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Canterbury Tales
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Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales is one of the most studied works in English literature, appearing regularly in courses covering medieval literature, British literature, and world literature surveys. Written in the late fourteenth century, the collection uses a frame narrative — a group of pilgrims traveling to Canterbury trading stories — to offer a wide-ranging portrait of medieval English society. Its blend of social satire, moral instruction, and literary experimentation makes it academically rich, inviting analysis of character, gender, class, and the conventions of storytelling itself.

Student essays on this topic approach the work from several directions. Many focus on individual tales, with the Pardoner's Tale and the Wife of Bath's Tale drawing particular attention. Gender and the role of women in medieval English life is a recurring angle, with papers examining how Chaucer constructs female characters and what those constructions reveal about attitudes toward love, marriage, and power. Comparative approaches also appear, setting Chaucer's work alongside other medieval literature such as Boccaccio's Decameron. Broader historical and cultural essays situate the tales within medieval English life roughly spanning the period from 1300 to 1450.

A strong essay on Canterbury Tales grounds its thesis in close reading of specific tales rather than making sweeping claims about the entire collection. Evidence drawn from a character's voice, the narrator's framing, or the moral outcome of a story carries significant weight. The most common pitfall is treating the pilgrims as straightforward mouthpieces for Chaucer's own views, when the ironic distance between author and narrator is itself a central feature worth analyzing.

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Essay Doctorate
Gender Women Occupy Conflicted and Ambiguous Roles
This is a five page paper about literature. It is about three works of literature, in the English language, including Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (14th century), Chaucer's Canterbury Tales (14th century too) and Shakespeare's Twelfth Night (17th century). Issue of gender and the role of women is the focal point of the analysis, which uses a comparison model to discuss the theme in each work.
Research Paper Doctorate
History of censorship in United States media
Censorship is the official prohibition or restriction of any type of expression that is believed to threaten the political, social, or moral order, and may be imposed by local or national governmental authority, by a…
Research Paper Doctorate
Language of Geoffrey Chaucer and Its Relationship
In both literature and language, Geoffrey Chaucer made an important contribution to the development of English. In terms of the development of the English language his works and their popularity are related to the…
Paper Undergraduate
For Writergrrl101
Crime and Punishment: Crime and Punishment shows the folly of intellectual ambition. The novel tells the tale of a law student, Raskolnikov, who commits a murder of an old pawnbroker, half to show his own brilliance as…
Paper Undergraduate
Canterbury Tales and 14th Century
The Canterbury Tales is a fragmented narrative. It consists of a series of tales, told by a variety of characters on a pilgrimage. The tales are given additional resonance because of the character of the teller.
Research Paper Doctorate
Marlowe Chaucer Intertextuality, Point-Of-View, Metaphor,
Intertextuality, point-of-view, metaphor, connotation: "The Franklin's Tale" of Geoffrey Chaucer and "Hero and Leander' of Christopher Marlowe)
Paper Masters
Wire and Changing Urban Markets
One of the ways in which many modern Americans view urban areas is through the portrayal of some of the sociological and cultural issues at the heart of the inner city. There are numerous portrayals in movies and television, but one of the most realistic and vibrant is The Wire. The Wire is a television drama set around the inner city area of Baltimore, Maryland. It began in 2002 and ended in 2008, with 60 episodes on HBO in five seasons.
Essay Doctorate
Canterbury Tales Wife of Bath\'s Prologue
Wife of Bath's Prologue, by Geoffrey Chaucer is one of the first pieces of literature that introduces us to a smart, intelligent, and independent woman. One of the most important aspects of the wife's character is her…
Paper Doctorate
Frame Story Takes a Number
A frame story takes a number of different (sometimes radically) stories and binds them together upon a common thread that all of the stories have. In the Canterbury Tales, they are all on pilgrimage and just as in the Holy land, they require the services of a knight to protect them upon their way there. A good example of how such stories work together is shown in the Knights Tale, which is followed immediately by that of his son in the Squire's Tale. The Knight's tale is an especially appropriate beginning for a list of such tales of Canterbury pilgrims since the old knight can relate his old conquests and battles while he was in Eastern Europe, Spain, North Africa and the Holy land. The story introduces many aspects of knighthood like courtly love and the ethical dilemmas it produces that is spelled out against this background of war. Just as all is fair in love and war, both elements come together in the Knight's Tale. From love and war, the knight has developed perfectly the qualities of chivalry were based in the Middle Ages. As a chivalrous knight, he learned to be quiet and gentle with those who are weaker (such as ladies) and to selflessly defend them and their honor up to and including in battle if necessary. This makes for the true knight. While he had the best equipment, he dressed modestly and his clothing bore the smudges of battle from his former service. All in all, this spelled out the perfect knight as an example for his squire son to follow.
Research Paper Doctorate
Pursuit of Individualism and Objectivity
In the late Middle Ages, during the late 14th century, Europe, particularly Italy, had experienced "rebirth" after a series of chaos that is the Black Plague have wiped out the whole of European Civilization.