Nō drama, which integrates speech, song, dance, music, mask, and costume into a distinctive art form, is among Japan’s most revered cultural traditions. It gained popularity in the fourteenth century, when the actor and playwright Zeami (1363–1443) drew the favor of the shogun with his theatrical innovations. Nō’s intricacies and highly stylized conventions continue to attract Japanese and Western appreciation, and a repertoire of some 250 plays is performed today.
Joy, Despair, Illusion, Dreams presents a selection of Nō plays, magnificently rendered in English by Royall Tyler, an eminent scholar and translator of classical Japanese literature. It includes both canonical and lesser-known works of Zeami’s, as well as anonymous works. Several are outside the established repertoire, offering glimpses of Nō before the tradition was codified in the Edo period, and have not previously been translated into English. An introduction describes the structure, formal features, and performance conventions of Nō plays, and brief essays precede each work. Through Tyler’s authoritative scholarship and keen ear for the subtlety and beauty of the language, Joy, Despair, Illusion, Dreams gives Anglophone readers access to the complex art of Nō.
Tabella dei contenuti
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Nō Plays
Akoya no matsu (The Akoya Pine)
Funabashi (The Boat Bridge)
Furu
Genji kuyō (To Hallow Genji)
Genjō
Hakozaki
Higaki (The Cypress Fence)
Kiyotsune
Kuzu
Matsukaze (Wind in the Pine)
Matsura Sayohime
Naniwa
Nishikigi (The Painted Wands)
Nomori (The Watchman’s Mirror)
Saoyama
Tadatsu no Saemon
Tōgan Botō (Tōgan and Botō)
Tōru
Tsunemasa
Unoha (Cormorant Feathers)
Essays and Other Translations
Matsukaze and the Music of the Biwa
The Sword of Furu
The Jewel of Shidoji
Nō Texts Translated
Works Cited
Circa l’autore
Royall Tyler is the award-winning translator of
The Tale of the Heike and
The Tale of Genji. His Columbia University Press books include
The Miracles of the Kasuga Deity (2016) and
The Dawn of the Warrior Age: War Tales from Medieval Japan (2024). After teaching at Ohio State University, the University of Wisconsin–Madison, and the University of Oslo, Tyler retired from the Australian National University.