The label Realism came to be applied to literature by way of painting as a result of the controversy surrounding the work of Gustave Courbet in the early 1850s. Courbet’s realism consisted in the emotionally neutral presentation of a slice of life chosen for its ordinariness rather than for any intrinsic beauty. Literary realism, however, was a much less easily definable concept. Hence the loose use of the term in the late 1850s, when it was applied to works as various as Gustave Flaubert’s Madame Bovary (1857), Baudelaire’s Les Fleurs du mal, and the social dramas of Alexandre Dumas fils. ...(100 of 41004 words)