The Wife of Bath
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From the award-winning biographer of Chaucer, the story of his most
popular and scandalous character, from the Middle Ages to
#MeTooEver since her triumphant debut in Chaucer’s Canterbury
Tales, the Wife of Bath, arguably the first ordinary and
recognisably real woman in English literature, has obsessed
readers—from Shakespeare to James Joyce, Voltaire to Pasolini,
Dryden to Zadie Smith. Few literary characters have led such
colourful lives or matched her influence or capacity for
reinvention in poetry, drama, fiction, and film. In The Wife of
Bath, Marion Turner tells the fascinating story of where
Chaucer’s favourite character came from, how she related to real
medieval women, and where her many travels have taken her since the
fourteenth century, from Falstaff and Molly Bloom to #MeToo and
Black Lives Matter. A sexually active and funny working woman, the
Wife of Bath, also known as Alison, talks explicitly about sexual
pleasure. She is also a victim of domestic abuse who tells a story
of rape and redemption. Formed from misogynist sources, she plays
with stereotypes. Turner sets Alison’s fictional story alongside
the lives of real medieval women—from a maid who travelled around
Europe, abandoned her employer, and forged a new career in Rome to
a duchess who married her fourth husband, a teenager, when she was
sixty-five. Turner also tells the incredible story of Alison’s
post-medieval life, from seventeenth-century ballads and Polish
communist pop art to her reclamation by postcolonial Black British
women writers. Entertaining and enlightening, funny and
provocative, The Wife of Bath is a one-of-a-kind history of a
literary and feminist icon who continues to capture the imagination
of readers.