Jane de La Vaudère  

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Jane de la Vaudère was the pen name of Jeanne Scrive, a French novelist, poet and playwright who was born April 15, 1857, in Paris, and died on July 26, 1908. Her father was a famous doctor, Gaspard-Léonard Scrive, Surgeon-General of the French Army in the Crimean war. She is considered by contemporary critics a participant in the Decadent movement and Naturalism.

Her poetic works include Les Heures perdues, L'Eternelle chanson, Minuit, and Evocation. She is also remembered for a collection of decadent novels and short stories, such as Les Androgynes (1903), Les Demi-Sexes (1897), or Les Sataniques (1897) — probably her masterpiece. She wrote exotic novels as well, including Les Courtisanes de Brahma, La Porte de Félicité or La Gueisha amoureuse.

She collaborated with the Théâtre du Grand Guignol.

Bibliography

Novels and Short Stories

  • Folie d'Opium
  • Mortelle étreinte
  • L'Anarchiste
  • Le Droit d'aimer
  • Ambitieuse
  • Les Demi-Sexes
  • Les Sataniques
  • Le Sang
  • Les Frôleurs
  • L'Amuseur
  • Trois fleurs de volupté
  • Le Harem de Syta
  • Les Mousseuses
  • L'Amazone du roi de Siam
  • La Mystérieuse
  • Les Androgynes
  • Les Courtisanes de Brahma
  • L'Expulsée
  • La Gesha amoureuse
  • Les Confessions galantes
  • Rien qu'amante
  • La Sorcière d'Ecbatane
  • La Porte de Félicité
  • Sapho : dompteuse





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