Taking as its starting point a recent biography of Flaubert, this article seeks to show how his famous aesthetic of impersonality and 'art for art's sake' was closely integrated with a moral view of life developed very early in life in relation with other members of his family, such that it was imperative to 'be good' but all social and conventional manifestations of goodness, were false, superficial and boring. The article then tracks the dominance of this attitude in works as different as Madame Bovary and Salambo, suggesting that far from offering a universal prescription of 'how to write', Flaubert was doing no more than codifying his own particular position in French society at the time
This article imagines Flaubert as a painter—the pendant to thinking of Manet as a novelist. The two ...
The article reconstructs Jacques Rancière's reading of Madame Bovary. Gustav Flaubert is presented b...
An ideal marriage is a state of being equal in every way which is built on a healthy dose of admirat...
Taking as its starting point a recent biography of Flaubert, this article seeks to show how his famo...
The article examines the work of Flaubert, in which the most difficult problems are posed - social, ...
It is virtually impossible today to broach the subject of realism in the arts without at least menti...
International audienceLover of Art for the sake of art, as his friend Maxime Du Camp said of him, an...
International audienceLover of Art for the sake of art, as his friend Maxime Du Camp said of him, an...
International audienceLover of Art for the sake of art, as his friend Maxime Du Camp said of him, an...
International audienceLover of Art for the sake of art, as his friend Maxime Du Camp said of him, an...
The article distinguishes the aims of realism in Madame Bovary and L’Ėducation sentimentale from tha...
Flaubert reads to write. During the 1845-1857 period in particular his literary readings perfect his...
A proper beginning for a study on Flaubert’s Madame Bovary should be inclusive of the writer’s stanc...
Madame Bovary, which was scandalous in its own day for its focus on the adultery of a provincial wom...
A proper beginning for a study on Flaubert’s Madame Bovary should be inclusive of the writer’s stanc...
This article imagines Flaubert as a painter—the pendant to thinking of Manet as a novelist. The two ...
The article reconstructs Jacques Rancière's reading of Madame Bovary. Gustav Flaubert is presented b...
An ideal marriage is a state of being equal in every way which is built on a healthy dose of admirat...
Taking as its starting point a recent biography of Flaubert, this article seeks to show how his famo...
The article examines the work of Flaubert, in which the most difficult problems are posed - social, ...
It is virtually impossible today to broach the subject of realism in the arts without at least menti...
International audienceLover of Art for the sake of art, as his friend Maxime Du Camp said of him, an...
International audienceLover of Art for the sake of art, as his friend Maxime Du Camp said of him, an...
International audienceLover of Art for the sake of art, as his friend Maxime Du Camp said of him, an...
International audienceLover of Art for the sake of art, as his friend Maxime Du Camp said of him, an...
The article distinguishes the aims of realism in Madame Bovary and L’Ėducation sentimentale from tha...
Flaubert reads to write. During the 1845-1857 period in particular his literary readings perfect his...
A proper beginning for a study on Flaubert’s Madame Bovary should be inclusive of the writer’s stanc...
Madame Bovary, which was scandalous in its own day for its focus on the adultery of a provincial wom...
A proper beginning for a study on Flaubert’s Madame Bovary should be inclusive of the writer’s stanc...
This article imagines Flaubert as a painter—the pendant to thinking of Manet as a novelist. The two ...
The article reconstructs Jacques Rancière's reading of Madame Bovary. Gustav Flaubert is presented b...
An ideal marriage is a state of being equal in every way which is built on a healthy dose of admirat...