Playlist: Medieval Japan: Noh Drama

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A Brief History and Introduction

Japan

Language & Literature , Religion & Thought

Duration:

0:38 min

Appears in:

Transcript

Donald Keene: The Noh drama began quite early. We don't know just when it began, but probably as early as the eleventh century. However, most of the repertory, the plays that are performed today, are works that were written in the fifteenth or early sixteenth century.

These plays are short — to read them would only take a few minutes — but in performance, a play that you can read in ten minutes may take an hour. The performance is slow, deliberate, but more than that, it's intended to represent more than you actually see with your eyes.

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About the Speakers

Donald Keene, University Professor Emeritus; Shincho Professor Emeritus of Japanese Literature
Columbia University

Robert B. Oxnam, President Emeritus
Asia Society

Haruo Shirane, Shincho Professor of Japanese Literature and Culture
Columbia University

Bibliography

The Noh Plays of Japan
Translated by Arthur Waley
New York: Grove Press, 1957

On the Art of the No Drama: The Major Treatises of Zeami
Translated by J. Thomas Rimer and edited by Yamazaki Masakazu
Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1984

“Three Plays of the Noh Theater”
By Thomas Blenman Hare
in Masterpieces of Asian Literature in Comparative Perspective, edited by Barbara Stoler Miller
Armonk, N.Y.: M.E. Sharpe, 1994

Zeami’s Style: The Noh Plays of Zeami Motokiyo
By Thomas Blenman Hare
Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1986

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Introduction to Medieval Japan