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Les Fleurs du mal Critical Essay | Critical Essay by Edward K. Kaplan

This literature criticism consists of approximately 23 pages of analysis & critique of Les Fleurs du mal.
This section contains 6,665 words
(approx. 23 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Les fleurs du mal - Critical Essay by Edward K. Kaplan

Critical Essay by Edward K. Kaplan

SOURCE: "Baudelaire and the Vicissitudes of Venus: Ethical Irony in Fleurs du Mal," in The Shaping of Text: Style, Imagery, and Structure in French Literature, edited by Emanuel J. Mickel, Jr., Bucknell University Press, 1993, pp. 113-30.

In the following essay, Kaplan explores the relationship between ethics and sexuality in Les Fleurs du Mal.

Respectful attention to literary context often helps resolve thorny theoretical issues. The "architecture" (or overall thematic structure) of Les Fleurs du Mal can be delineated, with some certainty, through analysis of certain sequences (or cycles), and Baudelaire's deliberate revisions of the first (1857) edition provide empirical confirmation. Here, quite briefly, are the changes. The second (1861) edition, which remained definitive, marks a radical shift from a poetics of transcendent Beauty to a poetics of compassion for imperfect, and afflicted, people. Most of the thirty-two added poems embrace the world as it exists.

Baudelaire altered the first...
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This section contains 6,665 words
(approx. 23 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Les fleurs du mal - Critical Essay by Edward K. Kaplan
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Les fleurs du mal - Critical Essay by Edward K. Kaplan from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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