Materials
satirical
ICH Materials 14
Photos
(3)-
Two artists (Cheo singing club of Yen Nhan commune, Yen Mo district) sing a duet of the song "Duyen phan phai chieu", the traditional tune "Duong truong phai chieu"
Chèo – Vietnamese traditional stage art in Ninh Bình province\n\nEach Chèo tune has its own typical characteristics to depict character expressions either joyfulness or satirical humour, for example Hát sắp, Hát sắp song loan,…. \nThe tunes that are of lyrical and romantic characteristics include Sa lệch chênh, Đường trường tiếng đàn, Đường trường bắn thước, Tình thư hạ vị, Nhịp đuổi…, which convey messages, promises, and delicate expressions of love. The tune Sa lệch xếp expressing optimism and pride is performed while working and moving on.
Viet Nam -
Khoja Nasreddin satirical and humorous storytelling traditions
"Traditions of telling humorous and satirical stories about Khoja Nasriddin - a folklore character of the peoples of the Muslim East. \nKhoja Nasreddin is a collective image devoid of spatial and temporal boundaries. He is a connecting link in a chain of cultural phenomena that are far from each other; in the end, he constitutes a single cultural layer. The first appearance of anecdotes about Khoja Nasreddin dates back to the 10th century.\nThe literary character of Nasruddin is eclectic and combines in himself the image of a sage and a simpleton at the same time, an internally contradictory image of an antihero, a vagabond, a freethinker, a rebel, a fool, a holy fool, a sly man, a rogue and even a cynical philosopher, a subtle scientist-theologian and a Sufi. He makes fun of human vices, misers, bigots, hypocrites, bribe judges, etc."\n
Azerbaijan,Kyrgyzstan,Tajikistan,Turkmenistan,Turkey,Uzbekistan -
Khoja Nasreddin satirical and humorous storytelling traditions
"Traditions of telling humorous and satirical stories about Khoja Nasriddin - a folklore character of the peoples of the Muslim East. \nKhoja Nasreddin is a collective image devoid of spatial and temporal boundaries. He is a connecting link in a chain of cultural phenomena that are far from each other; in the end, he constitutes a single cultural layer. The first appearance of anecdotes about Khoja Nasreddin dates back to the 10th century.\nThe literary character of Nasruddin is eclectic and combines in himself the image of a sage and a simpleton at the same time, an internally contradictory image of an antihero, a vagabond, a freethinker, a rebel, a fool, a holy fool, a sly man, a rogue and even a cynical philosopher, a subtle scientist-theologian and a Sufi. He makes fun of human vices, misers, bigots, hypocrites, bribe judges, etc."\n
Azerbaijan,Kyrgyzstan,Tajikistan,Turkmenistan,Turkey,Uzbekistan