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Original Research 


The Power of Female Speech in two Medieval Tales: A Comparative Study

Mustafa Binmayaba, Lubna Al-shanquitiy.


Abstract
The story has been a fundamental vehicle for teaching throughout history, especially during the medieval period. Two enlightening medieval collections of stories are the eastern The Arabian Nights and the western Lais of Marie de France. Several Comparative Literature programs teach these two literary works in their courses. The tales within these collections function for the two female storytellers, Scheherazade and Marie de France, to educate their political authorities through the positive influence of their speech. This paper examines the power of speech in convincing Medieval rulers to change their attitudes toward women. Throughout these two collections of stories, we find several types of indirect persuasive methods of speech, such as cause and effect, logic, evidence, seduction and emotion, used by the characters to have a positive effect on their audience. The target of the paper is to discover how these two female storytellers make use of the duality of speech and quick convention in a way that supports their efforts to change a powerful ruler’s attitude toward women and to convince him that speech, in general, and women’s speech, in particular, are valuable things.

Key words: Comparative literary studies, Arabian Nights, Lais of Marie de France, medieval woman


 
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Pubmed Style

Binmayaba M, Al-shanquitiy L. The Power of Female Speech in two Medieval Tales: A Comparative Study. CSLL. 3; 2(1): -. doi:10.5455/CSLL.1682793573


Web Style

Binmayaba M, Al-shanquitiy L. The Power of Female Speech in two Medieval Tales: A Comparative Study. https://www.criticalstudiesinlanguagesandlit.design/?mno=151495 [Access: January 01, 2025]. doi:10.5455/CSLL.1682793573


AMA (American Medical Association) Style

Binmayaba M, Al-shanquitiy L. The Power of Female Speech in two Medieval Tales: A Comparative Study. CSLL. 3; 2(1): -. doi:10.5455/CSLL.1682793573



Vancouver/ICMJE Style

Binmayaba M, Al-shanquitiy L. The Power of Female Speech in two Medieval Tales: A Comparative Study. CSLL. (3), [cited January 01, 2025]; 2(1): -. doi:10.5455/CSLL.1682793573



Harvard Style

Binmayaba, M. & Al-shanquitiy, . L. (3) The Power of Female Speech in two Medieval Tales: A Comparative Study. CSLL, 2 (1), -. doi:10.5455/CSLL.1682793573



Turabian Style

Binmayaba, Mustafa, and Lubna Al-shanquitiy. 3. The Power of Female Speech in two Medieval Tales: A Comparative Study. Critical Studies in Languages and Literature, 2 (1), -. doi:10.5455/CSLL.1682793573



Chicago Style

Binmayaba, Mustafa, and Lubna Al-shanquitiy. "The Power of Female Speech in two Medieval Tales: A Comparative Study." Critical Studies in Languages and Literature 2 (3), -. doi:10.5455/CSLL.1682793573



MLA (The Modern Language Association) Style

Binmayaba, Mustafa, and Lubna Al-shanquitiy. "The Power of Female Speech in two Medieval Tales: A Comparative Study." Critical Studies in Languages and Literature 2.1 (3), -. Print. doi:10.5455/CSLL.1682793573



APA (American Psychological Association) Style

Binmayaba, M. & Al-shanquitiy, . L. (3) The Power of Female Speech in two Medieval Tales: A Comparative Study. Critical Studies in Languages and Literature, 2 (1), -. doi:10.5455/CSLL.1682793573





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