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Kamishibai
Kamishibai literally "paper drama", is a form of storytelling that
originated in Japanese buddhist temples in the 12th century, where monks used e-maki
(picture scrolls) to convey stories with moral lessons to a mostly illiterate
audience. It endured as a storytelling method for centuries, but is perhaps
best known for its revival in the 1920s through the 1950s. The gaito
kamishibaiya, or kamishibai storyteller, rode from village to village on a
bicycle equipped with a small stage. On arrival, the storyteller used two wooden
clappers, called hyoshigi, to announce his arrival. Children who bought candy
from the storyteller got the best seats in front of the stage. Once an audience
assembled, the storyteller told several stories using a set of illustrated
boards, inserted into the stage and withdrawn one by one as the story was told.
The stories were often serials and new episodes were told on each visit to the
village.
The revival of Kamishibai can be tied to the global depression of the late 1920s
when it offered a means by which an unemployed man could earn a small income.
The tradition was largely supplanted by the advent of television in the late
1950s but has recently enjoyed a revival in Japanese libraries and elementary
schools. Some Americans have translated traditional kamishibai into English and
offer them as part of a "balanced literacy" teaching philosophy.
Momotaro
Kintaro
Urashima Taro Issun
Boshi Tamamo
no Mae Shita kiri Suzume
Bancho Sarayashiki
Yotsuya Kaidan Kachi
kachi Yama Hanasaka Jiisan
Kiyohime
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