The Wife Of Bath's Tale

658 Words2 Pages

Since the publishment of Canterbury Tales, written by Geoffrey Chaucer, the Wife of Bath has been commonly referred to as “the original feminist” by literary critics and in classrooms alike. She is seen as a headstrong and authoritative woman who gets what she wants when she wants it. Though she is fairly powerful in her own sense, this does not automatically mean she is a feminist. A feminist embraces what it means to be a woman and idolizes the idea of having men and women be equal. In her prologue and tale, she highlights negative stereotypes about women and downgrades men. The author, Geoffrey Chaucer, certainly did not mean for the Wife of Bath to be interpreted as a feminist. A true feminist empowers women and values the idea that men

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