Working Class Morality Gustave Flaubert's Madame Bovary, distributed in 1857, communicates his aversion of the French bourgeoisie. He taunts anybody not privileged pronouncing that they have no firm ethics and endure exclusively on Romanticism. Flaubert utilizes artistic methods, for example, lingual authority, metaphorical language, and punctuation to straightforwardly condemn the white collar class for deserting their ethics when it gets advantageous and useful for them. Flaubert uses ground-breaking style to scrutinize the sentiments of the white collar class as they desert their ethics, finding that it can propel their place in the social rank. Emma Bovary, the hero of the novel, is in urgent need of cash to pay an obligation. Looking for cash she visits a public accountant of the town, when he wants sexual favors consequently she blames him for exploiting [her] trouble… [She] is to be felt sorry for not to be sold (Flaubert 280).

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