The aim of this study is to assess in what ways Madame Bovary constitutes a radically new departure in the history of the novel. After tracing the circuitous route by which Flaubert came to start work on Madame Bovary when he was almost thirty, the book analyses the innovatory features of the work, namely its subject-matter, its narrative techniques, its style and language, and its narratorial perspectives. The study then draws together what has been established and shows how everything in the novel is suffused with a very modern irony. Though it has long been recognised that Madame Bovary marks a turning point in the history of the novel, the time has come when it is opportune to define exactly in what ways this is so.
Alan Raitt
Bovary Flaubert Madame Madame Bovary Originality Raitt Realism Romanticism
«This monograph fills a niche surprisingly vacant until now in the vast repertoire of Flaubert studies. […] The value of the study lies above all in the expertise of its writer who is well respected for his work on Flaubert and on nineteenth-century French literature. […] Alan Raitt ist supremely in command of his subject matter and thus able to refer us skillfully and succinctly to the most relevant research, as well as to range widely within the writings of the master.» (Elizabeth P. Goulding, New Zealand Journal of French Studies)
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