Introduction
Considered among the most influential novelists of the nineteenth century, Flaubert is frequently associated with the realist and naturalist schools of fiction and is best known for his masterpiece Madame Bovary (1857). A meticulous literary craftsman, Flaubert diligently researched his subjects and infused his works with psychological realism with the goal of achieving an objective prose style "as rhythmical as verse and as precise as the language of science." -- Gustave Flaubert Criticism
Recommended Resources
All Resources
- A Sentimental Education - Book Review
- A Sentimental Education - Literary Characters
- A Sentimental Education - Literary Places
- A Simple Heart - Book Review
- A Simple Heart - Masterplots II: Short Story Series
- A Simple Heart Study Guide
- Bouvard and Pecuchet - Literary Characters
- Critical Survey of Long Fiction
- Critical Survey of Short Fiction
- Cyclopedia of World Authors
- Dictionary of World Biography: The 19th Century
- Flaubert-Sand
- Flaubert-Sand - Book Review
- Gustave Flaubert - Nineteenth-Century Literary Criticism
- Gustave Flaubert - Short Story Criticism
- Gustave Flaubert Censorship
- Madame Bovary (1934)
- Madame Bovary (1949)
- Madame Bovary (1991)
- Madame Bovary (2000)
- Madame Bovary - Book Review
- Madame Bovary - Literary Characters
- Madame Bovary - Literary Places
- Madame Bovary - Masterplots
- Madame Bovary Criticism
- Madame Bovary eText
- Madame Bovary Lesson Plans
- Madame Bovary Study Guide
- Salammbo - Literary Characters
- Salammbo - Literary Places
- Salammbo Criticism
- The Oxford Companion to English Literature Article on Gustave Flaubert
- The Temptation of Saint Anthony - Literary Characters
- The Temptation of Saint Anthony - Literary Places
