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| goukan 合巻 | ||||||
| KEY WORD : art history / paintings | ||||||
|  Lit. combining volumes. Long, complicated       revenge stories which required two, three or up to ten booklets, that were       sewn together and placed between a cover *hyoushi 表紙. A type of *kusazoushi 草双紙 which followed the development of the *kibyoushi 黄表紙, but also considered to be part of the larger genre of popular fiction       known as gesaku 戯作 (the term originally meant "written for fun" and       the genre displays a facetious but sophisticated style). Earlier kusazoushi had consisted of booklets of five folded doubled pages (folios) which were       sold in sets of two or three. As a result of the Kansei 寛政 Reforms, which       began in 1787, the content of kusazoushi changed from humourous material       to instructional or edifying materials. The resulting complexity of the       plots led to longer stories and a change in the binding of the books. Goukan appeared mainly from the end of the Kyouwa 享和 era (1801-4). The word itself       was included with the title of the 1804 publication TOUKAIDOU MATSU NO       SHIRANAMI 東海道松之白浪 by Shunsuitei Genkou or Motoyoshi  春水亭元好       with illustrations by Utagawa Toyokuni 歌川豊国 (1769-1825), Zenbu jissatsu       goukan 全部十冊合巻 (goukan in ten booklets). Authors of goukan included Shikitei Sanba 式亭三馬 (1776-1822), who was known for his *kokkeibon 滑稽本 and Ryuutei Tanehiko 柳亭種彦 (1783-1842), who is best known for his 1829 NISE MURASAKI INAKA GENJI 偐紫田舎源氏 (The False Murasaki and Rustic       Genji) with illustrations by Utagawa Kunisada 歌川国貞 (1786-1864). Jippensha       Ikku 十返舎一九 (1765-1831) also wrote some 360 goukan. The period from       1804-1844 is thought to be the golden age of the goukan. The contents       of the developed goukan ranged from revenge stories to ideas taken       from *kabuki 歌舞伎,       to love stories. Advancements in carving and printing techniques led to       the fully color printed cover, and Toyokuni, Kunisada and others created       designs for the illustrations as well as for the covers and slip covers       into which these books were placed. The designs were printed in a variety       of colors with fine details. The affixed titles *harigedai 貼外題 of the books were woodblock printed in color and the *mikaeshi 見返 (frontispiece) and slip covers into which the books were placed were       also elaborately color printed. There were also various clever devices,       such as the picture of an actor which would turn into a different design       when one turned the page. Goukan led into the development of the       *yomihon 読本. The goukan remained popular well into in the Meiji period, but then died out due to       the rise of newspapers and other reading material. | 
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