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The Dictionary of Received Ideas (in French,
Le Dictionnaire des Idées Reçues) is a short satirical work
collected and published in 1911-3 from notes compiled by
Gustave Flaubert during the 1870s, lampooning the clichés
endemic to French society under the
Second French Empire. It takes the form of a dictionary of
automatic thoughts and platitudes, self-contradictory and
insipid. It is often paired with the Sottisier (a
collection of stupid quotations taken from the books of famous
writers).
At the time of Flaubert's death, it was unclear whether he
intended eventually to publish it separately, or as an appendix
to his unfinished novel,
Bouvard et Pécuchet. In some of his notes, it seems that
Flaubert intended the dictionary to be taken as the final
creation of the two protagonists. In other notes, it seems the
Sottisier is intended as their final work.
The idea of a spoof encyclopedia had fascinated him all his
life. As a child, he had amused himself by writing down the
absurd utterances of a friend of his mother's, and over the
course of his career he speculated as to the best format for a
compilation of stupidities. In a letter to Louis Bouilhet from
1850, Flaubert wrote: "Such a book, with a good preface in which
the motive would be stated to be the desire to bring the nation
back to Tradition, Order and Sound Conventions—all this so
phrased that the reader would not know whether or not his leg
was being pulled—such a book would certainly be unusual, even
likely to succeed, because it would be entirely up to the
minute." He wrote to Louise Colet in 1852: "No law could attack
me, though I should attack everything. It would be the
justification of Whatever is, is right. I should
sacrifice the great men to all the nitwits, the martyrs to all
the executioners, and do it in a style carried to the wildest
pitch—fireworks.... After reading the book, one would be afraid
to talk, for fear of using on of the phrases in it."
The dictionary is comparable in many respects to
Ambrose Bierce's
The Devil's Dictionary, but takes the opposite tack by
affirming all the commonplace notions.
Examples
- ABSINTHE. Extra-violent poison: one glass and
you're dead. Newspapermen drink it as they write their copy.
Has killed more soldiers than the Bedouin.
- ARCHIMEDES. On hearing his name, shout "Eureka!"
Or else: "Give me a fulcrum and I will move the world."
There is also Archimedes's screw, but you are not expected
to know what it is.
- FEUDALISM. No need to have one single precise
notion about it: thunder against.
- OMEGA. Second letter of the Greek alphabet.
- THIRTEEN. Avoid being thirteen at table; it
brings bad luck. The strong-minded should not fail to crack
jokes: "What is the difference? I'll eat enough for two!" Or
again, if there are ladies, ask if any is pregnant.
- WALTZ. Wax indignant about. A lascivious, impure
dance that should only be danced by old ladies.
References
- Flaubert, Gustave. 1954 (revised 1968). Flaubert's
Dictionary of Accepted Ideas. Translated by Jacques Barzun.
New York: New Directions.
ISBN 0-8112-0054-X
[1]
- Barger, Jorn. 2002. Analysis of Flaubert's Dictionary of
Received Ideas.
[2]
External link
-
Dictionnaire des idées reçues, available at
Project Gutenberg.
Categories:
1911 books |
Satirical books |
Dictionaries