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Search results on "COMPARISON MEDEA MADAME BOVARY":

Term Paper # 68032 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
A Comparison of "Medea" and "Madame Bovary", 2006.
This paper analyzes the characters of Jason in "Medea" by Euripides and Charles in "Madame Bovary" by Gustave Flaubert.
954 words (approx. 3.8 pages), 2 sources, MLA, $ 33.95
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Abstract
The writer of this paper reviews and discusses the plots and main characters in both works of writing which center around the subject of adultery. This paper focuses on the differences and similarities between Jason and Charles, in which both deal with issues of fidelity, albeit in different manners. The writer contends and makes clear why a major related difference between both men is their level of self-involvement. This paper examines the manner in which Jason shows no loyalty to his wives while Charles, on the other hand, cares deeply for his wife and often seems more concerned with her welfare than his own. This paper analyzes the characteristics of both Jason and Charles, who are total opposites in every way, including what they want from life and their determination to get it.

From the Paper
"The first obvious difference between Charles and Jason relates to their faithfulness. Jason is not at all faithful to Medea, cheating on her and marrying another woman. At the same time, he shows no real love towards either of his wives. In contrast, Charles is completely and blindly faithful to his wife. He provides her with unconditional love and will do anything for her. In their relationships with their wives then, Charles and Jason are opposites, with Charles the completely unfaithful husband and Jason the completely faithful. Jason and Charles are also opposites in what they want from life and their determination to get it. While Jason is driven and will do anything to get what he wants, Charles has no ambition at all."
Term Paper # 71182 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Madame Bovary", 2003.
An account of Madame Bovary's in Flaubert's "Madame Bovary."
690 words (approx. 2.8 pages), 1 source, MLA, $ 23.95
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Abstract
This paper is an account of Emma Bovary's fate or destiny as a romantic as depicted in the novel by Flaubert, "Madame Bovary." It looks at how Emma as a victim of circumstances and also discusses her preconceptions and romantic escapism.

From the Paper
"Emma Bovary is a victim of circumstance to the extent that her experience of the world is socially constructed. What has to be understood is that she cannot simply run away from home and make her way in the world alone .Men can do that in nineteenth-century..."
Term Paper # 102139 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Gustave Flaubert's Madame Bovary, 2008.
A review of the book "Madame Bovary" by Gustave Flaubert.
1,608 words (approx. 6.4 pages), 1 source, APA, $ 52.95
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Abstract
This paper analyzes the perpetual imbalance and complex relationship between the sexes in the book "Madame Bovary" by Gustave Flaubert. The paper explains that Gustave Flaubert's "Madame Bovary" is the rare critique of this arrangement that from a male perspective nonetheless utilizes the protagonist to paint a devastating portrait of the emotional toll weighed on women by this form of oppression. The paper looks at how the indiscreet life of Emma Bovary serves to indict a culture in which the expectation that a woman is a secondary, creates an essentially miserable, directionless and destructive figure. The writer also points out that Emma exists only as an extension of the three love affairs that would dominate her life, and is a reflection of the inevitable conflict between a woman's personal will and the confining parameters of a man's world.

From the Paper
"This is a handicap though, which we may note to be a product of a culture rather than of an ambition. Her discontent with her first husband, Charles, is no mere incidental fact of her own personal shortcomings. As point of fact, Flaubert takes great pains to establish the universe of his novel by exploring at length the insufficiencies of this man, far before we are introduced to the young, beautiful and promising Emma Bovary. That the two would be paired as a matter of Charles' desire and the woman's obligation to seek a future through supplication to a profitable union is indicative of the severe limitations of free will availed a woman in the France of late 19th century. It is the unfortunate cultural ceiling which leaves Emma to speculate about her missed opportunities."
Term Paper # 95013 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Madame Bovary", 2007.
This paper examines Gustave Flaubert's novel, "Madame Bovary".
1,077 words (approx. 4.3 pages), 0 sources, $ 37.95
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Abstract
In this book review, the writer explores the literary innovations used by Gustave Flaubert in his novel, "Madame Bovary". Contrary to the popular Romanticism of the time, Flaubert used realism in describing Emma Bovary's life. According to the writer, Flaubert used his novel to deconstruct romanticism by playing off of Madame Bovary's fantasies against the reality of her life.

From the Paper
"Emma Bovary is a woman who fantasizes about a life that is meant for the rich and famous. She purchases magazines so she can read of the latest fashions. She educates herself and takes music lessons. She even sends her own child to a wet nurse because that is what all the rich mothers in Paris do. She constantly lives beyond her means in order to escape the emptiness of her simple life. Emma lives through her fantasy novels. This is why the ball that she attended was such an important event to her. She could see the noble characters of her fantasies participating in such a regal event. As Emma said, "the memory of the ball would not leave her" though her memory of it would grow weak; "the yearning still remained (1121)". Emma was back in her simple existence, the place she longed to escape from."
Term Paper # 104890 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Madame Bovary as Film and Novel, 2008.
This paper discusses 'Madame Bovary' as a novel by Gustave Flaubert and as a film by director Vincent Minelli.
1,260 words (approx. 5.0 pages), 3 sources, MLA, $ 42.95
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Abstract
In this article, the writer discusses that in trying to bring 'Madame Bovary' to the screen, director Vincent Minelli had the problem that much of the story depended on Gustave Flaubert's brilliant narrative. In a novel, Flaubert's crafted sentences had held readers' attention for decades, but a translation into film seemed an insurmountable obstacle. The writer notes that Minelli found a device, by which he could have a narrator, a character playing Flaubert, introduce the movie, and at various time move the plot along. To do this, Minelli opens not with the novel itself, but with the trial of Gustave Flaubert on charges of presenting a morally degenerate woman as his heroine, thereby threatening to corrupt the morals of all of France. The writer maintains that as a novel, Madame Bovary remains a standard of the literary canon, one of the premier examples of realistic fiction, and effectively a benchmark against which much of modern realistic fiction is judged. The writer concludes that the movie is regarded as creditable, however it is not considered one of the great cinematic classics. A modern viewer sees the artificiality and yearns for more realistic movement in this movie version of a realistic novel.

From the Paper
" Trying to defend the movie, Flaubert paints a reasonable picture of the farm to which Charles Flaubert, a young doctor, has come one rainy night to attend to the broken leg of Emma Roualt. After he has set the patient's leg, he and Emma meet, and they are smitten with one another, he because she is a beautiful young woman, and he because she imbues him with a host of romantic ideals that he simply does not have. By his own confession, he is a rather simple, hard-working country doctor, but she declares him to be the most handsome and dashing man in the world."
Term Paper # 56213 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"The Awakening" and "Madame Bovary", 2005.
A comparison of Kate Chopin's "The Awakening" and Gustave Flaubert's "Madame Bovary".
3,854 words (approx. 15.4 pages), 8 sources, MLA, $ 105.95
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Abstract
This essay shows that Madame Bovary?s entire experience is by way of approaching her own obscurity and, indeed, her own demise and her death as an individual. It discusses how the depiction of Madame Emma Bovary?s adulterous behavior, beyond the racy fascination readers dipped into as Emma?s desire for ?self-obliteration? was carried out, was totally unacceptable for the 19th century, and along with her other foibles, indicates a serious dance with transgressions. It then looks at how Edna, the main character from "The Awakening", certainly transforms the image of the stereotypical female of the 19th century from a modest, obedient wife and mother into a woman having an affair and breaking all the rules.

From the Paper
"Before examining further Edna?s breaking away from Darwin?s ideas, it is worthy to point out that Darwin saw civilization as evolving largely because ?a woman?s modesty curbs the male?s eagerness to couple,? Bender continues (488). But Bender also quotes Ruth Bernard Yeazell as saying, as a critique of Darwin, that ??females are at once less lustful and more discriminating than males? [and] the satisfying conclusion to Darwin?s story preserves the ideals of motherhood and the modest woman who knows nothing of appetite or sexual desire.?
Are we talking about women with no appetite for sexual desire? Not in Chopin?s characters. She clearly follows a pattern of both accepting and rejecting Darwin, which Bender only scratches the surface with. Chopin is likely embracing Darwin through the many images of the sea that connect Edna with evolution, if you will. ?Edna is a post-Darwinian woman-animal who had evolved from the sea in a world without gods,? Bender explains."
Term Paper # 32392 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Madame Bovary", 2002.
Analysis of the character of Emma Bovary in Flaubert's novel "Madame Bovary".
650 words (approx. 2.6 pages), 1 source, $ 26.95
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Abstract
This paper discusses the nature of the character Emma Bovary in the novel Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert. By showing the different aspects of Emma Bovary, we can see how she remains consistently superficial regardless of her guilt on not acting along moral lines.
Term Paper # 95613 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
'Madame Bovary', 2006.
A review of Gustave Flaubert's novel, "Madame Bovary".
1,521 words (approx. 6.1 pages), 1 source, MLA, $ 50.95
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Abstract
This paper reviews and discusses the book 'Madame Bovary' by Gustave Flaubert. The paper reports that this novel so scandalized the moral fiber of public prosecutors of the time, that a court suit was brought against it. According to the paper, while the book narrates intense desire and pursuit for wealth, romance and social status, it also exposes the unstable and unsettling place of women in society during time period of the book, which ultimately puts an end to Madam Bovary's intense pursuit and wild indiscretions.

From the Paper
"Her third opportunity is Rodolphe Boulanger, a wealthy landowner to whom Emma is only one in a string of mistresses. He is calculating, selfish and manipulative. He designs the seduction of Emma with strategic precision, runs an affair with her and leaves her when he gets bored of her romantic fancies and emotional demands. He represents the fulfillment of the rest of her intense dreams of wealth and class. She has the body and sensual means for it for a while, but her misplaced romantic ideals and demands do not fit the designs of Rodolphe, especially when she becomes indiscreet. Her beauty and the risks and excitement of adultery make her desirable to Rodolphe to feed his ego, but not her desires and personal requirements. Like Leon, Rodolphe has the options, which Emma does not have in a society, which puts women at a disadvantage and at the pleasure of men."
Term Paper # 97369 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Madame Bovary"--A Review, 2007.
A analysis of the character Emma Bovary in Gustave Flaubert's novel "Madame Bovary."
2,156 words (approx. 8.6 pages), 2 sources, MLA, $ 67.95
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Abstract
This paper gives an in-depth character analysis of Emma Bovary, the protagonist in Gustave Flaubert's classic novel "Madame Bovary." The review posits whether Emma is a woman or a child, and considers this thesis through the brief plot summary of the novel. Additionally the review points out Emma's tragic flaws and their consequences. In particular, the paper considers Emma's fascination with luxury and her difficulty in accepting her own reality. The paper compares Emma to Don Quixote.

From the Paper
"The most significant side of Emma's childishness is connected with her desire to have wild love affairs that would resemble those she had read about in her books. Flaubert himself hints at Emma's child-like behavior, when she begins her relationship with Rodolphe. At first, Emma is absolutely ecstatic, but not with the relationship as such or with Rodolphe, but with the idea that she finally has a lover:..."
Term Paper # 50860 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Flaubert?s ?Madame Bovary?, 2004.
This paper discusses the function of the character Emma in Flaubert?s ?Madame Bovary?.
1,730 words (approx. 6.9 pages), 1 source, MLA, $ 55.95
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Abstract
This paper explains that Emma Bovary from ?Madame Bovary? by Gustave Flaubert is an intriguing character and, like any good character of literature, has all the complexities that 'real' people have. The author points out that Emma is a character who is driven by a desire to achieve the kind of life she has read about in romance novels. The paper relates that Flaubert?s message is a warning about the dangers of the romantic view and the inherent problems in accepting a romantic view as achievable.

From the Paper
"In a normal environment, Emma would be able to express her interest in relationships through the people around her. She would have contact with males and would have people in relationships acting as role models for her. In the convent, Emma is removed from all these influences and essentially isolated from any example of a romantic relationship. With Emma?s natural interest in relationships, this drives her to look elsewhere. The place she looks is in romance novels. With the reading of these novels, Emma has a view created of the perfect man and the perfect relationship. It must also be noted at this point that individuals at this age develop their expectations of the world from the influences in their world. One could argue that it is Emma?s fault for accepting this view, because she should have known better than to accept such a false view of reality."
Term Paper # 16674 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Determinism in "Madame Bovary", 2000.
A review of Gustave Flaubert's "Madame Bovary", focusing on the determinism and fate of the characters of the novel.
1,657 words (approx. 6.6 pages), 1 source, MLA, $ 53.95
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Abstract
This paper analyzes the novel "Madame Bovary" by Gustave Flaubert, discussing the theme of determinism and fate through the characters, Charles and Emma, and the relationship between them. The paper argues, citing evidence from the novel, that Charles Bovary accepts his fate submissively while Emma Bovary struggles passionately against it. Because Flaubert joined these two characters in marriage, his novel becomes absurd. The paper describes how Emma's adultery is her one and only fate, determined by her impossible marriage itself.

From the Paper
"?Fate? and ?destiny? are words a person uses when they believe that what has occurred was set in the stars. Whatever ?fate? they come to is unavoidable; nature and station predetermine a person?s actions and the circumstances surrounding their situation determine the eventual outcome of that situation. There is an inciting event, people react, challenges follow, all proceeding to a succession of events that point to only one possible conclusion. Their ?destiny? or ?fate? is the natural solution. This idea expressed in literature is called determinism. Determinism is the inexorable ?why? of the character?s success or demise; and characteristics inherent in their personality and their societal position are what cause their eventual end. In his novel, Madame Bovary, Gustave Flaubert reveals his remarkable ability to express this idea through the trials and tribulations of his characters, forever enchanting us with captivating imagery and his unique use of metaphors. His determinism is one sprinkled with pessimism; no matter how fervently a character struggles to avoid their ultimate fate, fighting reality proves a fruitless battle?their situation is hopeless."
Term Paper # 61785 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Madame Bovary" and French Society, 2005.
An analysis of Gustave Flaubert's dislike of French society as interpreted through his novel "Madame Bovary".
787 words (approx. 3.1 pages), 7 sources, MLA, $ 28.95
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Abstract
This paper examines how Flaubert put all of his views of French life in the mid 1800's into the novel "Madame Bovary". It looks at how Flaubert believed that French society, especially the bourgeoisie or middle class, was very superficial and hypocritical and how this outlook can be seen through the characters Charles Bovary, Monsieur Homais, and Emma Bovary.

From the Paper
" In addition to Charles Bovary, Flaubert revealed his disgust of French society with the character Monsieur Homais. Homais' purpose as a character in the novel Madame Bovary matches exactly with his purpose as a representation of the typical person in the bourgeois class. He is a pompous and obnoxious apothecary in the small French town of Yonville. (Novels for Students). It could be said that he is a self proclaimed know-it-all type of person. These qualities are revealed as soon as the Bovarys meet Homais after moving to Yonville. Because of these negative characteristics, Homais has very few friends. Homais talked almost constantly about various medical theories and techniques, but in reality he knew nothing about them (Roberts, 9)."
Term Paper # 46178 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Romantic Illusions in "Madame Bovary", 2002.
A discussion on the fall of romanticism in Gustave Flaubert's "Madame Bovary".
1,762 words (approx. 7.0 pages), 6 sources, MLA, $ 56.95
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Abstract
This paper examines how the shattering of romantic illusions forms the central theme of the novel, "Madame Bovary" by Gustave Flaubert. It looks at how Emma Bovary, the protagonist, is unable to reconcile her passionate romanticism with mundane reality and how she enters into adulterous relationships to fulfill her unrealistic desires. It discusses how her tragic end is an outcome of her withdrawal from reality, since she cannot see herself as a failure and refuses to admit that she has indulged in excessive romanticism. It shows how her suicide can be considered escapist, since it underlines the shattering of romantic illusions.

From the Paper
"Emma?s next relationship, with Leon, shows how her romanticism causes isolation?the construction of ?barriers between one human being and another.? The isolation occurs because Emma judges men against her predetermined criteria of romanticism. When Emma is evaluating Leon, she remembers the little things: ?she remembered his other gestures from other days, phrases he had used, the sound of his voice, (and) everything about him? (Flaubert, 1982). She believes that gestures and phrases alone can tell ?everything about him? (Flaubert, 1982). Emma summons a mental facsimile from these memories ?with the acuity of a sensation almost immediate? (Flaubert, 1982)."
Term Paper # 93113 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Madame Bovary" and "The Scarlet Letter", 2007.
A comparative analysis of the main themes of Gustave Flaubert's "Madame Bovary" and Nathaniel Hawthorne's "The Scarlet Letter".
2,019 words (approx. 8.1 pages), 3 sources, MLA, $ 63.95
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Abstract
The two novels "Madame Bovary" by Gustave Flaubert and "The Scarlet Letter" by Nathaniel Hawthorne, are categorized as two of the greatest works of arts in modern literature. This paper examines how, despite the differences in nationalities and cultural backgrounds of the two authors, their versatility and skillfulness have definitely led their novels into a strong success. The paper further compares the main themes and symbolism in the books as well as their different styles, their cultural back grounds and the presence of religion in both novels.

From the Paper
"Irony is one of the main characteristics in both novels .In "Madame Bovary", however, irony is more evident due to Flaubert's strong refusal of his society much more than Hawthorne does. In chapter four , after the wedding Flaubert describes the newly weds : "it was he who gave the impression of having lost his virginity overnight :the bride made not the slightest sigh that could be taken to betray anything at all " In chapter nine ,When Rodolphe offers to escort Emma for a horse ride ,the unsuspected Charles tells him that his wife is at "...his disposal" and thus Flaubert here is stressing on the Bourgeoisie ' lack of intelligence . .Irony is found in "The Scarlet Letter'' as well ,as in chapter three , where Dimmesdale urges Hester to say the name of her lover ,ironically enough ,Dimmesdale himself is this lover : "I charge thee to speak out the name of thy fellow-sinner and fellow sufferer !" . Another ironic gesture is shown when Hester's husband shouts at her among the crowd; "speak woman, speak and give your child a father!" implying that he is the one who should have been the baby's father. Moreover, Chillingworth, who dedicated himself to revenge from DImmesdale and Hester, fails at the end and dies leaving his money to his unfaithful wife and her daughter."
Term Paper # 67011 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Madame Bovary", 2006.
An analysis of Gustave Flaubert's novel "Madame Bovary".
1,825 words (approx. 7.3 pages), 1 source, MLA, $ 58.95
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Abstract
This paper analyzes the novel "Madame Bovary" by Gustave Flaubert, focusing on the character of Emma and the plight of women. The paper asserts that the novel created an indomitable male-dominated order by which all characters had to abide -- and most did, with the one notable exception of Emma. The paper demonstrates how, in trying to fulfill her dreams of a world in which women are not subjugated to men, Emma attempts to transform both herself and the world around her. Despite her best efforts, however, the order is too strong and, as the paper shows, Emma is doomed to be at the mercy of men. The paper concludes with Emma's tragic death as a result of realizing this fact.

From the Paper
"Emma also recognizes that woman's weakness is a two-pronged deficiency, one prong being biological, the other being social. Biologically, she is physically weaker than man. Socially, according to the laws and standards, a married woman is the legal subjugate to her husband--she is in his power. Her hope is to have a male child, and, thus, to live vicariously through him--to experience, or at least taste his freedom. This is a hope, however, that goes unfulfilled. Perhaps Emma is punished for simply daring to hope. She gives birth to a girl, and faints dead away upon learning so. She cannot live vicariously through a daughter, for, in doing so, she would only be re-experiencing the lack of power that she already knows in her own life. She names her baby Berthe--a name, she recalls, by which a dignified man (the marquis) addressed an otherwise unnotable young woman at La Vaubyessard (p. 74). Perhaps, by giving her daughter a name she associates with a man, she hopes to grant her daughter some essence of masculinity. Whatever the case, it is no real surprise that Emma comes to shun her daughter--a constant, living, breathing reminder of her own weakness perpetuated."
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Papers [1-15] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 7]
Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 —>