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Flaubert and the Gift of Speech : Dialogue and Discourse in Four "Modern" Novels

Part of the Cambridge Studies in French series
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This is the first book-length study of Flaubert's use of dialogue, an important but neglected component of his fictional texts.

Professor Haig's starting point is Sartre's observation that 'Flaubert does not believe that we speak: we are spoken'.

Dialogue in Flaubert does not attempt to represent an individual style but to circumscribe a larger phenomenon of language.

Speech defines man both in the sense that it describes him as a set of human characteristics, and inscribes him within a system of social values.

The author explores the development of Flaubert's use of dialogue in Madame Bovary, L'Education Sentimentale (both versions), and Bouvard et Pecuchet.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
0521326494 / 9780521326490
Hardback
09/10/1986
United Kingdom
208 pages
138 x 216 mm, 358 grams