The Dreams That Undid Her: Madame Bovary

The Dreams That Undid Her: Madame Bovary

Flaubert doesn’t write Emma as a villain or a victim, but as a deeply human character. Her choices may be selfish or foolish, but they come from real pain.

When Madame Bovary was first published in 1857, it shocked readers with its unflinching look at a woman’s dissatisfaction with marriage and her pursuit of romance outside it. More than 160 years later, Gustave Flaubert’s novel remains a powerful study of longing, illusion, and disappointment. Told with precise, careful language, Madame Bovary is not just the story of one woman’s downfall—it’s a critique of society’s promises and a warning about confusing fantasy with reality. Emma Bovary is the restless wife of a kind but boring country doctor, Charles Bovary. She wants more from life: passion, luxury, excitement—the kind of experiences…

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