Life and creativity of Gustav Flaubert

in #godflesh6 years ago (edited)

The bourgeoisie in France condemns the immortal work of Flaubert's novel "Madame Bovari" when he appeared in 1857. This is one of the most frequent and in-depth studies of the 19th century French literature. This is the magnificent post-mortem revenge of an author who in time does not receive unanimous support for any of his works. The author, who is disgusted by the mediocre spirit of his age, chooses the loneliness devoted to diligent labor. Fundamentally, if we take into account its innovation and influence, Flaubert's work is limited to a few novels, on which the author dedicates years of hard work. For Flaubert everything begins with the long boredom experienced in the city of Rouen, where he was born on December 12, 1821, the time of the first provocative appearances of Romantics in French literature.

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His father was called Ashley Cleopas Flaubert, born in Champagne. He was chief surgeon and professor at the Home of God, Rouen's central hospital. His mother is the daughter of a doctor from Pont l'Évque, originated in the middle of the great provincial bourgeoisie. In this brilliant bourgeois family, everything is banal and lame: the father is devoted to his work, and the mother is busy raising children, and especially in Gustav, he has a strong influence on Gustav's community of glorified surgeons and the atmosphere of the hospital, where his father often leads him to attend demonstration or anatomy lectures. Gustav is the second child in the family born between an older brother, alienated from the family, and a younger sister. Gustav loves his sister, who will die at birth, and his brother will be engaged in raising his daughter. The famous French philosopher of the twentieth century, Sartre, explores in detail the child psychology of Flaubert in his solid monograph, "The idiot of the family". For hours he was dazed by his thoughts and dreams before he learned to read - a skill that made it difficult. Apparently, as a child, Flaubert possessed a rich imagination that, from an early age, he lived without any special illusions about man, human fate, and life in society.

At the age of 20, he has already read Byron, Homer, Shakespeare, and Goethe, and appears to be a "non-hungry", a disgraceful attitude towards life that is accompanied by "grotesque sadness." He introduces into his novels the strange figure of the "grotesque melancholik". Flaubert begins to write as a student. His first work appeared in 1837 in the Little Colibri Magazine. A major influence on adolescent Flaubert has his closest friend, the young philosopher Alfred Le Poitouven, whose pessimistic attitude is compelling. Young Flaubert is disgusted by the truths and the established ideas. It makes a fun compilation.

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Thank you

Interesting story

thnaks

Plss upvote and comment godflesh

:)

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