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The Family Idiot: Gustave Flaubert, 1821-1857, Volume 5
 
 
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The Family Idiot: Gustave Flaubert, 1821-1857, Volume 5 [Hardcover]

Jean-Paul Sartre (Author), Carol Cosman (Translator)

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Book Description

0226735192 978-0226735191 January 26, 1994 1
With this volume, the University of Chicago Press completes its translation of a work that is indispensable not only to serious readers of Flaubert but to anyone interested in the last major contribution by one of the twentieth century's greatest thinkers.

That Sartre's study of Flaubert, The Family Idiot, is a towering achievement in intellectual history has never been disputed. Yet critics have argued about the precise nature of this novel or biography or "criticism-fiction" which is the summation of Sartre's philosophical, social, and literary thought. In the preface, Sartre writes: "The Family Idiot is the sequel to Search for a Method. The subject: what, at this point in time, can we know about a man? It seemed to me that this question could only be answered by studying a specific case."

Sartre discusses Flaubert's personal development, his relationship to his family, his decision to become a writer, and the psychosomatic crisis or "conversion" from his father's domination to the freedom of his art. Sartre blends psychoanalysis with a sociological study of the ideology of the period, the crisis in literature, and Flaubert's influence on the future of literature.

While Sartre never wrote the final volume he envisioned for this vast project, the existing volumes constitute in themselves a unified work—one that John Sturrock, writing in the Observer, called "a shatteringly fertile, digressive and ruthless interpretation of these few cardinal years in Flaubert's life."

"A virtuoso perfomance. . . . For all that this book does to make one reconsider his life, The Family Idiot is less a case study of Flaubert than it is a final installment of Sartre's mythology. . . . The translator, Carol Cosman, has acquitted herself brilliantly."—Frederick Brown, New York Review of Books

"A splendid translation by Carol Cosman. . . . Sartre called The Family Idiot a 'true novel,' and it does tell a story and eventually reach a shattering climax. The work can be described most simply as a dialectic, which shifts between two seemingly alternative interpretations of Flaubert's destiny: a psychoanalytic one, centered on his family and on his childhood, and a Marxist one, whose guiding themes are the status of the artist in Flaubert's period and the historical and ideological contradictions faced by his social class, the bourgeoisie."—Fredric Jameson, New York Times Book Review

Jean-Paul Sartre (1906-1980) was offered, but declined, the Nobel Prize for literature in 1964. His many works of fiction, drama, and philosophy include the monumental study of Flaubert, The Family Idiot, and The Freud Scenario, both published in translation by the University of Chicago Press.





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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Gustave Flaubert's boyhood desire to become an actor was "his way of living the situation assigned to him in the Flaubert family," writes Sartre. This monumental life study draws on psychoanalysis and existentialism in imagining how Flaubert forged his inner self. Sartre portrays the author of Madame Bovary as a Nero of words whose towering literary ambition was the revenge of a child seething with rage at his manly, overpossessive mother. Though this volume covers Flaubert's early literary career, the emphasis is on childhood and adolescence. His fetishes, homoerotic affairs, self-proclaimed desire to be a woman and masochism add up to a seldom-seen side of the polished literary stylist. Readers not put off by the dense academic prose and highly speculative approach will find much to ponder.
Copyright 1987 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.

From Library Journal

This volume completes the publication of Sartre's monumental five-volume study of Flaubert, a work that sums up Sartre's thought as much as his subject's. Sartre, who never wrote the final volume he had planned, here concludes with a climax rather than a denouement, ending with the publication of Madame Bovary. Since Flaubert distilled with acuity the sociohistorical climate of his class and era, all the major and minor figures of the time find their place in this account, whether in kowtow or combat. In the end, translator Cosman's achievement is as stellar as Sartre's--and as interpretive of his work as Sartre was of Flaubert's. Her work on earlier volumes (e.g., Vol. 4, LJ 7/91) has been criticized for failing to normalize the style, but her strategy is clear: to make Sartre a Deconstructionist, an exemplar of a movement that paralleled his last years and largely ignored him. The result shows Sartre at this most encyclopedic and makes him sound relevant. For specialized liter ary collections.
- Marilyn Gaddis Rose, SUNY-Binghamton
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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More About the Author

Novelist, playwright, and biographer Jean-Paul Sartre (1905-80) is widely considered one of the greatest philosophers of the twentieth century. His major works include "No Exit," "Nausea," "The Wall," "The Age of Reason," "Critique of Dialectical Reason," "Being and Nothingness," and "Roads to Freedom," an allegory of man's search for commitment, and not, as the man at the off-licence says, an everyday story of French country folk.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Thus far we have tried to understand Flaubert's neurosis from within, to reconstruct its protohistorical genesis, its history, and to discover the subjective teleological intentions it constitutes and by which it is structured in turn. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
subjective neurosis, panoramic consciousness, objective neurosis, scientistic humanism, defunct aristocracy, apprentice author, false army, vatic poet, legitimate aristocracy, class transcendence, scientistic ideology, false emperor, wrought matter, literary autonomy, false literature, paternal curse, analytic reason, classical centuries, objective spirit, false nobility, young bourgeois, bourgeois distinction, enlightened elite, vile multitude, prior circumstances
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Madame Bovary, George Sand, Knights of Nothingness, Loser Wins, Ancien Régime, Third Republic, Legion of Honor, Saint Antoine, Second Republic, Knight of Nothingness, Prince Napoleon, Middle Ages, Parisian Household, Trois Contes, Victor Hugo, Casimir Perier, Edition de Monaco, Marie-Jeanne Durry, Revue de Paris, Doctor Cloquet, Doctor Flaubert, Gilles de Rais, Louis Blanc, Madame Durry, Madame Schlesinger
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