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- Title
From Private Zashiki to the Public Stage: Female Spaces in Early Twentieth-Century Nō.
- Authors
Geilhorn, Barbara
- Abstract
This article discusses the situation of women in nō, focusing on the early twentieth century as a crucial period for the advancement of women. At that time, the reconstruction of gender relations assumed a central position in the debates on modernization, and the first actresses in modern theatre (shingeki) developed into ambivalent icons of the “new woman” (atarashii onna). In nō, following the dramatic rise in the number of female amateurs and the resultant need for female instructors, leading critics and performers engaged in two-sided debates on the role of women. The main points at issue still persist in contemporary debates. This essay offers a compendium of historical information on the key question of female participation in nō, which has been researched very little up to now, and discusses contemporary discourses on gender in nō. By analyzing the situation of women in its sociopolitical context and taking into account the debates on performing gender on stage that were taking place in all genres of performing arts at that time, it adds a new dimension to the existing research. Barbara Geilhorn is a Japan Society of the Promotion of Science postdoctoral research fellow based at Waseda University, Tokyo. Her current project examines Japanese theatre after the Fukushima catastrophe. Barbara was formerly a lecturer at the Institute of East Asian Studies of Free University Berlin and received her PhD with a thesis on female nō and kyōgen performers. She has participated in various international projects on nō theatre and held doctoral scholarships from the German Research Foundation and the German Institute of Japanese Studies in Tokyo. Publications include the coedited Enacting Culture–Japanese Theatre in Historical and Modern Contexts (Munich: Iudicium, 2012). She is currently co-editing a book on cultural responses to the Fukushima disaster.
- Subjects
WOMEN in the theater; INDIAN women (Asians); GENDER differences (Psychology); MODERNIZATION (Social science); GEILHORN, Barabara
- Publication
Asian Theatre Journal, 2015, Vol 32, Issue 2, p440
- ISSN
0742-5457
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1353/atj.2015.0038