TY - BOOK AU - Showalter,Elaine TI - Daughters of decadence: stories by women writers of the fin de siècle SN - 185381590X (pbk) : U1 - 823.914 20 PY - 1993/// CY - London PB - Virago KW - English fiction KW - Short stories N1 - Kate Chopin : 'An Egyptian cigarette' Victoria Cross : 'Theodora : a fragment' Ada Leverson : 'Suggestion' George Egerton : 'A cross line' Borgia Smudgiton : 'She-notes' George Fleming : 'By accident' Olive Schreiner : 'The Buddhist priest's wife' Charlotte Perkins Gilman : 'The yellow wallpaper' Charlotte Mew : 'A white night' Mabel E. Wotton : 'The fifth edition' Constance Fenimore Woolson : 'Miss grief' Vernon Leee : 'Lady Tal' Sarah Grand : 'The undefinable : a fantasia' Edith Wharton : 'The muse's tragedy' Kate Chopin : 'Emancipation : a life fable' Olive Schreiner : 'Three dreams in a desert' Olive Schreiner : 'Life's gifts' Edith Wharton : 'The valley of childish things' N2 - At the turn of the century, short stories by - and often about - 'New Women' flooded the pages of English and American magazines like The Yellow Book, The Savoy, Atlantic Monthly and Harpers. This daring new fiction, often innovative in form, and courageous in its candid literary aspiration, shocked Victorian critics who parodied the experimental stories in Punch as symptoms of fin de siecle decadence, or denounced the authors as 'literary degenerates' or 'erotomaniacs'. This collection brings together twenty of the most original and important stories, including such little-known writers as Victoria Cross, George Egerton, Vernon Lee, Constance Fenimore Wollson and Charlotte Mew. Ranging from the lyrical to the Gothic, and frequently dealing with the conflicts of women artists, the short fiction of the fin de siecle is the missing link between the Golden Age of Victorianism women writers and the new era of feminist modernism ER -