Seasoning the Seasons — Season 1, Episode 13: Dolls: Bearers of Dreams
Documentary • 28 min • 13 seasons, 162 episodes • ★ 10.0/10
Episode synopsis
The Japanese fascination with dolls extends through Neolithic clay figures to Girls' Day festival dolls, puppets and now cartoon character figurines as well. The dolls embody diverse local traditions and beliefs, serving as prayers for good health and rich harvests, or for the repose of the dead, as expressions of awe and respect for the deities, and as toys or ideal figures. The Girls' Day festival dolls represent the Emperor's court gathered for a wedding in Kyoto. This nationwide custom is a prayer for the healthy growth of girl children. In puppet theater, Bunraku and Ningyou-joruri flourished in Osaka during the Edo Period, which lasted from the 17th to the mid-19th century. The puppets express all the subtlety and feelings of real human beings and it takes years of practice to master the puppetry techniques. What do dolls mean to the Japanese people? We look back over this fond, beautiful and extraordinary history.
About Seasoning the Seasons
This program visits places across Japan to introduce the charms of their local daily life and festivals fostered by the nation's long history.
More episodes from Season 1
- E1Kyoto: Coloring the Season
- E2Kakunodate: Stories of Old Families
- E3Spirited Away to Tono
- E4Japanese Towers: Memories Past and Present
- E5Matsushima: Islands of Beauty and Prayer
- E6Suwa: A Celebration Down Through Time
- E7Niyodo River: Living with Japan's Clearest River
- E8Mt. Fuji
- E9Awa Dance: Obon Festival with 100,000 Dancers
- E10Kamakura: Samurai and Zen
- E11Itsukushima: Island of the Gods
- E12Hand-Made in Japan