Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert — book cover

Book details

Madame Bovary

by Gustave Flaubert

1856 · Oxford University Press

About the book

Emma Bovary, a country doctor’s wife in provincial France, finds her domestic life suffocatingly dull. Raised on sentimental romance novels, she attempts to recreate those fictional fantasies through high-interest credit spending and secret affairs with local men, Rodolphe Boulanger and Léon Dupuis. Flaubert uses precise clinical realism to document her shifting psychological states and her inability to reconcile her lofty imagination with the banal reality of middle-class social rituals. The narrative details the accumulation of debt and the eventual collapse of her social standing.

Readers interested in the history of the European novel study this work to observe the invention of modern realism. It attracts those who value psychological accuracy over idealized heroism and want to understand how narrative perspective shapes the reader's view of a character's flaws. One finishes the book with a clear understanding of how boredom and consumerism can drive a person toward total self-destruction. This edition from Oxford University Press provides the necessary context for nineteenth-century social structures.

Details

Published
1856
Publisher
Oxford University Press
ISBN
9780192840394
Language
EN