ABSTRACT

This book offers an account of an unprecedented North American study of contemporary female and male strip shows. It particularly focuses on the contradictory sex roles, cultural positions, and performance practices of 'straight' strip shows during their second heyday in the early 1990s.
Katherine Liepe-Levinson's research took her to over seventy different strip bars, clubs, theatres and sex emporiums ranging from elaborate lap-dancing and couch-dancing 'gentlemen's' clubs in New York, Houston, and San Francisco; to Peoria's onetime duplex cabaret where women strip for men downstairs, and men for women upstairs; to the nightclubs of Montreal where female and male performers displayed the 'Full Monty'.
Liepe-Levinson's intriguing, comprehensive study concentrates on the cultural and theatrical elements of the strip shows themselves including the geographic locations and interior designs of the clubs, the choreography and costumes of the dancers and the all-important participation of the audience. She draws upon a variety of methodologies as well as interviews with performers to explore how the strip show's cultural and theatrical aspects simultaneously uphold and break traditional sex roles. Her findings readily complicate several of the most prominent and prevalent theories about sexual representation, gender and desire.

chapter |18 pages

INTRODUCTION

Strip show: Performances of gender and desire

chapter 1|31 pages

URBAN LOCATIONS OF DESIRE

A tale of five cities

chapter 2|26 pages

INTERIORS

chapter 3|32 pages

COSTUME DRAMAS AND SEXUAL SUBJECTIVITY

chapter 4|25 pages

CHOREOGRAPHY I

The basic moves

chapter 5|18 pages

CHOREOGRAPHY II

Structure, pleasure, and “confessional” narratives of the body

chapter 6|29 pages

PERFORMING SPECTATORS

The pleasure of mimetic jeopardy

chapter 7|9 pages

EPILOGUE AS INTERMEZZO

The saga of the strip show, or the battles over sexual representation rage on…