Current:Home > StocksA Wife of Bath 'biography' brings a modern woman out of the Middle Ages -TradeWisdom
A Wife of Bath 'biography' brings a modern woman out of the Middle Ages
View
Date:2025-04-13 22:48:14
The Wife of Bath was dreamed up by Geoffrey Chaucer in The Canterbury Tales more than 600 years ago. She has captured countless imaginations since.
The character known for her lusty appetites, gossipy asides and fondness for wine has influenced authors, artists and musicians over the century ranging from William Shakespeare to the Brazilian Tropicália composer Tom Zé's catchy song, "A Mulher de Bath."
"She's extreme, and she laughs at herself," explains Marion Turner, an English professor at Oxford University. "She's aware of when she's saying things that are outrageous."
In her new book, The Wife of Bath: A Biography, Turner argues that Chaucer's pilgrim, whose given name is Alison, is the first modern character in all of English literature. Chaucer gives her more to say than any other character. She has a sense of her own subjectivity, her faults and foibles. Alison seems — well, real.
"She has been married five times, she has worked in the cloth industry, she has traveled all over the known world at that time," Turner points out. Unlike the queens and witches who preceded her in English literature, Alison is not a flat allegorical figure. Her ordinariness makes her radical.
"She tells us about domestic abuse. She tells us about rape. She tells us about what it's like to live in a society where women are comprehensively silenced," Turner says.
It might seem strange to write a biography of a made-up character. But Turner, who previously wrote a well-regarded biography of Chaucer, puts the Wife of Bath in the context of actual women who found ways to prosper in the aftermath of the Black Death, which upended social norms and created new pathways for women to work and hold authority.
"It's astonishing," Turner marvels, "when you find out about women such as the 15th century duchess who marries four times, and her last husband was a teenager when she was 65. Or the woman in London who was twice Lady Mayoress and inherits huge amounts of money. Other London women who run businesses are skinners, blacksmiths, own ships!"
Business acumen aside, the Wife of Bath still draws readers in with her taste for sex. The horniest character in The Canterbury Tales helped inspire James Joyce's Molly Bloom and many more prurient portrayals, including in the early 17th century. Back then, ballads written about "the wanton Wife of Bath" were censored and the printers put in prison.
Still, Turner says, "probably the most misogynist response to her across time came in the 1970s," with a film adaptation of The Canterbury Tales by the Italian director Pier Paolo Pasolini. Hardly one to shy from sex, Pasolini's Wife of Bath is a predatory monster draped in scarlet, whose sexual appetites destroy a man she marries.
More recently, the character has been celebrated and re-interpreted by several prominent postcolonial writers. Novelist Zadie Smith wrote her first play based on the character. Upon its premiere in 2021, The Guardian called The Wife of Willesden, "a bawdy treat," and "a celebration of community and local legends, of telling a good story and living a life worth telling. Not bad for an original text that's 600 years old."
And it's impossible not to be moved by the late, pioneering dub poet Jean "Binta" Breeze's take on the character. She performed "The Wife of Bath in Brixton Market" on location in 2009.
All these iterations of the Wife of Bath help us understand not just our own dynamic world, but how the travels of this pilgrim have in some ways only just begun.
veryGood! (56)
Related
- Stamford Road collision sends motorcyclist flying; driver arrested
- NFL Reporter Doug Kyed Shares Death of 2-Year-Old Daughter After Leukemia Battle
- Most United Methodist Church disaffiliations are in the South: Final report outlines latest in ongoing split.
- Phoenix woman gets 37-year prison sentence in death of her baby from malnutrition, medical neglect
- Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
- Retired Georgia mascot Uga X dies. 'Que' the bulldog repped two national champion teams.
- Home energy aid reaches new high as Congress mulls funding
- Felons must get gun rights back if they want voting rights restored, Tennessee officials say
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- Ron DeSantis announced his campaign's end with a Winston Churchill quote — but Churchill never said it
Ranking
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- Kansas lawmakers want a report on last year’s police raid of a newspaper
- See maps of the largest-ever deep-sea coral reef that was discovered in an area once thought mostly uninhabited
- Bill would revise Tennessee’s decades-old law targeting HIV-positive people convicted of sex work
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- Spanish police arrest suspect in killing of 3 siblings over debts reportedly linked to romance scam
- Memphis utility lifts boil water advisory after 5 days
- These Gym Bags Are So Stylish, You’ll Hit the Gym Just to Flaunt Them
Recommendation
Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
911 calls show fears of residents and friends after a young man got shot entering the wrong home
Johnson & Johnson reaches tentative deal to resolve talc baby powder litigation
Outgoing North Dakota Gov. Burgum sees more to do for the ‘underestimated’ state
New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
Girl, 8, describes 'magical' moment Jason Kelce picked her up to say hi to Taylor Swift
Charles Osgood, longtime CBS host on TV and radio, has died at 91
Nitrogen hypoxia: Why Alabama's execution of Kenneth Smith stirs ethical controversy.