaucer kept his view real in the sense that he wrote his characters in the way that society viewed them, but in doing so he was able to show us our own mistakes.