madame bovary powerpoint

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Madame Bovary By Gustave Flaubert

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A high school powerpoint presentation on Gustave Flaubert's Madame Bovary.

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Page 1: Madame Bovary Powerpoint

Madame Bovary

By Gustave Flaubert

Page 2: Madame Bovary Powerpoint

The NovelThe Novel

Page 3: Madame Bovary Powerpoint

The Novel

• Written by French author Gustave Flaubert

• Published in 1856

• The tragic story of Emma Bovary, a doctor’s wife, who engages in

adulterous affairs to escape the emptiness of her life

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The Novel

ThesisEmma’s tragedy is a result of her romantic tendencies

• misery

• bad decisions

• destruction

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The NovelEmma

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Emma • The novel’s protagonist: a romanticist who desires wealth, passion and high society

• Sought the passion and adventure that she read about in novels

“[…] love affairs, lovers , mistresses, persecuted ladies fainting in lonely country houses, post riders killed at every relay, horses ridden to death on every page, dark forests, palpitating hearts, vows, sobs, tears and kisses […] “ (36)

• Romantic, superficial, disillusioned, contemptuous, unforgiving, selfish

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Misery• Deluded by her ideals: her inability to reconcile reality with ideals leads to:

dissatisfaction and lethargy

• Dissatisfation with husband: “He did not know how to swim, fence or shoot a pistol […]

But shouldn’t a man know everything, excel at all sorts of activities, initiate you into the turbulence of passion, the refinements and mysteries of life? This man taught nothing, knew nothing, wanted nothing. He believed her to be happy and she resented his steadfast calm, his serene dullness, the very happiness she gave him.” (40)

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Bad decisions• She makes bad decisions in pursuit of her ideals: affairs, debts, neglecting child

• Rodolphe Boulanger: She repeated to herself, “I have a lover! I have a lover!” and the thought gave her a delicious thrill, as though she were beginning a second puberty. At last she was going to possess the joys of love, the fever of happiness she has despaired of every knowing. She was entering a marvellous realm in which everything would be passion, ecstasy and rapture

• Her romantic ideals supplanted reason

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Destruction

• By her third romance, she became more desperate for love; seen in her capriciousness, self-destructing behaviour

• Achieving romantic passion became a do-or-die decision

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Emma • Does not realize the fault in her feelings: instead, she feels entitled to her ideals

“If only she could lean over the balcony of a Swiss chalet, or enclose her melancholy in a Scottish cottage, with a husband wearing a long black velvet cloak, a sugar loaf hat and fancy gloves! (39)”

• Never takes responsibility for her own actions and consequences

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The Novel

Do you find Emma a relatable character?

Discussion Question

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The NovelThemes

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The Failings of the Bourgeoisie

• Critique of the ineffectual lives of the bourgeoisie

• Homais is the book’s prominent symbol of the bourgeoise- he is a champion of science, despite not understanding it- gives long and irrelevant speeches to make himself sound intelligent

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Powerlessness of Women

She hoped for a son; he would be strong and dark; she would call him George; and this idea of having a male child was like an expected revenge for all her impotence in the past. A man, at least, is free; he can explore all passions and all countries, overcome obstacles, taste of the most distant pleasures. But a woman is always hampered. Being inert as well as pliable, she has against her the weakness of the flesh and the inequity of the law. Like the veil held to her hat by a ribbon, her will flutters in every breeze; she is always drawn by some desire, restrained by some rule of conduct.

• Emma is ruled by the men in her life: her father, her husband, her lovers, her debtors

• She is restricted and unable to escape

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The NovelThe Author

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Gustave Flaubert(1821-1880)

• known for meticulous devotion to his art and style

•Influenced Guy de Maupassant, Edmond de Goncourt, Alphonse Daudet, and Zola, Kafka, J.M. Coetzee among others

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The NovelLiterary Theory

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Realism

• dealt w/ portraying contemporary life and society “as they were” • writers opted to portray everyday life experiences rather than highly stylized or romantic

• Honore de Balzac