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  1. 7 de may. de 2019 · Bunraku - Japan's Traditional Puppet Theater. ”Nippon Bunraku”, performed in March 2019 at Harajuku Meiji Jungu-mae. Bunraku, also known as ningyo joruri, is a form of Japanese puppet theater designated as a UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage. This form of performing art first appeared in Osaka during the Edo period around the 18th century.

  2. 18 de jun. de 2021 · Ningyo Joruri is a combination of ningyo (puppets) and Joruri (narrative music) which combines voice and shamisen. It is now known as “Bunraku” since that is...

  3. 26 de jun. de 2014 · Bunraku Puppet theatre is a traditional art with roots in Osaka. A narrator and a three-stringed guitar-like instrument (shamisen) is used to perform the gidayu ballad drama, with three puppeteers manipulating the puppets on stage, all combining to tell a story.This performance art is on the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity by UNESCO.

  4. 29 de oct. de 2019 · 1. Bunraku has a long history. Traditional Japanese puppet theatre, known as bunraku, emerged more than 300 years ago during the Edo period, where it flourished in Osaka. This stage art form was recognised by UNESCO as a World Intangible Cultural Heritage in 2003. Bunraku and its sister art form, kabuki – traditional musical theatre known for ...

  5. Bunraku, Japanese puppet theater, is an unusually complex dramatic form, a collaborative effort among puppeteers, narrators, and musicians. It was first developed in the seventeenth century, with the growth of an audience with the leisure and funds to appreciate a popular theater, the availability of the newly imported instrument called the ...

  6. Osaka has been the capital for bunraku, traditional Japanese puppet theater, for many centuries.The popularity of the theater form had grown in the city during the Edo Period (1603-1868) when bunraku - like kabuki - was a rare kind of art entertainment for the common public, as opposed to entertainment for the nobility.. The National Bunraku Theater (国立文楽劇場, Kokuritsu Bunraku ...

  7. Traditional three-man puppet-theatre bunraku (文楽) should properly be called jōruri ayatsuri (浄瑠璃操り) or ningyō jōruri (人形浄瑠璃). These terms stress the two major elements of the art: performed to the accompaniment of recited narrative music (jōruri) known as gidayū bushi, it involves the manipulation (ayatsuri) of puppets (ningyō).