<b>Witty satire, political drama, transgressive social commentary, mystical meditation; for years, these topics were banned from the stage.</b> In the late 19th and early 20th centuries decadent writers turned to decadence as a means of responding to urban modernity, and dramatists were no exception. Decadence offered these writers a framework for exploring nonconformist identities and beliefs that challenged narrow ideas about taste, decency, and progress, and recurring motifs included queer sexualities and genders, elitism, social class, degeneracy and decay. International in scope and eclectic in content, this edited anthology is an authoritative and accessible introduction to this fast-expanding field of decadent literature . The first publication of its kind to deal specifically with decadent dramatic works in the pre-modernist and modernist periods, <i>Decadent Plays</i> breaks new ground by exploring how the concept of decadence cuts across genre, styles, and culture, and by inc