Masculinized femininity of women characters on the Kabuki stage: Female Onnagata's “cross-gender” performance in the “all-male” theatre

IF 0.9 3区 社会学 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY Journal of Material Culture Pub Date : 2023-11-01 DOI:10.1177/13591835231211222
Maki Isaka
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Abstract

This article explores four-century-old “all-male” kabuki theatre of Japan as the site of logics, mechanisms, and operations of onnagata's gender performance. The term onnagata signifies actors performing women's roles in kabuki, and since the first two and a half centuries of kabuki history overlapped with the time when women were legally expelled from performance activities, male onnagata mostly developed and established the artistry and traditions of onnagata acting. Women resumed kabuki performance when it was still illegal, but that did not cancel this fact. The present article studies kabuki in this historical context in order to investigate how dynamically genders are taking shape on the kabuki stage and off. To that end, this paper uses “cultivation” (a training methodology called shugyô) as a key point of investigation, while paying special attention to female onnagata as a main subject of examination. Cultivation is the training methodology of weight that has long been used and systematized in many circles engaged in activities established in premodern times, such as Buddhism, martial arts, and performing arts, and constitutes a blanket regime for these wide-ranging areas. Cultivation is to obtain and internalize second nature to the extent that it could function as if it were natural, the process of which takes place through two stages: (1) repetitive, long-lasting, personal, and somatic training in, e.g., posture, movements, and the like, and (2) internalization of said technique as second nature. That this cultivation process is congruous with the concept of performativity in contemporary critical theory suggests that an analysis of how female kabuki actors go through cultivation in order to internalize kabuki body grammar, including gender related code can contribute not only to kabuki studies but also to gender studies.
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歌舞伎舞台上女性角色的男性化女性特质:女翁长形在“全男性”剧场中的“跨性别”表演
本文以四百年的日本“全男性”歌舞伎剧场为背景,探讨女长性别表演的逻辑、机制和运作。“女长”一词指的是在歌舞伎中扮演女性角色的演员,由于歌舞伎历史的前两个半世纪与女性被法律驱逐出表演活动的时间重叠,男性女长主要发展和建立了女长表演的艺术和传统。当歌舞伎仍然是非法的时候,妇女们重新开始表演,但这并没有取消这一事实。本文在这一历史背景下对歌舞伎进行研究,以探讨性别在歌舞伎舞台上和舞台下是如何动态地形成的。为此,本文以“修炼”(一种训练方法shugyô)为调查重点,特别关注女性女永形作为主要考察对象。修炼是一种训练重量的方法,在佛教、武术和表演艺术等前现代社会的许多活动中,长期以来一直被使用和系统化,并构成了这些广泛领域的一揽子制度。修炼是获得和内化第二天性,使其能够像自然一样发挥作用,这一过程通过两个阶段进行:(1)重复的、持久的、个人的和身体的训练,例如姿势、动作等,以及(2)将上述技术内化为第二天性。这种培养过程与当代批评理论中的表演性概念是一致的,这表明分析女性歌舞伎演员如何通过培养来内化包括性别相关代码在内的歌舞伎身体语法,不仅有助于歌舞伎研究,也有助于性别研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
30
期刊介绍: The Journal of Material Culture is an interdisciplinary journal designed to cater for the increasing interest in material culture studies. It is concerned with the relationship between artefacts and social relations irrespective of time and place and aims to systematically explore the linkage between the construction of social identities and the production and use of culture. The Journal of Material Culture transcends traditional disciplinary and cultural boundaries drawing on a wide range of disciplines including anthropology, archaeology, design studies, history, human geography, museology and ethnography.
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