The dominance of medieval men is immorality, absurdity, and danger, women have little rights and there is no opportunity to acquire rights. The requirement of control is formed by the essential combination of human desires and religious interference. In Jeffery Chaucer 's Canterbury Tales, the arrogant amnesty and the comprehensive view of the unmaintained wife are the home of the separation of moral roles. The moral role between men and women is reflected in the religious rank of men, with men at the top and women at the bottom.
Geoffrey Chaucer 's Canterbury Tales Chaucer' s Pardoner is unique in groups traveling to Canterbury. Parson, Bath's wife, clerk and others like to shake the group's opinion and opinions, but Pardoner is trying to defraud the group's funds. His preaching is based on sound theology, but when they apply their lives to their own lives they are totally out of completeness and make them hollow. He is a hypocrite - his basic intention is whether Jeffrey José has led to discussions on the view of the feminist for centuries. The prologue to Bath's wife is merely an independent example of the complex nature of Joe's belief system. On the other hand, we have many strong female characters, they are still strongly dependent on men in life, but they need to know the life they want. From a comparison point of view, the reader sees a group of people, including Joe, as a writer himself.
Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales is a collection of pilgrims from Canterbury Cathedral. In this book, amnesty and rebels show the role of the opposition in many ways. Forgiveness is a beautiful blonde guy loved by everyone. However, he is very corrupt, intellectual, and sells erroneous religious information to those who make very good compliments. Meanwhile, Reeve is a very serious and sincere businessman. He is very smart and knows the criminal's thoughts and actions.
As a weakly shameless immoral person, its amnesty is very self-hated, but promises to deceive people's money by making people believe that it is necessary to buy an amnesty for committing a crime. His story is about the fable of three assassins who found death by greed. Pardoner used this story as an attempt to sell an amnesty to the company, but was suppressed by the organizer. A person of mysterious threat, he and his Yeoman are not the first travelers of the Canterbury pilgrim. When you understand the stories they talk about, they search for parties. Cannon suddenly disappeared when Canon's Yeoman revealed too much about his master's career.