Answer:
Chaucher's 'Wife of Bath Tale' challenges the gender stereotypes.
Explanation:
The Wife of a Bath’s Tale is amongst one of Geoffrey Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales. This tale is based upon gender roles, love, marriage, and human desire.
In this tale, Chaucer have challenged the gender stereotypes and this could be concluded from some of the following incidences from the novel. Firstly, according to ancient thinking, a man can marry more than one woman but woman cannot. But this his tale we can see how the wife already had three marriages and was looking forward for another marriage.
Chaucher’s wife is seen as defending the age old norms of being a typical wife and she comes up with her own modern perspectives towards marriage and sex.
Surja Mukhi’s cultural point of view on marriage is, she believes that it is important to find a mate based on love.
Answer: Option C
<u>Explanation:</u>
‘The Poison Tree: A tale of Hindu life in Bengal’ is a book authored by Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay. This is a about two characters Nagendra, and his loyal wife Surja Mukhi.
Surja Mukhi’s husband was a rich Zamindar and he used to drink. The relationship.m between the two was not as it used to be. Even though they were husband and wife, they didn’t share that bond of closeness, rather Nagendra was attracted towards some other girl name Kunda.
This is when Surja Mukhi feels that one should find mate based on love, the kind of person who loves you and understands you. When two person love each other, that’s when the marriage counts.
The answer is the first one: The Danish men, including the bravest among the group, were heartbroken to find the head of Aeschere on the ground.
<u>Explanation: </u>
[Hint] the first part says "had sorrow of soul". It is explaining how the Danish men were heartbroken when they found the head of Aeschere.
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<span>C. nonfiction book or ebook.
Hope this helps! :D</span>