Dictionary Of Received Ideas

Dictionary of Received Ideas (in French, La Dictionnaire des Idées Reçues) is a satirical work by Gustave Flaubert, lampooning the cliches endemic to French society under the Second French Empire. The book takes its form as a dictionary of catchphrases and platitudes, most of which are as paradoxical as they are insipid. In part, the book illustrates the transformation of modern man under machine capitalism by exploring the way that dialogue becomes prefabricated, and the ways in which meaning becomes divorced from context. At the time of Flaubert's death, it was unclear whether he intended to publish the book seperately (though he may have been wary of creating a scandal, as he had with his earlier Madame Bovary), or as an appendix to his unfinished novel, Bouvard et Pcuchet. In some of his notes, it seems that Flaubert intended the dictionary to be taken as the final creation of the two protagonists of the latter novel. The work is similar in many respects to Ambrose Bierce's The Devil's Dictionary.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
vegalta sendai
peter heylin
abrahamic mythology
ileus
cereal partners worldwide
black athena
groeningemuseum
hba1c
list of alberta related topics
scrappy moore
aaron hill
vog
krasovani
doug williams (football player)
ss conte di savoia
dextropropoxyphene
doug williams
little plastic castle
astor place (manhattan)
up up up up up up
bouvard et pcuchet
stoneage romeos
vibrio harveyi
the x files (motion picture)
semi collared flycatcher
enercon gmbh
chris owens (actor)
operation days of penitence fatalities
george william smith
mitch pileggi
marcia cross
senai airport
hmcs yukon
queen's award for export achievement
nicholas lea
little johnny
36th chess olympiad
otakou
lateran palace
melinda mcgraw
smart drive 2002
uss bashaw (ss 241)
revelling: reckoning
right of magistrates