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Madama Bovary & Anna Karenina



          Reading provides an escape for people from the ordinariness
 of everyday life. Madame Bovary and Anna Karenina, dissatisfied with
 their lives pursued their dreams of ecstasy and love through reading.
 At the beginning of both novels Anna Karenina and Emma Bovary made
 active decisions about their future although these decisions were not
 always rational. As their lives started to disintegrate Emma and Anna
 sought to live out their dreams and fantasies through reading. Reading
 served as morphine allowing them to escape the pain of everyday life,
 but reading like morphine closed them off from the rest of the world
 preventing them from making rational decisions. It was Anna and Emma's
 loss of reasoning and isolation that propelled them toward their
 downfall.

          Emma at the beginning of the novel was someone who made
 active decisions about what she wanted. She saw herself as the master
 of her destiny. Her affair with Rudolphe was made after her decision
 to live out her fantasies and escape the ordinariness of her life and
 her marriage to Charles. Emma's active decisions though were based
 increasingly as the novel progresses on her fantasies. The lechery to
 which she falls victim is a product of the debilitating adventures her
 mind takes. These adventures are feed by the novels that she reads.
          They were filled with love affairs, lovers, mistresses,
 persecuted ladies fainting in lonely country houses, postriders killed
 at every relay, horses ridden to death on every page, dark forests,
 palpitating hearts, vows, sobs, tears and kisses, skiffs in the
 moonlight, nightingales in thickets, and gentlemen brave as lions
 gentle as lambs, virtuous as none really is, and always ready to
 shed floods of tears.(Flaubert 31.)
         Emma's already impaired reasoning and disappointing marriage
 to Charles caused Emma to withdraw into reading books, she fashioning
 herself a life based not in reality but in fantasy.
          Anna Karenina at the begging of Tolstoy's novel was a bright
 and energetic women. When Tolstoy first introduces us to Anna she
 appears as the paragon of virtue, a women in charge of her own
 destiny.
          He felt that he had to have another look at her- not because
 she was very beautiful not because of her elegance and unassuming
 grace which was evident in her whole figure but because their was
 something specially sweet and tender in the expression of her lovely
 face as she passed him. (Tolstoy 76.)
         In the next chapter Anna seems to fulfill expectations Tolstoy
 has aroused in the reader when she mends Dolly and Oblonskys marriage.
 But Anna like Emma has a defect in her reasoning, she has an inability
 to remain content with the ordinariness of her life: her marriage to
 Karenin, the social festivities, and housekeeping. Anna longs to live
 out the same kind of romantic vision of life that Emma also read and
 fantasized about.
          Anna read and understood everything, but she found no
 pleasure in reading, that is to say in following the reflection in
 other people's lives. She was to eager to live herself. When she read
 how a heroine of a novel nursed a sick man, she wanted to move about
 the sick room with noiseless steps herself. When she read how Lady
 Mary rode to hounds and teased her sister-in-law, astonishing everyone
 by her daring, she would have liked to do the same. (Tolstoy 114.)
         Anna Karenina was a romantic who tried to make her fantasies a
 reality. It was for this reason she had an affair with Vronsky. Like
 Emma her decisions were driven by impulsiveness and when the
 consequences caught up with her latter in the novel she secluded
 herself from her friends, Vronsky, and even her children. Anna and
 Emma both had character flaws that made them view the world as fantasy
 so that when their fantasy crumbled they resorted to creating a new
 fantasy by living their lives through the books they read.
          Books allowed Emma Bovary to withdraw from her deteriorating
 life. They allowed her to pursue her dreams of love, affairs, and
 knights; from the wreckage of her marriage with Charles. Emma's,
 experience at La Vaubyessard became a source of absurd fantasy for
 Emma, and ingrained in her mind that the world that the novel's she
 read depicted was with in her reach.
          She devoured without skipping a word, every article about
 first nights in the theater, horse races and soirees; she was
 interested in the debut of every new sing, the opening of every new
 shop. She new the dress of the latest fashions and the addresses of
 every new tailor, the days when one went to the Bois or the Opera.
 (Flaubert 55.)
         This passage shows the absolute absurdity of Emma's obsession
 with reading. Emma while living in her remote French village in her
 mind was living out the life of a Parisian. As Emma decisions
 continued to sink her further into debt and deceit she began to live
 more and more through the novels she read. Her affair with Leon was
 undertaken partially to fulfill the fantasies of the novels she read.
 The room she rented for her rendezvous with Leon she decorated in the
 opulence that her novels bespoke, and she spent vast sums of money to
 continue the fantasy the novels she read described. Emma's continued
 detachment with reality made her unable to make rational decisions or
 even allow her to deal with her problems. The fantasy in which she
 lived made her unable to take action for herself.
          She blamed Leon for her disappointed hopes, as though he had
 betrayed her; and she even wished for a catastrophe that would bring
 about their separation, since she did not have the courage to take any
 action herself. (Flaubert 251.)
         Finally, Emma lost all control over her life as she became
 instead of the active character in the novel merely the observer of
 the consequences of her actions. And like the heroines of the novels
 she read she saw her only salvation would be through a dramatic
 suicide. Emma's obsession with reading lead her to make decisions that
 escalated her unhappiness and further paralyzed her from dealing with
 reality.
          Anna Karenina like Emma Bovary turned to novels to provide an
 escape from her unhappy life. Anna wracked with guilt over abandoning
 Seryozha and shunned by society turned to morphine and reading to
 provide a fantasy life when her own life was crumbling around her.
 When Anna and Vronsky's relationship further disintegrated in the
 novel Anna turned more inward. She ventured with Vronsky to Italy to
 try to repair their relationship and then to a country estate. The
 country estate was lavish but for Anna it was a lonely place.
          Anna devoted as much time to her appearance, even when they
 had no visitors, and she read a great deal, both novels and serious
 books that happened to be in fashion. She ordered all the books that
 received good notices in the foreign papers and periodicals they
 subscribed to and read them with the attention that is only possible
 in seclusion. (Tolstoy 640.)
         Anna's relationship with Vronsky continued to crumble. But
 both Anna and Vronsky were unable to take action to do anything either
 to save their relationship or deal with her divorce with Karenin. Anna
 like Emma became so trapped in her fantasy world she was unable to
 deal with reality. Anna in the last parts of the novels watches as her
 life disintegrates but she continues to take no action as she delves
 into the morphine and novels that provide a palliative for reality. It
 is critical to realize that both Anna and Emma are aware that they are
 living in fantasy, and is precisely because they are aware of reality
 that they despair and kill themselves when they see that they have in
 their minds no escape from their troubles. Both Anna and Emma also
 attempt to use reason to escape from their problems, "Yes I am very
 troubled and reason was given to us to escape from our troubles," says
 Anna Karenina. But both Anna and Emma's reason is so distorted by the
 fantasy in which they live that they see little escape from life but
 through death.
          Anna Karenina and Emma Bovary live out their dreams and
 fantasies through reading novels which serve as palliatives for their
 painful lives. Reading novels is not the primary theme in their lives
 nor is it the primary reason they kill themselves. But their use of
 reading as an escape from reality is critical to Anna and Emma's
 characters. It is Anna and Emma's reading of novels which allows them
 to abandon their husbands and pursue their fantasies both in life and
 in their minds. It is reading which prevents them from using reason to
 correct their troubles. It is reading which distorts their reality and
 forces them to become dissatisfied and bored with the ordinary
 pleasures of life. Anna Karenina and Madame Bovary are books
 ironically about the dangers of reading.


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