The Prettiest Girl on Stage Is a Man: Race and Gender Benders in American Vaudeville (Unabridged) The Prettiest Girl on Stage Is a Man: Race and Gender Benders in American Vaudeville (Unabridged)

The Prettiest Girl on Stage Is a Man: Race and Gender Benders in American Vaudeville (Unabridged‪)‬

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    • 15,99 €

Descripción editorial

In this lively and enlightening study, Kathleen B. Casey explores the ways in which the gender- and race-bending spectacles of vaudeville dramatized the economic, technological, social, and cultural upheaval that gripped the United States in the early 20th century. She focuses on four key performers. Eva Tanguay, known as "The I Don't Care Girl", was loved for her defiance of Victorian decorum, linking white womanliness to animalistic savagery at a time when racial and gender ideologies were undergoing significant reconstruction. In contrast, Julian Eltinge, the era's foremost female impersonator, used race to exaggerate notions of manliness and femininity in a way that reinforced traditional norms more than it undermined them. Lillyn Brown, a biracial woman who portrayed a cosmopolitan black male dandy while singing about an antebellum southern past, offered her audiences, black and white, starkly different visual and aural messages about race and gender. Finally, Sophie Tucker, who often performed in blackface during the early years of her long and heralded career, strategically played with prevailing ideologies by alternately portraying herself as white, Jewish, black, manly, and womanly, while managing, remarkably, to convince audiences that these identities could coexist within one body.

The book is published by The University of Tennessee Press.

GÉNERO
No ficción
NARRACIÓN
LAH
Lee Ann Howlett
IDIOMA
EN
Inglés
DURACIÓN
07:28
h min
PUBLICADO
2016
11 de julio
EDITORIAL
University Press Audiobooks
PRESENTADO POR
Audible.com
TAMAÑO
345,8
MB