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ID 68452
JaLCDOI
Sort Key
4
FullText URL
Author
KHALMIRZAEVA, Saida Institute of Global Human Resource Development, Okayama University
Abstract
While higobiwa, the blind biwa players' tradition of Kyushu, is regarded as a historically distinctive genre, its evolution has been influenced by interactions with other storytelling traditions. It is evident that higobiwa borrowed stories from other genres and adapted them to its own distinctive narrative style. The findings of this research focused on the Heike-related tales reveal significant similarities between the tales of Ichi-no-Tani and Ko-Atsumori in the blind biwa players' tradition and Ko-Atsumori in the kojoruri tradition. These parallels suggest a shared narrative lineage between these two performance genres, prompting a reevaluation of our understanding of the transmission and evolution of oral narratives within the blind biwa players' tradition of Kyushu and shedding light on the dynamic nature and the interconnectedness of different performance traditions within Japan.
Keywords
higobiwa
the blind biwa players' tradition
kojoruri
Ichi-no-Tani
Ko-Atsumori
Note
研究論文 (Research Paper)
Publication Title
Bulletin of Institute for Promotion of Education and Campus Life, Okayama University
Published Date
2025-03-14
Volume
volume2
Publisher
岡山大学教育推進機構
Start Page
33
End Page
48
ISSN
1881-5952
Content Type
Departmental Bulletin Paper
OAI-PMH Set
岡山大学
language
Japanese
File Version
publisher
Eprints Journal Name
ipec