|
Showing 1 - 8 of
8 matches in All Departments
Nishiyama Matsunosuke is one of the most important historians of
Tokugawa (Edo) popular culture, yet until now his work has never
been translated into a Western language. Edo Culture presents a
selection of Nishiyama's writings that serves not only to provide
an excellent introduction to Tokugawa cultural history but also to
fill many gaps in our knowledge of the daily life and diversions of
the urban populace of the time. Many essays focus on the most
important theme of Nishiyama's work: the seventeenth to nineteenth
centuries as a time of appropriation and development of Japan's
culture by its urban commoners.
This volume presents a series of five portraits of Edo, the central
region of urban space today known as Tokyo, from the great fire of
1657 to the devastating earthquake of 1855. This book endeavors to
allow Edo, or at least some of the voices that constituted Edo, to
do most of the speaking. These voices become audible in the work of
five Japanese eye-witness observers, who notated what they saw,
heard, felt, tasted, experienced, and remembered. "An Eastern
Stirrup," presents a vivid portrait of the great conflagration of
1657 that nearly wiped out the city. "Tales of Long Long Ago,"
details seventeenth-century warrior-class ways as depicted by a
particularly conservative samurai. "The River of Time," describes
the city and its flourishing cultural and economic development
during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. "The
Spider's Reel" looks back at both the attainments and calamities of
Edo in the 1780s. Finally, "Disaster Days," offers a meticulous
account of Edo life among the ruins of the catastrophic 1855
tremor. Read in sequence, these five pieces offer a unique
"insider's perspective" on the city of Edo and early modern Japan.
This book presents a thoroughly researched and meticulously
documented study of the emergence, development, and demise of
music, theatre, recitation, and dance witnessed by the populace on
thoroughfares, plazas, and makeshift outdoor performance spaces in
Edo/Tokyo. For some three hundred years this city was the centre of
such arts, both sacred and secular. This study outlines the nature
of the performances, explores the social relations which lay behind
them, and reveals vast complexity: an obligation of gift-giving on
the part of observers; performers who were often economic migrants
fallen on hard times; relations of performance to social class; a
class system much more finely gradated than the official four caste
system; and institutions of professional organization and
registration, enforced by government, with penalties for
unregistered performers. The book discusses how performing,
witnessing, and rewarding performance were closely bound up with
economy, society and government, how the interaction between
various groups related to socio-economic advancement, how the
system of street performance reinforced social control, and how the
balance between different groups shifted over time.
In a tradition extending from the medieval era to the early
twentieth century, visually disabled Japanese women known as goze
toured the Japanese countryside as professional singers and
contributed to the vitality of rural musical culture. The goze sang
unique narratives (many requiring several hours to perform) as well
as a huge repertory of popular ballads and short songs, typically
accompanied by a three-stringed lute known as the shamisen. During
the Edo period (1600-1868) goze formed guild-like occupational
associations and created an iconic musical repertory. They were
remarkably successful in fighting discrimination accorded to women,
people with physical disabilities, the poor, and itinerants, using
their specialized art to connect directly to the commoner public.
The best documented goze lived in Echigo province in the Japanese
northwest. Although their activities peaked in the nineteenth
century, some women continued to tour until the middle of the
twentieth. The last active goze survived until 2005. In Goze: Blind
Women and Musical Performance in Traditional Japan, author Gerald
Groemer argues that goze activism was primarily a matter of the
agency of performance itself. Groemer shows that the solidarity
goze achieved with the rural public through narrative and music was
based on the convergence of the goze's desire to achieve social
autonomy and the wish of lower-class to mitigate the cultural
deprivation to which they were otherwise so often subject. It was
this correlation of emancipatory interests that allowed goze to
flourish and attain a degree of social autonomy. Far from being
pitied as helpless victims, goze were recognized as masterful
artisans who had succeeded in transforming their disability into a
powerful social tool and who could act as agents of widespread
cultural development. As the first full-length scholarly work on
goze in English, this book is sure to prove an invaluable resource
to scholars and students of Japanese culture, Japanese music,
ethnomusicology, and disability studies worldwide.
Before the twentieth century, Japanese religious and cultural life
was shaped by a variety of yearly ceremonies, festivals, and
customs. These annual events (nenju gyoji) included Shinto
festivals in which participants danced through the night to
boisterous music and Buddhist temple practices that honored
deities, great priests, or temple founders with solemn rituals and
prayers—and sometimes, when the Buddha was invoked, raucous
dancing. Temples also hosted popular fairs, where holy objects and
artwork were displayed to the faithful and curious. Countless other
celebrations were held annually at the residences of the nobility
and military elite and at commoner domiciles. Kyoto, the
imperial—and cultural—capital since the eighth century, was the
center of many of these events. From Kyoto festivals, rituals, and
celebrations diffused to other parts of the land, ultimately
shaping religious, artistic, and everyday life as a whole. By the
seventeenth century the Kyoto public wished to inform itself more
accurately about nenju gyoji and their dates and meanings. As a
result, a growing number of guidebooks and almanacs were written
and published for the urban populace. This volume is the first to
present translations of two such publications. Introductory
chapters explain Japanese conceptions of time and space within
which annual celebrations took place and outline how ceremonies and
festivals in and about Kyoto were chronicled, described, and
interpreted from the earliest times to the seventeenth century. The
final two chapters offer annotated translations of writings from
the seventeenth century that catalogue and describe the dates,
sites, meanings, and histories of many Kyoto annual events. The two
works, one largely historical, the other more ethnographic in
nature, indicate not only when and where observances and
commemorations took place, but also how their authors understood
the significance of each. Both translations feature a large number
of illustrations depicting events as they appeared in Kyoto at the
time.
This book presents a thoroughly researched and meticulously
documented study of the emergence, development, and demise of
music, theatre, recitation, and dance witnessed by the populace on
thoroughfares, plazas, and makeshift outdoor performance spaces in
Edo/Tokyo. For some three hundred years this city was the centre of
such arts, both sacred and secular. This study outlines the nature
of the performances, explores the social relations which lay behind
them, and reveals vast complexity: an obligation of gift-giving on
the part of observers; performers who were often economic migrants
fallen on hard times; relations of performance to social class; a
class system much more finely gradated than the official four caste
system; and institutions of professional organization and
registration, enforced by government, with penalties for
unregistered performers. The book discusses how performing,
witnessing, and rewarding performance were closely bound up with
economy, society and government, how the interaction between
various groups related to socio-economic advancement, how the
system of street performance reinforced social control, and how the
balance between different groups shifted over time.
This volume presents a series of five portraits of Edo, the central
region of urban space today known as Tokyo, from the great fire of
1657 to the devastating earthquake of 1855. This book endeavors to
allow Edo, or at least some of the voices that constituted Edo, to
do most of the speaking. These voices become audible in the work of
five Japanese eye-witness observers, who notated what they saw,
heard, felt, tasted, experienced, and remembered. "An Eastern
Stirrup," presents a vivid portrait of the great conflagration of
1657 that nearly wiped out the city. "Tales of Long Long Ago,"
details seventeenth-century warrior-class ways as depicted by a
particularly conservative samurai. "The River of Time," describes
the city and its flourishing cultural and economic development
during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. "The
Spider's Reel" looks back at both the attainments and calamities of
Edo in the 1780s. Finally, "Disaster Days," offers a meticulous
account of Edo life among the ruins of the catastrophic 1855
tremor. Read in sequence, these five pieces offer a unique
"insider's perspective" on the city of Edo and early modern Japan.
In a tradition extending from the medieval era to the early
twentieth century, visually disabled Japanese women known as goze
toured the Japanese countryside as professional singers and
contributed to the vitality of rural musical culture. The goze sang
unique narratives (many requiring several hours to perform) as well
as a huge repertory of popular ballads and short songs, typically
accompanied by a three-stringed lute known as the shamisen. During
the Edo period (1600-1868) goze formed guild-like occupational
associations and created an iconic musical repertory. They were
remarkably successful in fighting discrimination accorded to women,
people with physical disabilities, the poor, and itinerants, using
their specialized art to connect directly to the commoner public.
The best documented goze lived in Echigo province in the Japanese
northwest. Although their activities peaked in the nineteenth
century, some women continued to tour until the middle of the
twentieth. The last active goze survived until 2005. In Goze: Blind
Women and Musical Performance in Traditional Japan, author Gerald
Groemer argues that goze activism was primarily a matter of the
agency of performance itself. Groemer shows that the solidarity
goze achieved with the rural public through narrative and music was
based on the convergence of the goze's desire to achieve social
autonomy and the wish of lower-class to mitigate the cultural
deprivation to which they were otherwise so often subject. It was
this correlation of emancipatory interests that allowed goze to
flourish and attain a degree of social autonomy. Far from being
pitied as helpless victims, goze were recognized as masterful
artisans who had succeeded in transforming their disability into a
powerful social tool and who could act as agents of widespread
cultural development. As the first full-length scholarly work on
goze in English, this book is sure to prove an invaluable resource
to scholars and students of Japanese culture, Japanese music,
ethnomusicology, and disability studies worldwide.
|
You may like...
Betrayal
Lesley Pearse
Paperback
R395
R365
Discovery Miles 3 650
Flaffie
Jaco Jacobs
Paperback
R130
R118
Discovery Miles 1 180
Burn
Patrick Ness
Paperback
R245
R222
Discovery Miles 2 220
|