フルブライト交流事業

Claudia Orenstein

2021 Research Program
Affiliation in Japan: Sophia University

With Awa puppetry scholar, preservationist, and puppet collector Tsujimoto Kazuhide at his home in Tokushima, filming an episode of his monthly television show on Awa puppetry. November 2021. Tsujimoto’s puppet collection is now on display at the puppetry center he recently established next-door to his home, Ningyō Mura.

No.51
Exploring Endangered Traditional Artforms: A Study of Ritual Puppetry in Japan

Dr. Claudia Orenstein is a Professor of Theater at Hunter College and the Graduate Center, City University of New York. She specializes in Asian performance and has focused on puppetry over the past decade, having co-edited several books on the subject.

As a Fulbright scholar, she explored ritual puppetry in Japan. Having previously engaged with traditional Japanese forms of ritual puppetry, she wanted to explore their status in a contemporary setting. “These traditional forms are always a little bit endangered, so I was curious about what was actually happening with them today.” she says.

Dr. Orenstein was hosted at the Institute of Comparative Culture, Sophia University, Tokyo. “It was a strange time to be in Japan because it was just coming off of the huge summer COVID-19 surge,” she mentions, recounting how the Fulbright scholars managed to connect over Skype during the quarantine period. Despite limited physical interaction, she was appreciative of the sense of community among the scholars. “I know so many people who have been Fulbright scholars, and it feels like a real community of inspiring scholars and artists! It was really nice to connect with other Fulbrighters and find out what they were doing and their different research projects,” she says.

Despite some setbacks owing to the COVID-19 pandemic, Dr. Orenstein found several opportunities to travel and observe rituals and performances across Japan. She made concentrated trips to several areas, including Ishikawa, Gifu, Tokushima, Aomori, and Akita. “The research was very hands on, so it wasn't an always-being-in-a-library kind of thing.” she mentions, recalling her trip to northern Japan where the local residents helped her learn more about traditional puppets from that region. “I have endless stories about all of the places I went, and the people I met who helped me out,” she recalls fondly.

The flexibility of the Fulbright Program allowed Dr. Orenstein to avail unpremeditated opportunities. “I had never before in my life been given a grant like this, where someone says: here's the money, go do the research you feel like you need to do, and to be supported in that way makes you feel so validated as a professor, as a researcher, and as a human being really,” she says. In tandem with her research on puppetry, she visited several museums and temples, including a Shingon temple in Aomori, and observed contemporary Japanese theater.

With the successful culmination of her research program, Dr. Orenstein looks forward to writing more about her experience and will be presenting some of her research at the puppetry symposium at the UNIMA Council Meeting in Bali. UNIMA, (L’Union Internationale de la Marionnette), is an international organization devoted to puppetry. She is organizing an online event for the Ballard Museum and Institute of Puppetry and will be working as an editor for a new online, open access, peer-reviewed journal devoted to puppetry, masks, and related arts, Puppetry International Research. “I'm happy not only to support my own work, but to create occasions for further exchange and to give Japanese scholars opportunities to present their materials and their research,” she says.

To future Fulbright scholarship aspirants, Dr. Orenstein advises: “If you have a vision, even if you don't necessarily know exactly how everything is going to work out, if you can articulate the vision, and some specifics, I think that's a really good way to start.”

Trying out my mie on the hanamichi at the Aioi-za ji-kabuki (folk kabuki) theatre, thanks to my hosts Ryuken Onozaki and JET Program CIR Judas Hoffmann. Mizunami, Gifu. October 2021.

With Professor Martin Holman (holding a puppet of Ebisu) and other members of Holman’s Tokubei-za puppet company at the performance in Hakusan, Ishikawa. October 2021.

In puppeteer’s dress, ready to perform with Professor Martin Holman’s Tokubei-za company in Hakusan, Ishikawa. October 2021.


With father and son of the Chida family of shi-shi mai (lion dance) lion head carvers. Hakusan, Ishikawa. October 2021.

Meeting up with fellow Fulbright grantee Eli Claggett on a visit to Fukuoka. November 2021.

Dressed to learn the Harigoma dance with a local troupe on Sado island, thanks to my host and organizer, rice farmer and oni daiko performer Aida Tadaaki. November 2021.

Myself, PUK puppet company producer Yamaguchi Yoko, and Sado’s JET Program CIR Alisa Holm with the women of the Harigoma troupe on Sado Island after our dance lesson. Thanks to our host and organizer, rice farmer and oni daiko performer Aida Tadaaki. November 2021.

Trying out the Tokiwa-za company’s bunya ningyō figure on Sado Island after a performance, thanks to my host Aida Tadaaki. November 2021.

Getting bitten by a tiger for luck and to make myself smart at the Oneri Matsuri in Iida, Nagano. March 2022.

Interviewing members of Fukaze Dekumawashi Preservation Society, with the help of JET Program CIR Evan Rostetter, at the troupe’s rehearsal space in Hakusan, Ishikawa. April 2022.

With members of the Fukaze Dekumawashi and Higashi Futaguchi Preservation Societies and JET Program CIR Evan Rostetter at Futaguchi’s rehearsal and performance space in the mountains. Hakusan, Ishikawa. April 2022.

Searching out dosojin in Akita province. May 2022.

Learning about dosojin with experts on the tradition, Professor Kamino Yoshiharu (left) and Komatsu Kazuhiko (right), in Akita province. May 2022.

Oshirasama figures at the Michinoku Folklore Village, Iwate. May 2022.

A wall covered with oshirasama figures at the Michinoku Folklore Village, Iwate. Here visitors are invited to write their wishes on colorful cloths and then hang up with the figures. This is not part of the original practice. May 2022.