The Reeve's Tale

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    The Millers and Reeve’s tale are a lot like a typical sports rivalry. A real life example of the strife between the two men, is the Prep vs. La Salle tug-of-war. The schools are almost identical in beliefs and the way they are run, but the tension between the hawks and the explorers is beyond any normal rivalry. Just like how the resentment between the Miller and the Reeve is not just some normal disagreement. Although the Miller and the Reeve have contrasting, distinct looks about them, they are

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    and Analysis of The Reeve's Tale Prologue to the Reeve's Tale: The reactions of the crowd to the Miller's Tale were mixed, although many laughed. Only Oswald, the elderly Reeve was offended. He claims that with age the qualities of boasting, lying, anger and covetousness fade away. He vows to repay the Miller's Tale. Analysis The prologue to the Reeve's Tale continues the pattern established with the prologue to the Miller's Tale. Just as the Miller told his tale as a reaction to the

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    The Reeve's Tale

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    This essay engages in a feminist analysis of The Reeve’s Tale and The Wife of Bath’s Tale. The specific goal is to unpack how the tales objectify women through instrumentality, ownership and denial of subjectivity and how simultaneously these tales can also defy the patriarchal master narrative in its problematizing of gender roles. In The Reeve’s Tale, the interactions between the three males in the story, Symkyn, Aleyn, and John, and the two females, Symkyn’s wife, and daughter Malyne is the primary

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    Commentary: The story is seen as a fabliau, a short, salacious tale about town-dwelling non-aristocratic characters. Fabliaux make use of deceit to acquire money, to get sexual gratification or revenge. The Reeve's Tale involves all three based on the "cradle trick." The Reeve's story is said to be a response to the Miller’s tale by the Reeve himself . The Reeve thinks that the Miller's tale, in which an old carpenter acts foolishly, is directed against the Reeve as he had been a carpenter when

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    A fabliau can be described as a bawdy, humorous and metrical tale that was written or told by jongleurs (wandering entertainers). Geoffrey Chaucer acts as one of the highest recognized fabliaux writers, most notably for the Canterbury Tales. Within the Canterbury Tales, the Reeve’s Tale tells a slightly raunchy story of the Miller, his family, and two clerks, Alan and John. The Reeve’s Tale exhibits aspects of fabliaux through its comical and backstabbing events. The Miller and his wife are described

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    Despite idea that The Reeve’s Tale should be viewed as a humorous fabliau, it is difficult to do so when women are being objectified. Nussbaum’s female objectification of ownership is the foundation of Symkyn and his wife’s relationship. Symkyn is clear about the qualities he desires in an ideal wife showing that he is looking for a specific breed of woman. She must be of prestige quality, “For Symkyn wolde no wyf, as he sayde, / But she were wel ynorissed and a mayde” (Chaucer 3947-3948). Symkyn

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    usually was some sort of successful trick in the story. In Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales, he uses the fabliaux style writing to portray how they viewed women in the medieval period. He shows how a fabliaux can actually be a satire of a romantic scene. Chaucer displays the fabliaux style writing in the stories of The Reeve’s Tale, The Merchant’s Tale, and The Miller’s Tale. In the Reeve’s Tale, John and Alan went to the miller’s house to use the mill. The miller says they can stay the

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    “The Miller’s Tale” and “The Reeve’s Tale,” two of the many stories in Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales, portray many similarities on the views of love, marriage, and immorality. Both “The Miller’s Tale” and “The Reeve’s Tale” portray what love truly means to the Miller and the Reeve. Chaucer’s two tales also exemplify the unfaithfulness of the wives to their vows of marriage. Additionally, the stories share corresponding similarities in the many instances of dishonesty and immoral features

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    In The Reeve’s Tale, how is acceptable to identify and acknowledge humor while the female characters are being objectified by the patriarchy? Two main characters, Symkyn’s nameless wife and daughter, Malyne participate in gender restrictive roles, wife and virgin, which forces them into submission within society and their household. In their familial positions, Symkyn’s wife and Malyne appear to be weak-minded and completely oblivious to their plight. Their ignorance makes it easy for Symkyn and

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    The Canterbury Tales whereby the voluptuous relationship that were insulted banned in the Middle Ages which makes the reader somewhat will of reading banned and insulted. Not only banned passion but also his force of the personages fascinating prefaces are the cause of his accomplishment. Chaucer’s forceful preface is one significance way that performs his tales conspicuous.At the same time,Boccacio’s supposed simple explanations in his prefaces are as succinct as four to five sentence.Boccaccio

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