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  1. Sep 5, 2015 · Likewise, it is common for Japanese comedy to look overly silly or generally unfunny to those who are new to it. Japan has a long tradition of comedy that can be traced back as far as the Heian-era .

    • Owarai

      A theatre in Tokyo known as Lumine The Yoshimoto is also a...

    • A Comic-Erotic Diva
    • 'Wacky and Iconoclastic'
    • 'Audiences Want Unrealistic Things' on TV and Stage
    • Misunderstood
    • 'Sometimes I Don't Laugh'

    For Tomoko Aoyama, an Associate Professor of Japanese at the University of Queensland, one of the earliest figures in the history of Japanese humour is not a person, but a goddess. In Japan's Shinto religion, Ame-no-Uzume is the goddess of humour, or as Professor Aoyama calls her, "a diva". "[She was] Japan's first comic erotic-performer and shaman...

    Australian Roger Pulvers is an author, translator, playwright, filmmaker and reporter, who has mostly lived in Japan since 1967. Mr Pulvers says contemporary Japanese humour is centuries in the making. He traces its origins to the Edo period, which started around the year 1600. Then, bawdy comedy ruled. "You had an incredibly ribald, broad, in-your...

    Today, international audiences often associate Japanese humour with some of its variety or game shows on TV, which can be very over-the-top. Often, the more outrageous, the more well received. "There's physical punishment, hitting, very crazy stuff," Mr Wakasugi says. He says, while Australian audiences want relatability and personal connection wit...

    Mr Pulvers says Japanese humour can also be self-deprecating, drawing an unlikely parallel to the kind of humour he grew up with — Jewish humour. "[Jewish humour] is all about self-deprecation. And the Japanese sense of humour is also very self-deprecating and sardonic … They're very, very similar," he says. "The difference is [Japanese people] don...

    Mr Wakasugi's time in Australia, immersed in the world of stand-up comedy, has rubbed off on him. "Before I started comedy in Australia, I used to love Japanese comedy … Now if I watch Japanese comedy, sometimes I don't laugh." Mr Wakasugi says he's more aware of the sexism and racism that features in some mainstream Japanese comedy. "Japan is very...

  2. Mar 25, 2020 · Would you enjoy comedy in Japan? We interviewed our staff members in Japanese-Western couples to discover whether humour transcends borders!

  3. Aug 29, 2011 · Aug 29, 2011. Japanese comedy gets a bad rap. Foreigners either knock it for being too silly and too focused on slapstick or too pun-based and difficult to understand. The Japanese sense of...

  4. I think being funny here is simply wackily breaking through the stiff social conventions. It's cute, silly and they love buffoonery. If you do it and are rude: "American joke!" I don't think manzai is funny, but I don't think the Japanese are unfunny. They can't laugh at themselves though.

  5. Oct 8, 2024 · However, to truly understand the depth of Japanese comedy, one needs to look at it through the lens of 矛盾 (contradiction) and 逸脱 (deviation) — two concepts that are at the heart of what makes Japanese humor so intriguing and impactful.

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  7. Comedy generally breaks social norms to expose the humor in them. A lot of Japanese comedy is about that, certainly the physical comedy and the yelling is. The other thing notable about Japanese comedy is the long tradition of the straight man, crazy man duo. Like Elvis and Costello.

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