Criticism > Poetry > The Wife of Bath's Prologue and Tale, Geoffrey Chaucer - Catherine S. Cox (essay date March 1993)
The Wife of Bath's Prologue and Tale, Geoffrey Chaucer - Catherine S. Cox (essay date March 1993)
Catherine S. Cox (essay date March 1993)
SOURCE: Cox, Catherine S. “Holy Erotica and the Virgin Word: Promiscuous Glossing in The Wife of Bath's Prologue.1” Exemplaria 5, no. 1 (March 1993): 207-37.
[In the following essay, Cox explores the sexual connotations of the term “glossing,” highlights the double entendres in The Wife of Bath's Prologue, and investigates the link between sexual fulfillment and control of language. Cox maintains that although the Wife of Bath seeks to fight the patriarchal system, her lack of feminine discourse forces her to use male definitions, and ultimately she is unsuccessful in self-definition.]
Although the Wife of Bath, in her Prologue, argues in a quasi-feminist voice for the validity of her own experience and authority,2 her narrative seems ambiguously—and ambivalently—both feminist and anti-feminist.3 This sense of the narrative becomes...
[The entire page is 13894 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Criticism
- David S. Reed (essay date 1970)
- James W. Cook (essay date summer 1978)
- D. W. Robertson, Jr. (essay date spring 1980)
- H. Marshall Leicester, Jr. (essay date 1984)
- Mary Carruthers (essay date March 1985)
- Susan Crane (essay date January 1987)
- Susan Crane (essay date March 1988)
- Elaine Tuttle Hansen (essay date 1988)
- Alcuin Blamires (essay date 1989)
- Colin A. Ireland (essay date January 1991)
- Catherine S. Cox (essay date March 1993)
- Susan Signe Morrison (essay date spring 1996)
- Susanne Sara Thomas (essay date 1997)
- Charles W. M. Henebry (essay date 1997)
- Alcuin Blamires (essay date 2002)
- Elaine Treharne (essay date 2002)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
