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Published byRandolph Phelps Modified over 8 years ago
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Important things to note: Arthurian Romance=Stories about Arthur and his knights Chivalric code=Involved how the knights were to behave with regard to those beneath them; to ladies; to God; to their king; and to their country. Allusions= Biblical (Jesus Christ), Classical/Mythological (Midas, Ovid), Historical (King Arthur, Valerius)
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Prologue Part 1= Wife defends marriage as opposed to virginity and chastity Part 2=Wife describes her married life Part 3=Wife describes her final husband Jankin and their arguments over the “book of wicked wives.”
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The Church’s Hierarchy Virgins Widows who don’t remarry Married women “It was felt that God must love virgins most and that married people came a very poor third in his affections.” ---------------------------------------------------------- God Men Women Animals
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The Wife of Bath’s Tale The wife tells the story of a rapist knight who must answer a riddle to save his life: What is it that women most desire?
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In the course of her Prologue she seems to confirm as many stereotypes as she confronts. There's no question at all, though, that she gets your attention. In the late classical period, a lot of authors wrote treatises about the disadvantages of being married, particularly for men who hoped to have careers as scholars and thinkers.
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1. Wives would talk your ear off, preventing you from getting any work done. 2. Wives would demand that you make lots of money to pay for their extravagant lifestyle. 3. They would spill your secrets to anyone who happened to walk by.
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What Men Say About Women Nature has given women so much power that the law cannot afford to give her more. – Samuel Johnson (1700s) No trust is to be placed in women. – Homer (850 BCE) A woman, a spaniel, and a walnut tree, The more they’re beaten, the better they be. - Thomas Fuller (1600s) Can you recall a women who ever showed you with pride her library? – Benjamin Decasseres (early 1900s)
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Girls began to talk and to stand on their feet sooner than boys because weeds always grow up more quickly than crops. – Martin Luther (1533) A very little wit is valued in a woman, as we are pleased with few words spoken plain by a parrot. – Jonathan Swift (1600s-early 1700s)
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Irony The woe that is her marriage=she inflicted much of this woe herself Her favorite husband was the one who beat her. She wants to be dominant but then accepts subservience. The knight was able to save his life by telling the queen that women want sovereignty above all else. However, the knight made a deal with the hag that cost him his own sovereignty.
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So…what do women want most? “women wish to have sovereignty as well over her husband as her love, and to have mastery over him.” Women desire power over their own bodies and minds.
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How does Chaucer use satire in “The Wife of Bath’s Tale”? Do you consider the wife of Bath a feminist? Chaucer? Does the wife really need to manipulate the men in order to get what she wants?
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“The Goodman of Paris” Medieval French guidebook from 1393 on women’s proper behavior in marriage and running a household Includes sexual advice, recipes and gardening tips Written by an elderly husband to his 15 year old wife Theme: Wifely obedience
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The Goodman of Paris How do his views differ from the wife of bath’s views? How does it conflict with what a woman wants (according to the wife of bath). How do the characters differ? What is the theme of the passage?
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Clip https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e3cvOm7qStk https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e3cvOm7qStk
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