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Japan Ningyo Johruri Bunraku


Language: English
Analogue only: Español, Français, 

Ranking with Nô and Kabuki as one of Japan's foremost stage arts, the Ningyo Johruri Bunraku puppet theatre is a blend of sung narrative, instrumental accompaniment and puppet drama. This theatrical form emerged during the early Edo period (ca. 1600) when puppetry was coupled with Johruri, a popular fifteenth-century narrative genre. The plots related in this new form of puppet theatre derived from two principal sources: historical plays set in feudal times (Jidaimono) and contemporary dramas exploring the conflict between affairs of the heart and social obligation (Sewamono). Ningyo Johruri had adopted its characteristic staging style by the mid eighteenth century. Three puppeteers, visible to the audience, manipulate large articulated puppets on the stage behind a waist high screen. From a projecting elevated platform (yuka), the narrator (tayu) recounts the action while a musician provides musical accompaniment on the three-stringed spike lute (shamisen). The tayu plays all the characters, both male and female, and uses different voices and intonations to suit each role and situation. Although the tayu “reads” from a scripted text, there is ample room for improvisation.


on this subject: Nomination file/Dossier de candidature


Topics and Tags
Place/region: Japan, Asia and the Pacific
Series: Inscriptions on the Intangible Heritage Lists
Type: Documentary
Duration:
Published in:
Rights: UNESCO ICH
 

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Original: DVD
Location: F-H.129
UMVS reference: AUD-DIT/ISS/ARC/00548
Digitized version : AVFONDS-CLTICH-2008-00064.DV

Rights holder: UNESCO