In Joe's "Canterbury Tales" (one of the greatest epic work in world literature history), gender issues are also moral issues. Frederic Tapper founded a theory which means in 1914 the Canterbury story was designed as an example of sin and virtue. And each of them is based on one of the "strict categories" of traditional ethical analysis. (Condemnation) This is very interesting as we are very important in the Middle Ages. I think that this is moral education and Christian morality at the same time.
The story of Bath is one of the most famous stories of Jeffrey Chaucer 's Canterbury Tales. It provides insight into the role of the female character in the second half of the Middle Ages and the wisdom of her wife. She had some doubt and opposition to many of her marriages, but Bath 's wife talked about wedding and the way she got married five times to do gifts with her wisdom. She talks about marriage and sex in public. In this way, readers are created with insight into the most important issues in marriage, behavior in marriage, women's rule and equality.
José is very interested in the role of women in society and their response to it. For example, in "Bath's wife's story", Joe is actively seeking potential marriage dynamics between men and women among a series of critics often referred to as "marriage groups" . In the Middle Ages, feminism was not clearly invented, but from the mouth of Bath's wife it is clear that the idea of female equality is by no means rare.
The only bus wife in Canterbury's stories expresses the equal terms of Joe's medieval women and uses Bath's wife to surrender to other male-dominated society. In order to represent women, Jose leads the reader to a women's point of view in a very dry and sensible way, using stories such as "scholars", "second nun", "leaves", "franklin" . Middle Ages should be wives or women of so-called "virtues"
An important theme in Joe's poetry is marriage. That is the wife of the Trojan horse of Bath. Romance is also about the rule of sexuality. Romance began with Bers' wife ridiculing monks, alleging that they were too inaccurate; this sarcasm was a kind of revenge, as Flair previously suspended her prelude. The irony of my wife's monk indicates that Joe's readers believe that women do not like being dominated by others (with a second prologue interruption, the priest is a wife's extensive and indiscriminate monkey, I tried to quit a talkative person). Her stupid thing showed her anger with her voice with her voice with her voice verbally. She also insists that women need to pay attention to the monks. Because these sacred men already know about sexual assault women.