Howells' article 15.2

Dublin Core

Title

Howells' article 15.2

Article Item Type Metadata

Author

Christina Howells

Title

Rancière, Sartre and Flaubert: From The Idiot of the Family to The Politics of Aesthetics

Abstract

This paper discusses Rancière’s attitude to Sartre through an examination of the two philosophers’ analyses of Flaubert, and especially of Madame Bovary. It argues that Rancière simplifies Sartre’s conception of literary commitment and seriously downplays the subtlety of his understanding of the relationship between literature and politics. Furthermore, by limiting his sources to Sartre’s Qu’est-ce que la littérature? (1948), and not considering L’Idiot de la famille (1971–72), Rancière fails to recognise the similarities between Sartre’s account and his own, with respect to both aesthetic theory and stylistic analysis.

Volume

15.2 (Fall/Automne 2011)

Pages

82-94

Files

Citation

“Howells' article 15.2,” Symposium, accessed April 29, 2024, http://www.artsrn.ualberta.ca/symposium/items/show/8.

Document Viewer