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| kawaraban 瓦版 | ||||||
| KEY WORD : art history / paintings | ||||||
|  Lit. roof-tile print. Also later known as yomiuri 
読売 (sell by reading), because newsprint vendors read their product aloud in 
public to help sell them. Woodblock-printed news-sheets published during the Edo 
period. It is believed that early examples were sometimes printed on flat ceramic 
tiles rather than wood, thus the name. They contained news of fires and other 
disasters, double suicides, revenge tales and other topics of interest to the 
townspeople. Kawaraban were produced in particularly large numbers following 
the Toukaidou 東海道 Tidal Wave of 1854 and the great Ansei 安政 Earthquake in Edo 
of the following year. Prevalent among the earthquake news-sheets were pictures 
of catfish *namazu-e 鯰絵, 
a fish associated in popular lore with earthquakes. Kawaraban often discussed 
political developments, current manners and customs, and thus were often censored 
or prohibited. Because they were illicitly produced, most did not include the 
publisher's name. Kawaraban continued to be read widely by the public until 
the advent of newspapers in the Meiji period.  | 
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(C)2001 Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. No reproduction or republication without written permission. 掲載のテキスト・写真・イラストなど、全てのコンテンツの無断複製・転載を禁じます。  | 
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