Tuesday, Oct. 18 Wife of Bath - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 27
About This Presentation
Title:

Tuesday, Oct. 18 Wife of Bath

Description:

Tuesday, Oct. 18 Wife of Bath s Prologue and Tale Wife of Bath Her Story Who said this? Virginitee is greet perfeccion, Virginity is great ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:130
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 28
Provided by: Marilyn125
Category:
Tags: bath | brain | oct | teaching | tuesday | whole | wife

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Tuesday, Oct. 18 Wife of Bath


1
Tuesday, Oct. 18Wife of Baths Prologue and Tale
2
Wife of Bath
3
Her Story
4
Who said this?
  • Virginitee is greet perfeccion,               
    Virginity is great perfection,106       And
    continence eek with devocion,                And
    continence also with devotion,107       But
    Crist, that of perfeccion is welle,             
      But Christ, who is the source of
    perfection,108       Bad nat every wight he
    sholde go selle                Did not command
    that every one should go sell109       Al that
    he hadde, and gyve it to the poore,             
      All that he had, and give it to the poor,110  
        And in swich wise folwe hym and his foore. 
                  And in such wise follow him and his
    footsteps.111       He spak to hem that wolde
    lyve parfitly                He spoke to those
    who would live perfectly112       And
    lordynges, by youre leve, that am nat I.       
            And gentlemen, by your leave, I am not
    that.113       I wol bistowe the flour of al myn
    age                I will bestow the flower of
    all my age114       In the actes and in fruyt of
    mariage.                In the acts and in fruit
    of marriage.

5
G. L. Kitteredge on Wifes Tale
  • The wife proceeds, with infinite zest, to give
    the history of her married life, unfolding, as
    she does so, another heretical doctrine of a
    startling kind, which, in fact, is the real
    subject of her discourse. This is nothing less
    than the dogma that the wife is the head of the
    house. Obedience is not her duty, but the
    husbands. Men are no match for women, anyway.
    Let them sink back to their proper level, and
    cease their ridiculous efforts to maintain a
    position for which they are not fit. Then
    marriages will all be happy. She supports her
    contention with much curious learning derived, of
    course, from her fifth and latest husband, who
    was a professional scholar and she overbears
    opposition by quoting her own experience, which
    is better testimony than the citation of
    authorities. She had always had her own way.
    Sometimes she cowed her husbands, and sometimes,
    she cajoled them, but none of the five could
    resist her government. And it was well for them
    to yield. This is happy marriage.

6
Kitteredge continues
  • Who should know so well as she? Once, indeed,
    she rises almost to sublimity, as she looks back
    on the joy of her life
  • But, Lord Crist! Whan that it remembreth me
  • Upon my yowthe, and on my jolitee,
  • It tikleth me aboute myn herte roote
  • Unto this day it dooth myn herte boote
  • That I have had my world as in my tyme. (469-73)

7
Ways to analyze any text, applied to Wife of
Baths Tale Rape/ Loving Sex, Youth/ Age, Male/
Female, Obedience/ Control, etc.
8
Kitteredge concludes
  • This is one of the great dramatic utterances of
    human nature, as the Wife of Bath is one of the
    most amazing characters that the brain of man has
    ever yet conceived.

9
Pardoner
10
Or, another way
11
Green Knight
  • Life Not Death - Green Knight is both
  • But by the end Sir Gawain has gained this status
    of Not Death
  • Not Death/ Not Life the enchanted castle of Sir
    Bertilak?

12
Imagery trace an image through the text
  • Books
  • 1st line Her experience vs. authority books
  • Bible (wedding at Cana
  • Story of the Samaritan woman
  • That gentil text can I wel understonde
  • Solomon, Lameth, Abraham,
  • Clerk tries to rule her by books
  • Why that I rente out of his book a leef
  • That I was beten for a book, pardee
  • 791 Al sodeynly three leves have I plight
  • Out of his book, right as he radde, and ede

13
Oppositional categories Who is caught in
between?
  • Power Weakness
  • Rape Love
  • Books Experience / oral tales
  • Age Youth
  • Male Female
  • Money Poverty
  • Answers Questions
  • Catholic Church Pagan practices

14
Overlay onto an older story (or younger)
  • Wife of Baths story vs. Sir Gawain and the Green
    Knight
  • Decapitation is an issue
  • Both cannot return to Round Table until they have
    achieved death/ knowledge
  • Both wander into the land of magic
  • Both are controlled by older women (G by aunt
    Morgan le Fey and hero by the hag)
  • Both are put in bed with women, where sex should
    happen
  • Then what?

15
Frames
  • Connections between Wife of Baths Prologue and
    her story
  • Connections between the whole of the Canterbury
    Tales and her story
  • Connections between audience and Wife
  • Connections between audience and Tale
  • Connections between audience and reading

16
Baroque art/ Frame
17
Interpolated Stories
  • Midas - the story in Ovid,
  • Also, there is no wife. The person who knows the
    story is his BARBER. Why wife?
  • A reed grew up there which whispers his story to
    the world.
  • The truth will out.
  • How do you think that reflects back on the tale
    of the young man and the old hag?

18
Maps
19
Metaphors
  • Green Knights color and ability to survive
    beheading
  • Green girdle
  • Kisses
  • Deer/ Boar/ Fox
  • Pentangle
  • Gold in Beowulf
  • Bones held by Pardoner

20
Mise en abyme
21
Norman Rockwell doing it
22
With mirrors
23
Cameras photographing cameras
24
What could you answer for the midterm?
  • Who said this?
  •     Whan that Aprill with his shoures soote     
                When April with its sweet-smelling
    showers2         The droghte of March hath
    perced to the roote,                 Has pierced
    the drought of March to the root,3         And
    bathed every veyne in swich licour             
       And bathed every vein (of the plants) in such
    liquid4         Of which vertu engendred is the
    flour                 By which power the flower
    is created

25
Who said this?
  • "Lordynges," quod he, "in chirches whan I
    preche,                 "Gentlemen," he said,
    "in churches when I preach,330         I peyne
    me to han an hauteyn speche,                 I
    take pains to have a loud voice,331         And
    rynge it out as round as gooth a belle,       
             And ring it out as round as goes a
    belle,332         For I kan al by rote that I
    telle.                 For I know all by rote
    that I tell.333         My theme is alwey oon,
    and evere was --                 My theme is
    always the same, and ever was --334        
    Radix malorum est Cupiditas.                
    'Greed is the root of all evil.'

26
Who told this story?
  • "Now lat us sitte and drynke, and make us
    merie,                 "Now let us sit and
    drink, and make us merry,884         And
    afterward we wol his body berie."              
      And afterward we will bury his body."885      
      And with that word it happed hym, par cas,   
                 And with that word it happened to
    him, by chance,886         To take the botel
    ther the poyson was,                 To take the
    bottle where the poison was,887         And
    drank, and yaf his felawe drynke also,          
          And drank, and gave his fellow drink
    also,888         For which anon they storven
    bothe two.                 For which straightway
    they died, both of the two.

27
Short essay/ chart questions
  • Is Sir Gawain and the Green Knight an epic or
    chivalric romance?
  • What does Sir Gawain and the Green Knight mean?
  • Lanval, which was written over 200 years before
    SGGK, shows a very different side of the Knights
    of the Round Table or does it?
  • Which type of criticism seems to you to be the
    most useful in your readings (whatever your
    favorite type of literature)?
  • If you were teaching The Pardoners Tale and
    The Wife of Bath, would you feel as if you were
    teaching a Middle Ages text or something from the
    Early Modern Period?
  • To you, which seems most interesting and
    significant in Beowulf the structure with its
    emphasis on death and failure OR the vividly
    described battles against monsters OR the heroes
    and monsters themselves?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com