Monday, April 25, 2016

White

The color white in western culture has a long-standing meaning of purity and virginity. In North America women traditionally wear white on their wedding day to show that they have stayed virgins until marriage. In Moby Dick, the whale that Ishmael is hunting is the pure white whale, and an entire chapter is devoted to discussing the color white, showing the strange "purity" of hunting whales and being on a ship at sea and following your passion or the purity of the whale depending on your interpretation.
The symbolism of white can be traced back to medieval texts with a heavy religious overtone accompanying the color white. Since western Europe was predominantly Christian in medieval times, the color white was used in the Biblical sense; white meant purity and virginity. This is why the Mother of Christ is depicted usually wearing something white.
In the Miller's Tale from the Canterbury Tales, this symbolism is mocked and turned on its head. The young wife in the tale is described as being clothed in lots of white, "An apron as white as morning milk upon her loins, full and many a flounce. White was her smock" (lines 3236-3238). In the rest of the description of Alisoun, there are many references to her being pretty and being clothed in white. But in the rest of the story, her virginity is of no question. She is not loyal to her husband; sleeping with another man on multiple occasions and being described as a flirt. So what is Chaucer doing here? He has essentially destroyed the purity surrounding the color white by attaching it to a character who is not sexually pure.
Of could he be doing something entirely different? White is just a color, something that anyone can wear wherever they like. It is just an outward thing. Purity is something that is on the inside that cannot be determined by the colors that a person wears. In this tale, Alisoun wore a lot of white but that did not change the fact that she was very sexually promiscuous. Chaucer seems to be making fun of the heavy symbolism and assumptions that go with the color white. 

4 comments:

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  2. This is a really thought out and interesting analysis. I really appreciate my new take on the Miller's Tale now, since Chaucer seemed to totally tarnish the "white as pure" stereotype. You mentioned that women wear white on their wedding day as a symbol of purity/virginity. I've heard multiple times that women shouldn't wear white when getting married a second time... so basically having been with a man or woman makes them less pure. Refreshing to see that stereotype thrown out for once.

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  3. It's interesting that even back then when tradition was so highly regarded that Chaucer took a chance and went against the norm by ironically describing a sexually promiscuous woman in all white. Even today women are still pushed to wear white on their wedding day if they are "pure" and the color still holds a lot of the meaning it did back then. It seems rather ridiculous for so much importance to be placed on a woman and whether or not she is a virgin, especially in today's times. Kudos to Chaucer for shaking things up.

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