Disruptive Acts: The New Woman in Fin-de-Siecle France

Disruptive Acts: The New Woman in Fin-de-Siecle France

by M L Roberts (Author)

Synopsis

In fin-de-siecle France, politics were in an uproar, and gender roles blurred as never before. Into this maelstrom stepped the new women , a group of primarily urban middle-class French women who became the objects of intense public scrutiny. Some remained single, some entered nontraditional marriages, and some took up the professions of medicine and law, journalism and teaching. All of them challenged traditional notions of womanhood by living unconventional lives and doing supposedly masculine work outside the home. Mary Louise Roberts examines a constellation of these famous new women active in journalism and the theatre, including Marguerite Durand, founder of the women's newspaper La Fronde ; the journalists Severine and Gyp; and the actress Sarah Bernhardt. Roberts demonstrates how the tolerance for playacting in both these arenas allowed new women to stage acts that profoundly disrupted accepted gender roles. The existence of La Fronde itself was such an act, because it demonstrated that women could write just as well about the same subjects as men - even about the volatile Dreyfus Affair. When female reporters for La Fronde put on disguises to get a scoop or wrote under a pseudonym, and when actresses played men on stage, they demonstrated that gender identities were not fixed or natural, but inherently unstable. Thanks to the adventures of new women like these, conventional domestic femininity was exposed as a choice, not a destiny. Lively, sophisticated and persuasive, Disruptive Acts should be a major work not just for historians, but also for scholars of cultural studies, gender studies and the theatre.

$91.39

Quantity

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More Information

Format: Illustrated
Pages: 304
Edition: Illustrated
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Published: 08 Jul 2003

ISBN 10: 0226721248
ISBN 13: 9780226721248

Media Reviews
Disruptive Acts is a beautifully written and fascinating study of the emergence of the 'new woman' in fin-de-siecle France in context of the period's mass print culture, its preoccupation with the theater, its increasing commodification of culture, and the rise of the Third Republic. The book very importantly expands the history of how women resisted liberal domesticity in fin-de-siecle France and will be indispensable reading for a wide range of scholars. - Susan Lurie, author of Unsettled Subjects: Restoring Feminist Politics to Poststructuralist Critique
Author Bio
Mary Louise Roberts is professor of history at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. She is the author of Civilization without Sexes: Reconstructing Gender in Postwar France, 1917-1927, also published by the University of Chicago Press.