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Female performance practice on the fin-de-siècle popular stages of London and Paris
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01 November 2007

PERFORMING ARTS / Theater / History & Criticism, Literary studies: general, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Women's Studies, Theatre studies, Gender studies: women and girls
Introduction
The terrain:
1. The theatre of the city: urbanisation, performance and spectatorship in fin-de-siècle London and Paris
2. ‘All the noblest arts … expressed in the measured movements of a perfectly shaped body’: embodiment and spectacular performances of gender
Spaces:
3. Epidemics of enchanting creatures: Loïe Fuller and the Gaiety Theatre, London
4. Madness, dancing and the dancer: Jane Avril and the Salpêtrière hospital, Paris
Image:
5. ‘They are wise who advertise, in every generation’: image and the female celebrity
6. The art of imitation: staging the cult of celebrity
Intersections:
7. Moving away from the muse: Art Nouveau, Naturalist and Symbolist practices on the popular stage
8. Avant-Garde Salomania: ‘the most famous dancing girl in history?’
Afterword
Bibliography