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  1. By 1933, she had organized a troupe of performers called the “Kamishibai Missionaries” (kamishibai dendō dan) and had co-founded the Kamishibai Publishing Company (kamishibai kankō kai). Imai made several significant innovations to the kamishibai format.

  2. After war in China escalated in the late 1930s, the number of men pulled into the military or labor force depleted the number of street kamishibai performers. Almost as soon as Japan surrendered in 1945, however, newly out of work men once again turned to street kamishibai for income.

    • why was kamishibai so popular in the 1930s in china and the world today1
    • why was kamishibai so popular in the 1930s in china and the world today2
    • why was kamishibai so popular in the 1930s in china and the world today3
    • why was kamishibai so popular in the 1930s in china and the world today4
    • why was kamishibai so popular in the 1930s in china and the world today5
  3. Oct 31, 2011 · However, the form of Kamishibai that one thinks of today developed around 1929 and was quite popular in the 30s, and 40s, all but dying out with the introduction of television later in the 1950s.

  4. Kamishibai came into existence in 1930, just as Japan was modernizing, militarizing, and preparing for imperialistic wars with nearby Asian nations. Far cheaper to produce than movies, with greater accessibility than radio broadcasts, and targeted at young children, kamishibai became a primary form of propaganda and indoctrination.

  5. From the 1930s until the 1950s, kamishibai was the most popular form of entertainment for children, so much so that when television came to Japan in the 1950s, it was referred to as “ denki kamishibai ” (electric kamishibai).

  6. Jun 28, 2018 · Meet kamishibai – from kami, meaning paper and shibai, meaning play or theatre – the ancient Japanese storytelling tool that many librarians, nursing-homes and schools use in several countries ...

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  8. Kamishibai may be best known today as one of the direct precursors of postwar manga and anime, 3 but over its forty-year heyday it enjoyed enormous popularity, at times eclipsing rival entertainment media for children such as movies or radio (in the 1930s and early 1940s) and manga (in the 1950s).