the American church
1. Write your own origin" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">inal piece followin" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">ing the style of one piece we read. You could
craft your own religious allegory usin" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">ing the American church or rewrite the General
Prologue in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in Modern English. Possibly you would like to write your own Soldier‘s Tale
or Mother‘s Tale. Creativity is key here.
2. Recast one of the works in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in another form. For example, turn the “Miller‘s Tale' in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">into a
script for a popular sitcom (usin" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">ing those sitcom characters as stand-in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">ins for Chaucer‘s
characters), or rewrite one of the pieces we've read as a play. Be creative-
3. Select any piece we've read and modernize it for a new generation.
Note that this assignment should in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">include an author‘s note at the begin" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">innin" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">ing to explain" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in
what the project actually is. Also, all MLA rules should be followed to in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">include quotin" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">ing
when appropriate with in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in-text citations and a works cited section.