After the Second World War, Vancouver emerged as a hotbed of
striptease talent. In Burlesque West, the first critical history of
this notorious striptease scene, Becki Ross delves into the erotic
entertainment industry at the northern end of the dancers' west
coast tour - the North-South route from Los Angeles to Vancouver
that provided rotating work for dancers and variety for club
clientele.
Drawing on extensive archival materials and fifty first-person
accounts of former dancers, strip-club owners, booking agents,
choreographers, and musicians, Ross reveals stories that are deeply
flavoured with an era before "striptease fell from grace because
the world stopped dreaming," in the words of ex-dancer Lindalee
Tracey. Though jobs in this particular industry are often perceived
as having little in common with other sorts of work, retired
dancers' accounts resonate surprisingly with those of contemporary
service workers, including perceptions of unionization and
workplace benefits and hazards. Ross also traces the sanitization
and subsequent integration of striptease style and neo-burlesque
trends into mass culture, examining continuity and change to
ultimately demonstrate that Vancouver's glitzy nightclub scene,
often condemned as a quasi-legal strain of urban blight, in fact
greased the economic engine of the post-war city.
Provocative and challenging, Burlesque West combines the
economic, the social, the sexual, and the personal, and is sure to
intellectually tantalize.
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