Formal Revolution in the Work of Baudelaire and Flaubert

Cover: Formal Revolution in the Work of Baudelaire and Flaubert
Author
Kathryn Oliver Mills

Hardback
March 2012 • ISBN 978-1611493948 • $86.00

Paperback
October 2013 • ISBN 978-1611494921 • $45.99

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In Formal Revolution in the Work of Baudelaire and Flaubert, Kathryn Oliver Mills argues that despite the enduring celebrity of Baudelaire and Flaubert, their significance to modern art has been miscast and misunderstood. To date, literary criticism has paid insufficient attention to these authors’ literary form and their socio-cultural context. In addition, critical literature has not always adequately integrated individual works to each author’s broader oeuvre: on the one hand critics do not often maintain rigorous distinctions among texts when discussing Baudelaire and Flaubert, and on the other hand scholars of Baudelaire and Flaubert have not consistently considered the relationship of individual texts to either writer’s corpus. Furthermore, critical focus has been on the modernity of Les Fleurs du malMadame Bovary, and L’Education Sentimentale. Addressing these lacunae in scholarship on Baudelaire and Flaubert, Formal Revolution in the Work of Baudelaire and Flaubert puts forth the argument that the modern esthetics developed by Baudelaire in Le Peintre de la vie modern, and by Flaubert in his correspondence, are best embodied by Baudelaire’s collection of prose poems, Le Spleen de Paris, and by Flaubert’s short, poetic tales, Trois contesFormal Revolution places these relatively less well-known but last published works in relationship with the artistic goals of their authors, showing that Baudelaire and Flaubert were both acutely aware of the need to launch a new form of literature in order to literally “come to terms with” the dramatic changes transforming the nineteenth-century into the Modern Age. More specifically, Formal Revolution demonstrates that for Baudelaire and Flaubert the formal project of fusing prose with poetry—as poetic prose in the case of Flaubert, as poetry in prose in the case of Baudelaire—was crucial to their mission of “painting modern life.” This work concludes that experimentation with literary form represents these two seminal writers’ major legacy to modernity; suggests that the twentieth-century might have gone too far down that road; and speculates about the future direction of literature. The modernity of Baudelaire and Flaubert, still relevant today but often taken for granted, needs to be reexamined in light of the cultural, formal, and contextual considerations that inform Formal Revolution in the Work of Baudelaire and Flaubert.

About the Author
Kathryn Oliver Mills in professor at Sewanee, the University of the South.