Sentimental Education
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Beschrijving
Bol
Sentimental Education traces the hesitant life of Frédéric Moreau, a young provincial in Paris whose romantic infatuations, social ambitions, and political illusions unfold against the upheavals of the 1848 Revolution. Flaubert transforms the Bildungsroman into an anatomy of disappointment: events of national consequence are rendered through drifting conversations, missed chances, and compromised desires. Its impersonal narration, meticulous detail, and ironic restraint place it at the heart of nineteenth-century realism while quietly dismantling heroic and sentimental conventions. Gustave Flaubert, born in Rouen in 1821, brought to fiction an almost ascetic devotion to style, famously seeking le mot juste. His own youthful passions, legal studies in Paris, encounters with bourgeois society, and disillusionment after the revolutionary hopes of 1848 all inform the novel's atmosphere. After Madame Bovary, he broadened his critique from provincial adultery to an entire generation's moral and political paralysis. This book is essential for readers interested in realism, modern narrative technique, and the history of failed idealism. Those expecting melodramatic closure may be startled by its coolness, but its power lies precisely in its refusal of consolation. Sentimental Education rewards attentive reading as one of the great novels of modern disenchantment.
Sentimental Education traces the hesitant life of Frédéric Moreau, a young provincial in Paris whose romantic infatuations, social ambitions, and political illusions unfold against the upheavals of the 1848 Revolution. Flaubert transforms the Bildungsroman into an anatomy of disappointment: events of national consequence are rendered through drifting conversations, missed chances, and compromised desires. Its impersonal narration, meticulous detail, and ironic restraint place it at the heart of nineteenth-century realism while quietly dismantling heroic and sentimental conventions. Gustave Flaubert, born in Rouen in 1821, brought to fiction an almost ascetic devotion to style, famously seeking le mot juste. His own youthful passions, legal studies in Paris, encounters with bourgeois society, and disillusionment after the revolutionary hopes of 1848 all inform the novel's atmosphere. After Madame Bovary, he broadened his critique from provincial adultery to an entire generation's moral and political paralysis. This book is essential for readers interested in realism, modern narrative technique, and the history of failed idealism. Those expecting melodramatic closure may be startled by its coolness, but its power lies precisely in its refusal of consolation. Sentimental Education rewards attentive reading as one of the great novels of modern disenchantment.
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