Thursday, July 12, 2007

Literary Podcast-The Trial of Madame Bovary

In January 1857 a man called Ernest Pinard stood up in a crowded courtroom and declared, “Art that observes no rule is no longer art; it is like a woman who disrobes completely. To impose the one rule of public decency on art is not to subjugate it but to honour it”. Pinard was no grumbling hack, he was the imperial prosecutor of France, and facing him across the courtroom was the writer Gustave Flaubert. Flaubert’s work had been declared “an affront to decent comportment and religious morality”. It was a novel called Madame Bovary.

The trial became an argument about art and morality, about sex and marriage, it caused a sensation in Paris and forged Madame Bovary’s reputation as one of the greatest novels in the French language.


Listen to the podcast from BBC

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