Lexington Books
Pages: 274
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7391-2245-7 • Hardback • February 2008 • $133.00 • (£102.00)
978-0-7391-2246-4 • Paperback • February 2008 • $58.99 • (£45.00)
978-1-4616-3410-2 • eBook • February 2008 • $56.00 • (£43.00)
Lorie Brau is assistant professor of Japanese in the department of foreign languages and literatures at the University of New Mexico.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Chapter I: Ethnographer as Mummy Hunter
Chapter 3 Chapter II: A Night at the Yose
Chapter 4 Chapter III: What Makes Rakugo Rakugo?
Chapter 5 Chapter IV: Wits, Outlaws, Flatterers, and Antiquarians: Hanashika Heritage
Chapter 6 Chapter V: Rehearsing Tradition: Zenza Apprenticeship and the Hanashika Career
Chapter 7 Chapter VI: Producing Rakugo: Traditional and Alternative Performance Contexts
Chapter 8 Chapter VII: Making a Hit with Classical Rakugo
Chapter 9 Chapter VIII: Rakugo Audiences and Fans
Chapter 10 Conclusion: Tokyo Rakugo and Heritage
A brilliant ethnography of an exquisite Japanese performance genre by one who has not only studied it but also been a fan, apprentice, and performer in her own right. This luminous account of the art of storytelling is everything Walter Benjamin could have hoped for and more.
— Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, author of Destination Culture: Tourism, Museum, and Heritage
Lorie Brau's intimate knowledge and expertise illuminate her vivid account of a traditional comic art that remains immensely popular in today's Japan. Rakugo deserves to be better known abroad, and this book is a superb introduction to it.
— Howard Hibbett, Harvard College
Lorie Brau's Rakugo is a significant piece of scholarship...and contains a detailed history and several translated stories...This study is detailed and at times fascinating.
— The Japan Times Online
Japan scholars, students, and those interested in traditional performing and narrative arts, early modern and modern history, popular culture, media, humor and heritage...will surely want to have Rakugo: Performing Comedy and Cultural Heritage by Lorie Brau on their shelves, for both research and enjoyment.... Thanks to Brau's unique position as an insider in the rakugo world, readers are exposed to its realities and excitement. Her language flows beautifully as she tells her story, and she presents her subject in an instructive, yet warm and welcoming manner.
— Matthew W. Shores, University of Hawai'i at Manoa
The reader is able to get a very clear idea of what it is like to go to a rakugo performance without being there. It contains an index and a glossary of selected terms which is particularly useful to anyone interested in building a solid foundation of knowledge for further research on the topic. Brau's book will be interesting and useful for several kinds of readers....
— Till Weingartner, Freie Universitat Berlin
Rakugo is the 'sit-down' comedy of nimble narrative performed on stage in vaudeville-like halls. With erudite textual analysis and unusual participant-observation, Brau sure-handedly takes us into this small world of Japanese 'culture' and shows us quite vividly what is at stake in its performance and its perpetuation, both for rakugo itself and, by inference, for heritage performance genres generally.
— William W. Kelly, Yale University
The reader is able to get a very clear idea of what it is like to go to a rakugo performance without being there.It contains an index and a glossary of selected terms which is particularly useful to anyone interested in building a solid foundation of knowledge for further research on the topic.Brau's book will be interesting and useful for several kinds of readers.
— Till Weingartner, Freie Universitat Berlin