Bloomsbury Home
- Home
- ACADEMIC
- Drama & Performance Studies
- Drama and Performance Studies - Other
- Modern Japanese Theatre and Performance
Modern Japanese Theatre and Performance
David Jortner (Anthology Editor) , Keiko I. McDonald (Anthology Editor) , Kevin J. Wetmore Jr. (Anthology Editor) , Bruce Baird (Contributor) , Steven J. Clark (Contributor) , Yoshiko Fukushima (Contributor) , John K. Gillespie (Contributor) , David G. Goodman (Contributor) , Megumi Inoue (Contributor) , Margaret Key (Contributor) , Laurence R. Kominz (Contributor) , Carol Martin (Contributor) , M Cody Poulton (Contributor) , Jonah Salz (Contributor) , Zvika Serper (Contributor) , Carol Fisher Sorgenfrei (Contributor) , John D. Swain (Contributor) , Guohe Zheng (Contributor)
Modern Japanese Theatre and Performance
David Jortner (Anthology Editor) , Keiko I. McDonald (Anthology Editor) , Kevin J. Wetmore Jr. (Anthology Editor) , Bruce Baird (Contributor) , Steven J. Clark (Contributor) , Yoshiko Fukushima (Contributor) , John K. Gillespie (Contributor) , David G. Goodman (Contributor) , Megumi Inoue (Contributor) , Margaret Key (Contributor) , Laurence R. Kominz (Contributor) , Carol Martin (Contributor) , M Cody Poulton (Contributor) , Jonah Salz (Contributor) , Zvika Serper (Contributor) , Carol Fisher Sorgenfrei (Contributor) , John D. Swain (Contributor) , Guohe Zheng (Contributor)
This product is usually dispatched within 3 days
- Delivery and returns info
-
Free CA delivery on orders $40 or over
You must sign in to add this item to your wishlist. Please sign in or create an account
Description
At the heart of the development of modern Japanese culture, the theatre mirrors the issues and concerns of a society transitioning from the Tokugawa era to the modern period. Modern Japanese Theatre and Performance fills a gap in current Japanese theatre scholarship; the book discusses the role of women in modern theatre, buto dance, experimental theatres that combine traditional theatre with modern forms, and plays by Abe Kobo, Mishima Yukio, and Senda Koreya. With important contributions from both established and emerging scholars, this book is essential reading for anyone interested in theatre, modern performance, or Japanese studies.
Table of Contents
Part 2 Shingeki History
Chapter 3 Why Did Sewamono Not Grow into Modern Realist Theatre?
Chapter 4 The Rhetoric of the Real
Chapter 5 Moment(um) of Memory: Metapatterns in Japanese Theatre Since the 1960s
Chapter 6 The Quest for Salvation in Japan's Modern History: Four Plays by Akimoto Matsuyo
Chapter 7 Poison Women and National Identity in Postwar Japanese Performance
Chapter 8 Senda Koreya and the Tenko Paradigm
Part 9 Experimental Theatre(s) and Border Crossings
Chapter 10 Structureless in Structure: The Choreographic Tectonics of Hijikata Tatsumi's Buto
Chapter 11 Terayama in Amsterdam and the Internationalization of Experimental Theatre
Chapter 12 Super-kyogen: Radically Traditional Utopian Comedies
Chapter 13 Classical Japanese Performance in a Contemporary Context: A Traditional Strategy of Juxtaposition
Part 14 Specific Plays and Productions in Modern Japan
Chapter 15 Illegitimate Child of Shingeki: Soganoya Gokuro and His Nonkina tosan (Easygoing Daddy)
Chapter 16 Reflections of and on the Times: Morimoto Kaoru's A Woman's Life
Chapter 17 Steeplechase: Mishima Yukio's Only Original Modern No Play
Chapter 18 "Destroying the Audience's Alibi": Empathy and Ethics in Abe Kobo's Mihitsu no koi
Chapter 19 Divine Memory and Abject Reality: Miyagi Satoshi's Tenshu Monogatari and Simizu Shinjin's Bye Bye: The New Primitive
Chapter 20 From Scaretto to Kaze to tomo ni sarinu: Musical Adaptations of Gone with the Wind in Japan
Part 21 A Super-kyogen Script
Chapter 22 Mutsugoro (Mudskippers)
Product details
Published | May 17 2007 |
---|---|
Format | Paperback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 310 |
ISBN | 9780739123003 |
Imprint | Lexington Books |
Dimensions | 227 x 153 mm |
Series | Studies of Modern Japan |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
-
This fascinating collection of essays commemorates the thirtieth anniversary of J. Thomas Rimer's seminal work,Toward a Modern Japanese Theatre (1974). The essays capture the complex strategies by which Japanese theatre artists, ranging from shingeki to the postmodern, exercise their craft. This edition is a must for those interested in the changing landscape of performing arts in Japan.
Dr. Mari Boyd, Sophia University