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A "belle epoque"?: women in French society and culture, 1890-1914
Diana Holmes and Carrie Tarr
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Frontmatter
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Acknowledgements (page xi)
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List of Illustrations (page xiii)
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Introduction (Diana Holmes and Carrie Tarr, page 1)
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PART I: FEMINISM AND FEMINISTS
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1. New Republic, New Women? Feminism and Modernity at the Belle Epoque (Diana Holmes and Carrie Tarr, page 11)
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2. 1890-1914: A 'Belle Epoque' for Feminism? (Máire Cross, page 23)
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3. Marguerite Durand and La Fronde: Voicing Women of the Belle Epoque (Maggie Allison, page 37)
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4. The Uncompromising Doctor Madeleine Pelletier: Feminist and Political Activist (Anna Norris, page 51)
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5. Clans and Chronologies: The Salon of Natalie Barney (Melanie Hawthorne, page 65)
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PART II: NEW TECHNOLOGIES, NEW WOMEN?
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6. Vélo-Métro-Auto: Women's Mobility in Belle Epoque Paris (Siân Reynolds, page 81)
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7. Popularising New Women in Belle Epoque Advertising Posters (Ruth E. Iskin, page 95)
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8. An American in Paris: Loïe Fuller, Dance and Technology (Naoko Morita, page 113)
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9. Becoming Women: Cinema, Gender and Technology (Elizabeth Ezra, page 125)
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PART III: WOMEN AND SPECTACLE
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10. Spectacles of Themselves: Women Writing for the Stage in Belle Epoque France (Kimberly van Noort, page 139)
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11. Being a Dancer in 1900: Sign of Alienation or Quest for Autonomy? (Hélène Laplace-Claverie, page 153)
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12. Visions of Reciprocity in the Work of Camille Claudel (Angela Ryan, page 167)
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PART IV: WOMEN, WRITING AND RECEPTION
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13. Feminist Discourse in Women's Novels of Professional Development (Juliette M. Rogers, page 183)
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14. Daniel Lesueur and the Feminist Romance (Diana Holmes, page 197)
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15. Virginal Perversion/Radical Subversion: Rachilde and Discourses of Legitimation (Jeri English, page 211)
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16. Decadence and the Woman Writer: Renée Vivien's Une femme m'apparut (Tama Lea Engelking, page 225)
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17. Sensual Deviations and Verbal Abuse: Anna de Noailles in the Critic's Eye (Catherine Perry, page 239)
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18. Proletarian Women, Proletarian Writing: The Case of Marguerite Audoux (Angela Kershaw, page 253)
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PART V: COLONISED AND OTHER WOMEN
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19. Coloniser and Colonised in Hubertine Auclert's Writings on Algeria (Edith Taïeb, page 271)
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20. The Chivalrous Coloniser: Colonial Feminism and the roman à thèse in the Belle Epoque (Jennifer Yee, page 283)
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21. Marcelle Tinayre's Notes d'une voyageuse en Turquie: Creating Solidarity among Women (Margot Irvine, page 295)
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Conclusion (page 307)
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Select Chronology 1870-1914 (page 309)
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Bibliography (page 313)
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Notes on Contributors (page 335)
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Index (page 341)
Journal Abbreviation | Label | URL |
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FR | 81.4 (March 2008): 804-805 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/25481281 |
WIFS | 14 (2006): 147-148 | https://muse.jhu.edu/article/509370 |
FSQR | 62.4 (Oct. 2008): 488 | https://muse.jhu.edu/article/253393 |
Citable Link
Published: 2007
Publisher: Berghahn Books
- 9781845450946 (paper)
- 9780857457011 (ebook)
- 9781845450212 (hardcover)