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Table of Contents
Frontmatter
Contents
Illustrations
Introduction
1 The Bernhardt Effect: Self-Advertising and the Age of Spectacle
2 Mirth and Girth: The Politics of Comedy
3 The Strong Personality: Female Mimics and the Play of the Self
4 The Americanization of Salome: Sexuality, Race, and the Careers of the Vulgar Princess
5 "The Eyes of the Enemy": Female Activism and the Paradox of Theater
6 "Nationally Advertised Legs": How Broadway Invented "The Girls"
7 "Like All the Rest of Womankind Only More So": The Chorus Girl Problem and American Culture
Conclusion: The Legacy of Female Spectacle
Abbreviations
Notes
Acknowledgments
Index
Contents
Illustrations
Introduction
1 The Bernhardt Effect: Self-Advertising and the Age of Spectacle
2 Mirth and Girth: The Politics of Comedy
3 The Strong Personality: Female Mimics and the Play of the Self
4 The Americanization of Salome: Sexuality, Race, and the Careers of the Vulgar Princess
5 "The Eyes of the Enemy": Female Activism and the Paradox of Theater
6 "Nationally Advertised Legs": How Broadway Invented "The Girls"
7 "Like All the Rest of Womankind Only More So": The Chorus Girl Problem and American Culture
Conclusion: The Legacy of Female Spectacle
Abbreviations
Notes
Acknowledgments
Index