The Liminal Space of Burlesque
Allen offers this definition after recognizing a correspondence between theatrical space and the liminal space of tribal rituals described by anthropologist Victor Turner “Liminality confers a license to be different, a difference that would be unallowable in ‘everyday’ life” (37). This license is present in the burlesque performance, where performers create their own acts as they wish and incorporate as much inversion as they want. In the case of Lydia Thompson, whose use of costuming was radical for her time, when juxtaposed against the norm of the day.
Works Cited:
Allen, Robert Clyde. Horrible Prettiness: Burlesque and American Culture. University of North Carolina Press, 1991. Print.