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Japanese Literature: Noh, Kabuki, and Haiku
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Japanese Literature: Noh, Kabuki, and Haiku. Brief History of Japan Heavy cultural influence from China and Korea (Buddhism, ways of farming, art, language.

Jan 13, 2016

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Page 1: Japanese Literature: Noh, Kabuki, and Haiku. Brief History of Japan Heavy cultural influence from China and Korea (Buddhism, ways of farming, art, language.

Japanese Literature:Noh, Kabuki, and Haiku

Page 2: Japanese Literature: Noh, Kabuki, and Haiku. Brief History of Japan Heavy cultural influence from China and Korea (Buddhism, ways of farming, art, language.

Brief History of JapanHeavy cultural influence from China and Korea (Buddhism, ways of farming, art, language / letters)First emerged as separate state in eighth century C.E.; feudal dynasties began. Chose to be isolated.12th to 19th centuries: Samurais ruled (shogun), emperor was only figurehead1853: American Commodore Matthew Perry (with four warships) “requested” Japan to begin trading1868: After civil war, shogun resigns and Emperor restored to power; once again, he is truly in charge of Japan. Emperor begins modernization of country, abolishes samurai class and feudal system.

Page 3: Japanese Literature: Noh, Kabuki, and Haiku. Brief History of Japan Heavy cultural influence from China and Korea (Buddhism, ways of farming, art, language.

Japanese Literature

Theater:

Noh

Kabuki

Poetry:

Haiku

Page 4: Japanese Literature: Noh, Kabuki, and Haiku. Brief History of Japan Heavy cultural influence from China and Korea (Buddhism, ways of farming, art, language.

NohOldest (formalized by 1400’s)Stories are spiritual in nature (ghosts, demons, possessions)Masks are wornAudience is aristocratic / upper classelegant, refined

Page 5: Japanese Literature: Noh, Kabuki, and Haiku. Brief History of Japan Heavy cultural influence from China and Korea (Buddhism, ways of farming, art, language.

Noh (page 2)

Simple sets, little or no props

Stage has three sides for audience, connects to dressing room (separated by curtain)

Accompanied by music / “chorus”

Page 6: Japanese Literature: Noh, Kabuki, and Haiku. Brief History of Japan Heavy cultural influence from China and Korea (Buddhism, ways of farming, art, language.

A Traditional Noh Theater

Page 7: Japanese Literature: Noh, Kabuki, and Haiku. Brief History of Japan Heavy cultural influence from China and Korea (Buddhism, ways of farming, art, language.

Kabuki

Developed around 1600’s

Stories based on folklore, history

Highly stylized makeup

Appeals to middle class audience that often yells during performance

lavish, exaggerated

Page 8: Japanese Literature: Noh, Kabuki, and Haiku. Brief History of Japan Heavy cultural influence from China and Korea (Buddhism, ways of farming, art, language.

Kabuki (page 2)

Elaborate sets, often using special effectsExtensive use of props, especially the fanStage has one side (long proscenium), walkway connects to rear of theaterAccompanied by music / “chorus”omnagata: males performing as females

Page 9: Japanese Literature: Noh, Kabuki, and Haiku. Brief History of Japan Heavy cultural influence from China and Korea (Buddhism, ways of farming, art, language.

Comparisons: Kabuki and Elizabethan (Shakespearean) Theater

When thinking of how Elizabethan theater is like Kabuki, particularly A Midsummer Night’s Dream, consider:Only men play female partsHuman characters interact with supernatural people / forces (fairies)Use of songsExaggeration, especially for humorLove of special effects (Globe Theater: trap doors, galleries, cannons)

Page 10: Japanese Literature: Noh, Kabuki, and Haiku. Brief History of Japan Heavy cultural influence from China and Korea (Buddhism, ways of farming, art, language.

Contemporary Influence of Kabuki & Noh

Japanese anime (cartoons) and manga (comic books)

Costume / makeup design for modern movies (such as Star Wars)

Page 11: Japanese Literature: Noh, Kabuki, and Haiku. Brief History of Japan Heavy cultural influence from China and Korea (Buddhism, ways of farming, art, language.

HaikuA form of minimalist Japanese poetryWas opening stanza of longer poem before becoming stand-alone formTraditionally, the subject is nature or the seasonsAttempts to be profound, or compare two unlike thingsConsists of three lines and a certain number of syllables per lineTraditionally, haiku is 5-7-5.Because of language differences, Japanese haiku that is translated into English may not fall into this syllabic structure.

Page 12: Japanese Literature: Noh, Kabuki, and Haiku. Brief History of Japan Heavy cultural influence from China and Korea (Buddhism, ways of farming, art, language.

Japanese Haiku

the first cold showereven the monkey seems to wanta little coat of straw.

old pond (fu/ru/i/ke ya)a frog jumps (ka/wa/zu to/bi/ko/mu)the sound of water (mi/zu no o/to)

--both by Matsuo Basho (1644-1694)

Page 13: Japanese Literature: Noh, Kabuki, and Haiku. Brief History of Japan Heavy cultural influence from China and Korea (Buddhism, ways of farming, art, language.

English Haiku

A leaf falls forward –

A tumbling red-gold toddler

Meets the ground surprised.

Moist snowflake gleams, perched

At the end of my own nose

Before it melts, like lost tears.