Chat with us, powered by LiveChat The Prioress’s Tale” from Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales is obviously extremely biased toward Christianity and against Judaism, reflecting medieval British bigotry. The story (told by a head nun - Writeden

The Prioress’s Tale” from Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales is obviously extremely biased toward Christianity and against Judaism, reflecting medieval British bigotry. The story (told by a head nun of the Catholic church, remember) draws a clear dichotomy in which Christianity is good and Jewishness is evil.
Aside from those two categories, what does the Prioress’s narrative communicate about good and evil? In other words, what actions does the tale consider good, and what do you have to do to be evil? Support your arguments by paraphrasing or giving SHORT quotations from the text