JOURNAL OF RURAL PLANNING ASSOCIATION
Online ISSN : 1881-2309
Print ISSN : 0912-9731
ISSN-L : 0912-9731
spescial issue
A New Form of Rural Culture Successors of the Traditional Culture of Mountainous Area
A Case Study on Ritual Kagura Dancing Traditions of the Takachihogo-Shiibayama Area
Kako INOUE
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2017 Volume 36 Issue Special_Issue Pages 375-382

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Abstract

This paper is to explore how rural communities can transfer its traditional culture in a sustainable and endogenous manner while understanding the “succession” of a particular traditional culture, the ritual Kagura dancing tradition on a case of the Takachihogo-Shiibayama area (recognized as the Globally Important Agricultural Heritage Systems). The study examines three aspects, 1) cooperation among neighboring communities, 2) home-coming of younger generations and return migration, and 3) inclusion of children as performers, in relation with age distributions, showing both quantitative and qualitative survey results. The results indicate that the succession is currently supported by new types of participants, and that the traditional cultural events provide opportunities for ex-villagers to be back to their hometown, suggesting a new form of succession of traditional cultures of depopulating rural areas.

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© 2017 THE ASSOCIATION OF RURAL PLANNING
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