Canterbury Tales Essay

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    the guildsmen’s ultimate desire is to belong to the noble class. Chaucer treats the guildsmen as a group of craftsmen and gives them no individual importance; while they journey on the pilgrimage, they only appear in the prologue and do not tell a tale of their own. The guildsmen and their wives are financially well off, wear fine clothes and seem obsessed with their own self-importance. To show off their money, they bring a cook along on the pilgrimage. Mentioned in the prologue as well, the cook

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    In the late 1300s Geoffrey Chaucer began wrote The Canterbury Tales, a story which follows the religious journey of twenty-nine people, who represent many aspects of Medieval society, to the Canterbury Cathedral in southeast England. While on the pilgrimage the host of the tavern, where all the pilgrims meet, suggests that the pilgrims each tell a story for the group’s entertainment. Chaucer intended for all the voyagers to tell two stories, but he unfortunately died before he could finish the book

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    In Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales, there are 29 pilgrims making their way to Canterbury to see the shrine to Thomas A’Becket, who was martyred there. They are accompanied by Chaucer, the narrator, and Harry Bailey, the host. The host proposes a storytelling contest to help pass the time. The Host is the sole judge of the contest, and each story is judged on its entertainment and moral factors. The winner will receive a free meal, paid for by all the other pilgrims upon their arrival back at the inn

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    Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales In The Canterbury Tales, Geoffrey Chaucer comments on moral corruption within the Roman Catholic Church. He criticizes many high-ranking members of the Church and describes a lack of morality in medieval society; yet in the “Retraction,” Chaucer recants much of his work and pledges to be true to Christianity. Seemingly opposite views exist within the “Retraction” and The Canterbury Tales. However, this contradiction does not weaken Chaucer’s social commentary.

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    of Beowulf and The Canterbury Tales are two that have been compared for centuries. Based in two different time periods, both novels describe religion, loyalty, and distinguish social classes through characters. In the novel Beowulf, the character Beowulf is known as the “hero of all heroes,” strong, courageous, and a warrior who is willing to risk his life for his ideals. In The Canterbury Tales, there are twenty-four tales describing characters from a knight to a monk’s tale. As the stories are

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    In The Canterbury Tales there are many examples of irony and poetic justice. There is one tale in particular that has a great example of irony. The pardoner tale in the book The Canterbury Tales shows the ironic greed of the pardoner. The pardoner job is to sell “pardons” which are basically go to heaven free cards. So that already starts to show greed, but most of his greed comes from him selling fake artifacts. In his prologue it even shows that he would not preach unless he was paid to do

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    In this paper, I will explore various discourses that shaped the understanding of male gender in medieval England and the notion of masculinity in Canterbury Tales. The medieval concept of maleness was heavily influenced by the writings of the classical period. The physiological and other medical theories that constituted this concept were not restricted to the domain of medicine. They were supported by the religious doctrines. All of these rhetorics were based on a common assumption that men are

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    The Canterbury Tales The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer is one of the few examples that show how similar our stories are today from the storytellers of the twelfth century. But just like in today’s world, all modern stories have influences. Most of the time it's from the world around us and the time we are in. That is no different from The Canterbury Tales, as Chaucer’s tales contains many characters from many different walks of life and backgrounds. “ Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales

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    The language of abandonment figures into Chaucer's characterization of the Parson in the General Prologue to the Canterbury Tales through the Parson's troubling hierarchical relation to his parishioners. The "povre Persoun," referred to with glowing language--"good man," "riche [. . .] of hooly thoght," "lerned," "diligent," "pacient"--is, despite his comparable socioeconomic

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    a fulfilled life without the temptation of something. Geoffrey Chaucer displays this in The Canterbury Tales, because in the plot it says whoever shall tell the best original story out of the two will win a free meal when they get to the tavern. The two stories I will be judging is “The Pardoner's Tale” and “The Wife of Bath”, which I personally believe after evaluating the two stories, “The Pardoner's Tale” is the best of the two and deserves the free dinner. My choice of story is the best because

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