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A Gustave Flaubert Encyclopedia

Choice Reviews Online, 2001
Gustave Flaubert is probably the most famous novelist of nineteenth-century France, and his best known work,Madame Bovary,is read in numerous comparative literature and French courses. His fiction set the standard to which other authors turned to learn their craft, and his cult of art and his unrelenting search for stylistic perfection inspired many ...
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Dictionnaire Gustave Flaubert

2017
Ce dictionnaire propose un « tout Flaubert » à partir des axes principaux de sa vie et de son œuvre : noms de personnes et de lieux, aspects biographiques, sans oublier l’écriture et ses techniques, puisque Flaubert a révolutionné l’art du roman avec son approche spécifique de la prose comme « travail ».
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[Gustave Flaubert's illness].

Revue neurologique, 1983
All those interested in Gustave Flaubert's illness, during his lifetime as well as after his death, have agreed that he had epilepsy. The one important exception is Jean-Paul Sartre, who, in the 2800 pages of his "Idiot de la famille" claimed that Flaubert was a hysteric with very moderate intelligence who somatized his neurosis in the form of seizures.
H, Gastaut, Y, Gastaut
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Gustave Flaubert

Though he shunned the notion of the writer’s social mission, Flaubert pondered the philosophy of history. By dint of their critical thrust and masterful poetics, his novels possess an undeniable meditative character: historical and political interrogations run through the fabric of his texts.
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