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Lesbian Decadence - Representations in Art and Literature of Fin-de-Siecle France
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Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Translators’ Note
Prologue
Part I. “At that time, Sappho was reborn in Paris”
1. Sappho: The Resurrection of a Myth
2. The Poets’ Muse
3. Lesbos; or, The Topography of a Vice
Part II. “Her Traits, Her Vices, and Her Sexual Aberrations”
4. The Birth of the Female Invert
5. A Vice or an Illness?
6. A Heroine at the Crossroads of Medicine and Literature
7. When the Third Sex Comes Out
8. Madame Don Juan, Arlequine, and Others
Part III. “Damned Women or Exquisite Creatures? ”
9. Deadly Pleasures
10. The Half-Women
11. Female Narcissus
12. Female Spaces, Male Gaze
Notes
Bibliography
Index

About the Author

Nicole G. Albert is an independent scholar with a doctoral degree in comparative literature from the Sorbonne. She is the editor of Renee Vivien a rebours: etudes pour un centenaire [Renee Vivien Against the Grain: Studies for a Centenary] and Renee Vivien, une femme de lettres entre deux siecles [Renee Vivien: A Woman Writer between Two Centuries] as well as the author of La Castiglione: Vies et Metamorphoses [Castiglione: Lives and Metamorphoses]. Nancy Erber is professor emerita of linguistics and modern languages at LaGuardia Community College, City University of New York. An expert in fin-de-siecle literature, she edited, along with George Robb, Disorder in the Court: Trials and Sexual Conflict at the Turn of the Century. William A. Peniston is the librarian and archivist at the Newark Museum, as well as a French historian with a doctoral degree from the University of Rochester. He is the author of Pederasts and Others: Urban Culture and Sexual Identity in Nineteenth Century Paris. Nancy Erber and William A. Peniston co-edited and co-translated Queer Lives: Men's Autobiographies from Nineteenth-Century France and Bougres de vies: huit homosexuels du XIXe se racontent.

Reviews

An authoritative study that reveals how Sapphists were associated with the first expressions of a feminism that threw the popular imagination off balance and produced such inexhaustible fantasies. -- Marc Emile Baronheld Elle Belgique A marvel of elegance and erudition... Natalie Clifford Barney the Amazon, the tortured personalities of Renee Vivien and Lucie Delarue-Mardrus, the character of Claudine so smartly portrayed by Colette, Madame Adonis by Rachilde... Albert has brought these forgotten personages back to life with passion... The sterile and flamboyant lesbian with a mysterious and pernicious eroticism ended up embodying the spirit of the fin-de-siecle and by symbolizing to perfection the excesses of Decadence. -- S. M. Revue Inverses In Lesbian Decadence, Nicole G. Albert delves deeply into the history of lesbian representation and uses her finely sharpened pen to reveal to us the fascination which the descendants of Sappho exercised [on readers at the turn of the last century]... One of the greatest strengths of Albert's book is not to stop at the canonical works but to include hundreds of sources from scholarly philology to popular caricatures. -- Laure Murat Magazine Tetu This book presents a richly detailed portrait of 'the lesbian,' an image foregrounded in the world of arts and letters in the Belle Epoque. Fantasies connected to the kinds of 'deadly pleasures' that women enjoyed among themselves, often when they were intoxicated by opium, resulted in an enormous number of books, articles, and illustrations that the author has brought to light for us with stunning erudition. -- P. K. Le Monde At last Nicole Albert's landmark study of the place of 'the lesbian' in fin-de-siecle French culture is available in English! Exhaustively researched and newly updated, Albert's book draws on a wide variety of sources from literature, the arts, journalism, and the emerging field of sexology. Albert demonstrates how 'sapphism' was imagined and re-imagined by observers, and how the Belle Epoque vogue for lesbianism created a spectral figure both 'demonized and poeticized.' Situated at the intersection of history and literature, Lesbian Decadence should be of interest to everyone interested in a deeper understanding of how culture is shaped by notions of gender and sexuality. -- Michael Wilson, Associate Dean for Graduate Studies, University of Texas By far the most authoritative book on how lesbianism, with its many distinct but related aspects, is depicted in decadent discourse of the French Fin de Siecle. The book is itself a jewel of decadent criticism: multi-faceted, studded with insights, and beautifully wrought. -- Melanie Hawthorne, Professor of French, Department of International Studies, Texas A&M University Albert's book is a treat for American LGBT Studies researchers. She provides us with a treasure trove of paintings, drawings, and cartoons... Lesbian Decadence will not only be cited heavily in future nineteenth century LGBT Studies research, but it brings the amazing scholarship of Erber and Peniston to light as well. Best of all, due to its multiple illustrations, it is a fun read for academic non-fiction, and will inspire us in English-speaking countries to learn more about our French cousins. -- Rachel Wexelbaum Lambda Literary Including an excellent bibliography, this book will interest students of fin-de-siecle France, LGBT history, and gender studies. CHOICE [Lesbian Decadence] brings together an astonishingly wide range of literary, artistic, medico-scientific, and historical sources to catalogue and trace the many ways in which lesbianism was anything but invisible at the fin-de-siecle. -- Annabel L. Kim H-France Review Remarkably learned. -- David Charles Rose Women's History Review

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