Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on An Examination and Response of “The Wife of Bath and the Mediation of
‘Privitee’”. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page paper which provides a summary and then response to an essay
titled “The Wife of Bath and the Mediation of ‘Privitee,’” author unknown, available at
http://www.clas.ufl.edu/users/rashoaf/currency/eleven.html. No additional sources cited.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAbthweb.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
the society of Chaucers time as well as a glimpse into our own society. One of the most analyzed stories is that which concerns the Wife of Bath. In a
web article titled Chapter 11 "The Wife of Bath and the Mediation of Privitee," we are presented with an essay that examines the Wife of Baths story in relationship to
the past as well as the present. In the following paper we present a summary of the essay and then discuss how it could be responded to in relationship to
ones reading of Chaucers Wife of Bath. Summary When we examine the first paragraph and the last few paragraphs of the essay we note that the messages, or
theses are perhaps a bit different, though they both stress the fact that the focus is on how language, and words, are often a sort of commodity like money.
In the beginning the author notes that, "All economic exchange, from the most primitive barter to the most sophisticated credit transaction, involves signs, as universal as the grunt of agreement
and as nominal as money of account.1 Economic exchanges are, as it were, a laboratory of signs in action" (Anonymous The Wife of Bath and the Mediation of "Privitee" eleven.html).
In the end of the essay the author notes, "She expropriates herself: she makes of herself a sign, she publishes herself, as if she were a piece of writing--a peregrinating
commercial, looking for a buyer. If the Wife of Bath seems to us so delightful, so energetic, so saucy, so very individual and yet so disturbingly unfinished and unhappy, that
is because, as a woman who chose to be, and even reveled in being, for sale, she still is. {184)" (Anonymous The Wife of Bath and the Mediation of "Privitee"
...