found: Work cat.: The flirt's tragedy : desire without end in Victorian and Edwardian fiction, 2002:t.p.; p. 3 ("flirtation's place in the history of the novel is undoubtedly paramount ... coquettish females and flirty males") p. 5 ("... the flirtatiousness of Rosamund Vincy, Becky Sharp, and Daisy Miller ...") p. 13 ("flirtation's potential to deal the flirt a tragic fate ... coquetry ... flirtatious behavior") p. 14 (Eliot needed to contain flirtation, punishing such flirts as Rosamond Vinvy") p. 16 (female and male coquettes: "Flirtatious desire ... more than a formal strategy ... of literary representation ... through flirtation ... novelists link problems in the depiction of desire to ambiguous sexuality") p. 20 ("Shakespeare's Cleopatra, the archetypal flirt"; "the subject of coquetry takes on special interest for fiction makers") p. 33 ("flirtation creates 'victims' ... who misread flirting as serious seduction or actual romance") p. 94 ("female coquetry") p. 151 ("the female flirt")