Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Shin Kabuki
View through CrossRef
Shin Kabuki literally "new kabuki," a modern outgrowth of traditional kabuki and one of the fruits of Japan’s modernist theater movement.
The term was first coined by Kasuyama Masao and later defined by Kagayama Naozō to mean plays written in the kabuki format but with Western ideas incorporated in to them and with literary merit. As used today, it refers to works written since the late Meiji period (1868–1912) by intellectuals who were not part of the kabuki establishment. These works were staged with kabuki’s apparatus but without such traditional kabuki acting and staging conventions as climactic poses (mie), stylized makeup, and quick role-change (hayagawari). Through these plays, kabuki came to be divided into "classical" (koten) and "new" (shin) categories.
Following the Meiji Restoration, government leaders returning from trips to the West sought a potential counterpart to Western drama in Japan, as part of Japanese high culture suitable for entertaining the upper classes and visiting foreign dignitaries. This desire of the Meiji leaders coincided with indigenous modernist efforts to reform this traditional performing art to suit the times. This led to the appearance of zangiri-mono and katsureki-mono. However, following the death in 1893 of Kawakate Mokuami, who had provided most of the scripts for such reformative efforts, there was no playwright of comparable caliber to support the reform of kabuki. This gap, coupled with the growing influence of Western theater and the era’s great social changes, facilitated a transition away from the old practice—scripts were written exclusively by playwrights attached to a company—and the appearance of intellectual playwrights who were unrelated to kabuki.
Title: Shin Kabuki
Description:
Shin Kabuki literally "new kabuki," a modern outgrowth of traditional kabuki and one of the fruits of Japan’s modernist theater movement.
The term was first coined by Kasuyama Masao and later defined by Kagayama Naozō to mean plays written in the kabuki format but with Western ideas incorporated in to them and with literary merit.
As used today, it refers to works written since the late Meiji period (1868–1912) by intellectuals who were not part of the kabuki establishment.
These works were staged with kabuki’s apparatus but without such traditional kabuki acting and staging conventions as climactic poses (mie), stylized makeup, and quick role-change (hayagawari).
Through these plays, kabuki came to be divided into "classical" (koten) and "new" (shin) categories.
Following the Meiji Restoration, government leaders returning from trips to the West sought a potential counterpart to Western drama in Japan, as part of Japanese high culture suitable for entertaining the upper classes and visiting foreign dignitaries.
This desire of the Meiji leaders coincided with indigenous modernist efforts to reform this traditional performing art to suit the times.
This led to the appearance of zangiri-mono and katsureki-mono.
However, following the death in 1893 of Kawakate Mokuami, who had provided most of the scripts for such reformative efforts, there was no playwright of comparable caliber to support the reform of kabuki.
This gap, coupled with the growing influence of Western theater and the era’s great social changes, facilitated a transition away from the old practice—scripts were written exclusively by playwrights attached to a company—and the appearance of intellectual playwrights who were unrelated to kabuki.
Related Results
A Study on the Formation and Transmission of the Goryeong Shin Family Calligraphy(Seoye)
A Study on the Formation and Transmission of the Goryeong Shin Family Calligraphy(Seoye)
This paper aims to elucidate the formation and transmission of calligraphy within the Goryeong Shin Family, with a focus on Shin Gong-je as the central figure. It explores the spec...
A Study on the Formation and Transmission of the Goryeong Shin Family Calligraphy(Seoye)
A Study on the Formation and Transmission of the Goryeong Shin Family Calligraphy(Seoye)
This paper aims to elucidate the formation and transmission of calligraphy within the Goryeong Shin Family, with a focus on Shin Gong-je as the central figure. It explores the spec...
Artistic Direction in Takechi Kabuki
Artistic Direction in Takechi Kabuki
In the early postwar period, one man who sought to shake up the
Japanese theatre world was renegade critic and director Takechi Tetsuji
(1912-1988). Although Takechi worked in a nu...
Yoritomo's Death: A Shin Kabuki Play by Mayama Seika
Yoritomo's Death: A Shin Kabuki Play by Mayama Seika
Kabuki , while being one of Japan's three great classical theatre genres, has also benefited from dramatic works written especially for it by a variety of playwrights in the modern...
Kawatake Mokuami (1816–1893)
Kawatake Mokuami (1816–1893)
A playwright at the end of the Edo period and throughout much of the Meiji period, Kawatake Mokuami wrote over 360 plays during his fifty-year career which saw the advent of modern...
What Was the Visual Appeal of Kabuki?
What Was the Visual Appeal of Kabuki?
By using several woodblock-printed pictures to explore the visual appeal of kabuki in the Edo period. (1) Focus on the construction of kabuki theatre and the props on stage, consid...
Autoimmune hemolytic anemia in a patient with Kabuki syndrome - a case report in São Paulo and a brief discussion about Kabuki syndrome and association with autoimmunity
Autoimmune hemolytic anemia in a patient with Kabuki syndrome - a case report in São Paulo and a brief discussion about Kabuki syndrome and association with autoimmunity
Kabuki syndrome (KS), first described in Japan in 1981, is a rare disease characterized by a peculiar facies, postnatal growth deficiency, intellectual disability and a set of malf...

