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shouhon@³–{
KEY WORD :@art history / paintings
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Also daichou ‘ä’ , daihon ‘ä–{. In the Kyoto-Osaka area kamigata ã•û, it is often called *nehon ª–{. Edo period printed scripts or stage books for the performing arts, such as *kabuki ‰Ì•‘Šê, joururi ò—Ú—ž, and nagauta ’·‰S. Shouhon served as the standard for stage performances, listing the large stage equipment, the stage props, costumes, musical instruments and other requirements. There were books which also contained the music notations and lyrics of songs (see below). Shouhon produced in the mid-17c were illustrated and had 17 to 18 lines of thin letters per page. These were called shiramibon ål–{ (lice books) or eiri hosojibon ŠG“ü×Žš–{ (illustrated thin-letter books). A joururi master Uji Kaganojou ‰FŽ¡‰Á‰ê (1635-1711) published shouhon of his own performances, which contained musical annotations and were in a new style of eight lines of bold letters per page. After this the seven-line (per page) book shichigyoubon Žµs–{ became the standard. Shouhon of joururi and nagauta lyrics, published by various schools including tokiwazu í”Õ’Ã and kiyomoto ŽŒ³, were called usumono shouhon ”–•š³–{ because of their thinness, with perhaps only four or five folded pages per book. There were black-and-white printed pictures of actors on the covers *hyoushi •\Ž†, and annotations that included the titles of performances, the names of actors and musical performers. The woodblock prints of actors were done by the *ukiyo-e •‚¢ŠG artists of *Toriiha ’¹‹”h and Kitaoha –k”ö”h. There also were works by Kitagawa Utamaro Šì‘œì‰Ì–› (1753-1806). These annotated pictures now serve as important data for dating single-sheet prints *ichimai-e ˆê–‡ŠG. Shouhon made in the early 19c became cruder and had a green cover. Only the title was printed to an attached title strip *daisen ‘èâÓ on the cover.
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REFERENCES:
*eiri joururibon ŠG“üò—Ú—ž–{@
EXTERNAL LINKS: 
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NOTES
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