In this article Jim Davis considers gender representation in Victorian pantomime alongside variance in Victorian life, examining male and female impersonation in pantomime within the context of cross-dressing (often a manifestation of gender variance) in everyday life. While accepting that male heterosexual, gay, and lesbian gazes may have informed the reception of Victorian pantomime, he argues for the existence of a transgendered gaze and a contextual awareness of gender variant behaviour, with a more nuanced view of cross-dressed performance. The principal boy role and its relationship to variant ways of seeing suggests its appeal goes beyond what Jacky Bratton calls the ‘boy’, a notion she applies to the dynamic androgyny of male impers...
This project expands upon Rohy\u27s ideas of contingent sexualities to explore contingent gender ide...
The female figures in Shakespeare's comedies, such as Rosalind in As You Like It and Viola in Twelft...
During the nineteenth century, theatregoing became the favoured entertainment of both the lower and ...
This article contributes to the growing scholarship on the representation of gender and gender trans...
This paper examines the multi-layered adaptation and (re)presentation of the male impersonator on th...
Feminist scholars of Shakespeare and contemporaries have become increasingly interested in the pract...
This thesis examines male-to-female cross-dressing in Yorkshire between 1870 and 1939. It analyses t...
Pantomime's history is one of evolutionary transformation, and its modern incarnation as a multi-mil...
In lieu of an abstract, here is a preview of the article. What Butler Saw: Cross-Dressing and Spect...
In this paper I offer a queer analysis of several key moments during a Mantle of the Expert (MoE) pr...
Is there a woman in Shakespeare? This might sound facetious, but it is not so outlandish in the con...
The records of student societies show that cross-dressing was a very popular practice at Cambridge U...
Often, transvestism or cross-dressing, (that is, wearing normative, gender-designated attire of the ...
In this paper, I draw on early modern portrayals of gender nonconformity to provoke a rethinking of ...
“The Clothes Make the Man: Theatrical Crossdressing as Expression of Gender Fluidity in Seventeenth-...
This project expands upon Rohy\u27s ideas of contingent sexualities to explore contingent gender ide...
The female figures in Shakespeare's comedies, such as Rosalind in As You Like It and Viola in Twelft...
During the nineteenth century, theatregoing became the favoured entertainment of both the lower and ...
This article contributes to the growing scholarship on the representation of gender and gender trans...
This paper examines the multi-layered adaptation and (re)presentation of the male impersonator on th...
Feminist scholars of Shakespeare and contemporaries have become increasingly interested in the pract...
This thesis examines male-to-female cross-dressing in Yorkshire between 1870 and 1939. It analyses t...
Pantomime's history is one of evolutionary transformation, and its modern incarnation as a multi-mil...
In lieu of an abstract, here is a preview of the article. What Butler Saw: Cross-Dressing and Spect...
In this paper I offer a queer analysis of several key moments during a Mantle of the Expert (MoE) pr...
Is there a woman in Shakespeare? This might sound facetious, but it is not so outlandish in the con...
The records of student societies show that cross-dressing was a very popular practice at Cambridge U...
Often, transvestism or cross-dressing, (that is, wearing normative, gender-designated attire of the ...
In this paper, I draw on early modern portrayals of gender nonconformity to provoke a rethinking of ...
“The Clothes Make the Man: Theatrical Crossdressing as Expression of Gender Fluidity in Seventeenth-...
This project expands upon Rohy\u27s ideas of contingent sexualities to explore contingent gender ide...
The female figures in Shakespeare's comedies, such as Rosalind in As You Like It and Viola in Twelft...
During the nineteenth century, theatregoing became the favoured entertainment of both the lower and ...