Emma 's attitude changed for the opportunity to escape as she became more fun in front of the bachelor' s degree. Emma finally escaped her marriage during her death. She brought up arsenic and cried Charles, "Opening the window, I am asphyxic" (223). With the additional effect of poison, Emma was able to find himself far away from the happiness of Charles. The open window left Emma 's soul a path to heaven, where she did not mind anybody. On the other hand, Flaubert put Emma on the closed window and increased her feeling that she was overwhelmed by marriage.
Mrs Bofari and Lev Tolstoy 's Anna Karelina Gustav Flaubert wrote to Mrs Bovary: "Death of a person always causes a paralysis situation, it is very difficult, it grabs the arrival of nothing and it actually To succumb to the facts that arise (258) It is more embarrassing when death is suicide, when nothing happens to self-initiation, it's more embarrassing For the readers of Flaubert's Madame Bovary and Lev Tolstoy's Anna Karenina, Heroine's literary suicide is similar to a coma, even in the imaginary world being assembled, it also needs to accept the pause of death reality.
In the time series, Madam Bobary is about 50 years earlier than "awakening" and "women" come later, but the latter two novels are inspired by Mrs Bobary often called American Boeverly. Japanese wife and wife. In fact, in the fictitious world, both Edna and Yoko belong to the same era, the turn of the century when "new women" appeared. Therefore, they are the modern version of Madame Bobary of America and Japan. So, in the context of Flaubert 's Mrs. Bovary, there were three rebellious women who worked hard to achieve their goals in their cultural restrictions and how their contempt for them was Discussed whether it caused self destruction. I also note that although these heroines have different cultural backgrounds, there is no difference in human boundaries between cultural boundaries. (Abstract has been shortened by author's permission.)
Self-Conflict Struggle from Comparative Perspective: Women's Awakening Theme in Three Realistic Novels - "Mrs. Bovary" by Gustav Flaubert, "Awakening" by Kate Chopin, and "Aru Onna" by Arishima Takeo
Gustave Flaubert advocates extreme aspects of human life. He published a story of emotional symbolism in the life of Charles Bovary. Mrs Bovary is a story of Emma Bovary, but within the symbolic meaning Charles' composition was solved. It represents a deep sad and frustrated view of life. Many of them are deeply embedded in the story like a cold and ruthless puncture wound. The elements that make up Charles Bovary are still very obvious and bothering all his moves