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Buddhist nuns in art --- Buddhist nuns --- Kumano Region --- Painting, Japanese --- Women storytellers --- History --- Sources --- Religion
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Dancer, Nun, Ghost, Goddess explores the story of the dancers Giō and Hotoke, which first appeared in the fourteenth-century narrative Tale of the Heike . The story of the two love rivals is one of loss, female solidarity, and Buddhist salvation. Since its first appearance, it has inspired a stream of fiction, theatrical plays, and visual art works. These heroines have become the subjects of lavishly illustrated hand scrolls, ghosts on the noh stage, and Buddhist and Shinto goddesses. Physical monuments have been built to honor their memories; they are emblems of local pride and centerpieces of shared identity. Two beloved characters in the Japanese literary imagination, Giō and Hotoke are also models that have instructed generations of women on how to survive in a male-dominated world.
Arts, Japanese --- Dancers in art. --- Buddhist nuns in art. --- Women heroes in art. --- Tanz. --- Literatur. --- Legende. --- Nonne --- Göttin --- Geist --- Themes, motives. --- Giō, --- Hotoke Gozen, --- Fürstliches Schauspielhaus --- Chōsen Kōgei Kenkyūkai. --- Japanese arts --- Giō, --- 仏御前, --- 祇王,
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