
In 1857 The Trials Of Flaubert And Baudelaire For Offending Against Religion And Public Morality Drew Attention To The Features We Now Associate With Literary Modernism; But Instead Of Winning Praise For Their Innovations They Were Indicted For Ideological Crimes. With The Passage Of Time The Offenses Have Been Forgotten And The Innovations Inserted Into A Triumphal Narrative About The Rise Of Modernism. Far From Manifesting The Autonomy Proclaimed By Modernism's Defenders, Though, Flaubert's And Baudelaire's Works Remain Enmeshed In Their Socio-historical Contexts. To That End, The Censorship Effect Argues That The Stylistic Features That Prompted The Criminal Indictment Of Madame Bovary And Les Fleurs Du Mal--flaubert's Free Indirect Style And Baudelaire's Multiple Poetic Personae--were Much More The Products Of An Intense Struggle With A Culture Of Censorship Than They Were Hallmarks Of Autonomous Or Autoreferential Works Of Art. They Exhibit Signs Of Self-censorship And Collaboration With A Regime Of Ethical And Political Censorship That Not Only Shaped Their Very Composition But Affected Their Reception And Continues To Operate In The Field Of Literary Criticism. Indeed, As William Olmsted Compellingly Demonstrates, French Modernism Begins And Remains Deeply Embedded In A Culture Of Censorship Whose Proprieties, Both Literary And Social, Baudelaire And Flaubert Nevertheless Challenged And Transgressed. Exploring The Censorship Effect As It Played Out For Baudelaire And Flaubert, From Their Trials To Their Monuments, The Censorship Effect Recaptures Some Sense Of Their Original Anger As Well As Its Ongoing Suppression By New Orthodoxies And Reveals How The Effect Of Censorship Has Implications Beyond Flaubert And Baudelaire, Beyond Authors, But For Us As Readers Too.
This book investigates how the 1857 criminal trials of Gustave Flaubert and Charles Baudelaire fundamentally shaped the stylistic innovations of French Modernism. William Olmsted, a scholar of French literature, argues that the defining features of these authors' works—such as Flaubert's free indirect style and Baudelaire's multiple poetic personae—were not merely autonomous artistic choices but were products of an intense, ongoing struggle with a restrictive culture of censorship. By examining the intersection of legal indictment and creative output, Olmsted posits that Modernism is deeply embedded in the very social and ethical constraints it sought to challenge.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and critics recognize this work as a significant intervention in the study of French Modernism, noting its ability to reframe canonical texts through the lens of political and social pressure. Readers frequently highlight the academic rigor of the prose and the author's success in connecting historical legal proceedings to contemporary literary theory.
Page Count:
224
Publication Date:
2016-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press, Incorporated
ISBN-10:
019023864X
ISBN-13:
9780190238643
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