
When I mentioned to an acquaintance of mine that I was reading
Madame Bovary, he immediately raised eyebrows, accusing it of being a racy book. Come to find out, he hadn’t read the book; neither was he basing his impression on the famous obscenity trial of 1857, but instead on a movie version he had seen years ago. If you’ve read
Madame Bovary, you’ll see (as many of Flaubert’s contemporaries failed to see) that sex is beside the point; instead, it’s a tool—among others more outstanding—that Flaubert uses to make a thematic point. Many point to
ennui as a great theme in
Madame Bovary. You might also take away thematic ideas on the danger of allowing disillusion to take over when life fails to live up to a person’s ideal vision of it. You can see how these themes are far richer and far more needing illumination than mere sex.