'Les Tentations de Saint Antoine' and Flaubert's Fiction: A Creative Dynamic

Front Cover
Rodopi, 2001 - 201 pages
This book reveals the extensive and dynamic interplay between Les Tentations de saint Antoine and the rest of Flaubert's fiction. Mary Neiland combines two critical approaches, genetic and intertextual criticism, in order to trace the development of selected topoi and figures across the three versions of La Tentation and on through Flaubert's other major works. Each chapter is devoted to one of these centres of interest, namely, the banquet scene, the cityscape, the crowd, the seductive female and the Devil. Detailed study of these five areas exposes a remarkable intimacy between writings that appear at a far remove from each other. The networks of recurring images located demonstrate for the first time the obsessive nature of Flaubert's writing practice; the pursuit of these networks across his fictional writings exposes his developing technique; and La Tentation is revealed as both a privileged moment of expression and as a place of auto-reflection.
This volume will be of interest to students and specialists of Flaubert as well as to those interested in genetic and intertextual criticism.
 

Contents

Acknowledgements
7
The Banquet Scene
20
11
52
19
64
The Cityscape
73
The Crowd
105
The Seductive Female
113
La Tentation 1874
121
Intertextual Relationships
134
The Devil
147
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page 12 - Je le définis pour ma part, d'une manière sans doute restrictive, par une relation de coprésence entre deux ou plusieurs textes, c'est-à-dire, eidétiquement et le plus souvent, par la présence effective d'un texte dans un autre.

Bibliographic information