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The Canterbury Tales

The Canterbury Tales
Paper instructions:
Is the Wife of Bath a positive or negative figure in The Canterbury Tales? Readers of Chaucer have seen her in wildly different ways, from a “gargoyle” representing a lifestyle that should terrify them to an anticipation of a feminist or “ liberated woman.” How does her idea of woman’s sovereignty in marriage contribute to your view of her? What doesn’t she mention in her prologue that one might expect her to, and which might relate her thematically to the pilgrims? Is she a “feminist”?
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the Canterbury Tales

the Canterbury Tales
Read those website that I gave and write what you think ( like Journey) and need to answer those questions to be short paper.the Canterbury Tales1. https://sites.fas.harvard.edu/~chaucer/teachslf/wbt-par.htm
2. Go to Google, type: “The Canterbury Tales – Page 182 – Google Books Result”, read pages from 182-207
3. The marriage group, I was trying to find some sources go google book, but unfortunately it lock. You can find some sources online.

The Wife of Bath’s Prologue and Tale. What is your opinion of the Wife of Bath’s character? What has she “learned” from her five marriages? What makes a marriage work according to the Wife of Bath? How does her identity (status, personality) affect the content and the nature of marriage as depicted in her prologue and tale?

The Marriage Group as a whole (including The Clerk’s Prologue; The Clerk’s Tale; The Merchant’s Prologue; The Merchant’s Tale; Epilogue to the Merchant’s Tale. The Squire’s Prologue, The Squire’s Tale) How are these tales connected? Who has the power in each marriage? What makes a marriage work in these tales? How does the storyteller’s identity (status, personality) affect the content and the nature of marriage depicted in his or her tale?

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