BOBC |
Resource type: Journal Article Language: en: English Peer reviewed BibTeX citation key: Watts2011 Email resource to friend View all bibliographic details |
Categories: General Keywords: "Gemma Bovery", "Madame Bovary", Adaptation, Flaubert. Gustave, Identity, Literature, Memoria, Simmonds. Posy, Space, United Kingdom Creators: Watts Collection: Essays in French Literature and Culture |
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Attachments | URLs https://search.inf ... 7911451;res=IELHSS |
Abstract |
This article explores the relationship between memory, identity, and cartoon landscapes in Gemma Bovery (1999). Posy Simmonds' graphic novel offers itself as a satirical redrawing of Madame Bovary. British socialite Gemma is a woman whose expectations of life have been conditioned by glossy magazines and who, like her Flaubertian predecessor, is trapped in a cycle of debt and failed love affairs. Alongside this playful engagement with its canonical source, however, Gemma Bovery also contains a more serious reflection on the way in which personal identity is reconfigured by memory. Transplanting her characters from urban Britain to rural France, Simmonds exposes their attempts to fit in with a new cultural and geographical landscape, only for fragmented memories of the past to hinder their progress.
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