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The Book of Yokai: Mysterious Creatures of Japanese Folklore

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Monsters, ghosts, fantastic beings, and supernatural phenomena of all sorts haunt the folklore and popular culture of Japan. Broadly labeled yokai, these creatures come in infinite shapes and sizes, from tengu mountain goblins and kappa water spirits to shape-shifting foxes and long-tongued ceiling-lickers. Currently popular in anime, manga, film, and computer games, many yokai originated in local legends, folktales, and regional ghost stories.

Drawing on years of research in Japan, Michael Dylan Foster unpacks the history and cultural context of yokai, tracing their roots, interpreting their meanings, and introducing people who have hunted them through the ages. In this delightful and accessible narrative, readers will explore the roles played by these mysterious beings within Japanese culture and will also learn of their abundance and variety through detailed entries, some with original illustrations, on more than fifty individual creatures. The Book of Yokai provides a lively excursion into Japanese folklore and its ever-expanding influence on global popular culture. It also invites readers to examine how people create, transmit, and collect folklore, and how they make sense of the mysteries in the world around them. By exploring yokai as a concept, we can better understand broader processes of tradition, innovation, storytelling, and individual and communal creativity.

336 pages, Paperback

First published December 28, 2014

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Michael Dylan Foster

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 171 reviews
Profile Image for Philipp.
688 reviews222 followers
October 19, 2016
Wonderful short book - two parts, first what we can learn from yokai and other monsters about how humans interpret reality, and how they assign agency. He does so while keeping away from the 'weird Japan' cliches, as most culture have created stories to explain their reality - think of Germany's Heinzelmaennchen, or Australia's Adnoartina. It's just that while Germany mostly forgot their stories and Australia's colonization destroyed and forcibly shifted a lot of culture Japan was fortunate enough to keep these stories going, to the point of every small island town having their own stories, or variants of those.


Thinking about the genesis of yokai, then, is really a philosophical problem: it helps us explore how human beings struggle to grasp, interpret, and control the world around them.


The second part of the book is a yokai encyclopedia which serves as examples for the first part of the text, with numerous yokai who serve as examples for humans making sense of their surroundings. There are yokai who make unexplainable noises around the house (Yanari), yokai who watch you with their many eyes so you feel watched (Mokumokuren), and so on. He even includes the more famous modern urban myths such as toire no Hanako or Kuchisake-onna.

To me, the best thing about the geneology of yokai is that it's such a great example for an old unbroken 'remix culture' - a relatively new term for a culture which is open towards the recombining of older elements to create new elements (just look at Simpsonswave, what is happening on the Internet is a prime example of a remix culture). Here Foster accidentally traces the steps of the yokai remix culture starting hundreds of years ago. You have people telling each other stories, then folklorists started to write down these stories while inventing their own yokai to add (what happened to the Grimm's Fairy Tales between the first and second edition is another example for this in Germany), then later authors expand on the early authors' works while changing and expanding, and now you have manga artists who take these 300 year old drawings and update them, add their own details or reimagine them completely, Shigeru Mizuki probably being the most famous for that inside of Japan.


But because yokai emerge from the process of thinking through the unknown, they can perhaps offer a small metaphor for considering these immense challenges. As I have argued implicitly throughout this book, yokai are born from the dual acts of reading and writing the world around us; they develop from symbiotic processes of interpretation and creation.


Recommended for: people interested in people

P.S.: I have to say I'm jealous of Foster getting to stay on tiny Japanese islands to interview old story-tellers for his work, that sounds amazing.
Profile Image for Darjeeling.
351 reviews40 followers
December 7, 2018
I wanted a book on Japanese mythical creatures. What I got was a social studies essay that used the words "diverse" and "diversity" on almost every page. Often twice on a page. Frequently interrupting the myths and legends to give a feminist perspective, the book ends with a lecture on the dangers of global warming.

When the book is actually about yokai it's great, and as a Studio Ghibli fan learning the connection between many Ghibli films and yokai is very interesting to me. I did not enjoy the social studies lecture.
Profile Image for Rosa.
790 reviews6 followers
July 25, 2019
This is that kind of book that you start reading, think you're progressing well enough and then, when you look at the page count you only have advanced a little since the last time you looked... Still, I think this book is an imprescindible reading for everyone interested in Japanese culture and its myths.
The first part is a bit redundant, and as I said, dry, but once you reach the bestiary, it's really interesting. I was amazed at how some of the yokai have similitudes with some European tales. The 7 leagues boots the oni used in one of the stories, is really similar to the Tale of the 7 leagues boots my granny used to told me when I was little. The same goes for Yamamba. That yokai reminded me the Tale of the Wolf and the 7 Little Kids, you know, that one in which the mother goat goes to the market and had to leave her 7 kids at home advising them not to open the door to anyone. I loved when my granny told that tale to me, impersonating the voices of the mom, the wolf and the kids.

This book makes for an interesting reading, it has good points, and lots of bibliography (mostly in Japanese) to investigate further if you like the subject. I'm happy I finally get to read it. It's been two years since Sole and Joe gifted it to my sis!
Profile Image for Akylina.
288 reviews69 followers
June 2, 2015
This is a wonderful and highly informative book for anyone who is fascinated by folklore and its history until today. I really liked how the author decided to structure this book; the first part is something like a history of yokai, where the author explains their origins, their importance for Japanese culture and society, and also talks about the study of yokai at an academic level (I did not know such an academic field existed, and it is so very fascinating!).

In the second part, the author creates what he calls a "Yokai Codex", where he categorizes some of the yokai according to the places where they are mostly exncountered and explains some things about each one of them. It is understandable that not all yokai could be featured in this book due to their massive numbers, but I believe that the author managed to include the most basic ones, the ones most people are familiar with, even if they have not delved much into the world of yokai. I also loved the illustrations that accompanied the yokai descriptions.

This book, despite having been written by an academic, is written in such an engaging way that I am certain everyone can understand and enjoy. I, for once, immensely enjoyed reading this book and I think I now have enough material to start reading more about yokai.

A copy was provided to me by the publisher via NetGalley.
Profile Image for Adam.
997 reviews234 followers
March 22, 2017
As an American fantasy reader, the influence of things like Norse and Greek mythology and Arthurian romance on contemporary works are so transparent they can feel almost uninspired. From that perspective, Japanese cultural stuff feels bursting with creativity and novelty. It's one of those insights that feels really obvious in hindsight, so much so that I'm searching my memory for occasions when I surely must have inferred the existence of a cohesive body of folklore from which all the anime and games I was consuming were drawn, even if I never bothered to look into it. That's not really true, unfortunately. I've seen Pom Poko twice (or more?), Mushishi is one of my favorite works of fantasy, I wrote an article about Pokemon's relationship to Japanese environmental history and views of nature. Shit, I literally checked out a book of Japanese folk tales a few years ago and read a bunch of genuine yokai folktales. And it was somehow still a revelation to me when Nioh took the original yokai and presented them directly.

In the wake of that revelation I've looked into a bunch of yokai resources--a facebook group, the NHK's Begin Japanology video, Matt Meyer's yokai.com, and Matt Alt's Yokai Attack!: The Japanese Monster Survival Guide. Those other resources have more and arguably better art, and far more comprehensive yokai listings. Only Foster's work is crucial, however. It provides a broad but modestly comprehensive overview of yokai folklore studies, their evolution as a body of Shinto-adjacent spirits and working day to day knowledge to a playground for wordplay and political comedy to the modern bestiary of kawaii and horror material. It's a great summary, written in accessible and fun academic prose. The yokai descriptions stand out for their careful distinction between historical variants and attention to other points of reference, from zoology to carpentry. On a couple of occasions he indulges more speculation about the underlying causes of a yokai's popularity in a way that doesn't feel very enlightening (eg, he suggests in a few sentences that kuchi-sake-onna could "represent" parents pressuring their kids to do well in school, or growing up in concrete apartment complexes, or awareness of pollution, or anxiety over changing roles for women).

Far more than Shinto or even Japanese history writ large, yokai provide the core patterns and mechanisms that underlie Japanese fantasy pop culture stuff. Foster provides the best introduction to that material I've found, at least for an adult with a taste for scholarship and history and layers to things.
Profile Image for Jargon Jester.
466 reviews13 followers
March 9, 2021
This book is more of an analysis of why cultures create folklore like the yokai, and what they represent, than a book about the stories of yokai. The author spends a ridiculous amount of time explaining his research and how he organized the material. When he actually gets around to describing or telling stories about yokai, it is in sparse portions. So, if you have a Japanese ethnology class with an emphasis in folklore, congratulations, this is the perfect book for you. If you just wanted a book describing yokai and telling traditional stories about them, run away! The author is fond of blathering and tangents. He also draws a lot of connections that are pretty thin in my opinion.
Profile Image for Joe Muntal.
5 reviews2 followers
April 13, 2018
A good introduction to the creatures who occupy Japanese folklore. For further reading and deeper analyses check out Foster's Pandemonium and Parade and Gerald Figal's Civilization and Monsters.
Profile Image for ....
412 reviews47 followers
August 1, 2021
3.5* The Book of Yōkai Repetitions
Profile Image for Morgan.
412 reviews34 followers
April 11, 2021
I don't know why but, just thinking about this book, just makes me angry, or at least just a little annoyed.
This book is sectioned into 3 parts (one being the glossary, which I didn't read, cause glossary). The first part was so boring!!! If you want to read this book (which I don't really personally recommend), I highly suggest skipping the first section. If I remember correctly I think the first section made me fall asleep at least once.
The second section that was actually about the Yokai was good. I enjoyed the original illustrations and some of the old art that's sprinkled in there. I do think it would be hard to make something super boring when you have such an interesting source material.
Profile Image for Love.
396 reviews
March 10, 2018
Pretty satisfied with this book. It contains every little thing I wanted to read about. Packed with details. A solid 5 stars!
Profile Image for Diana Long.
Author 1 book35 followers
June 3, 2024
I listened to the Audible version of the book and thought the narrator did an excellent recording. I have been delving into the mythologies of different countries and this was an extensive work for Japanese folklore and covered a good deal of information.
Profile Image for Jacob.
417 reviews134 followers
Read
September 4, 2021
A great short history of Yokai culture in Japan and a small encyclopedia of some of Foster’s favorite Yokai at the end. I have been slowly learning more about Yokai and this book helped me frame a lot of the pieces I’ve read in disparate places online. I loved many parts. Some that stick out: the part recounting a Yokai event in Tokyo with lots of homemade zines and costumes and figurines; the part where a Kitsune shapeshifted into a man’s wife and the man kicks his other wife out of the house; the part about a college class coming up with their own Yokai to explain strange phenomena (the empty seat in the train that no one sits in); Lafcadio Hearn and Mizuki Shigeru’s roles in the continuing popularity of Yokai. Foster is careful not to make Japan out as exotic and weird for its Yokai culture, but instead makes it clear that these traditions are common all around the world. That said, I do appreciate that the monsters and mythical creatures of Japan seem to have a more accepted and playful role in pop culture than American folk myths (I’m thinking about big-foot and how we think about the people that talk about big foot🤷🏻‍♂️). For example, today I saw a human-sized Tanuki statue standing on someone’s balcony, huge ball sack and all :)

Also, this emoji is a Tengu 👺
Profile Image for Jewels-PiXie Johnson.
71 reviews69 followers
May 31, 2019
I'm fascinated by the Yokai as so many appear in Japanese fiction and are so firmly immersed in the culture.
So I was very much looking forward to reading this book!
However it left me feeling extremely disappointed and shortchanged.
Michael Dylan Foster (the author) really does like to waffle ! He spends a lot of time talking about how he became interested in Yokai and how he will explore them but he spends more time doing that than he spends telling us about the Yokai.
While he talks about being very passionate about the subject ,this sadly doesn't come across in a palpable way.
When we reach the codex of Yokai , it's great because we do find out the various different creatures names and a little about them. But there is a distinct lack of magic in the very brief descriptions Foster gives about each one. I think this is probably intentional ,since he seems keen to explore and reiterate a sociocultural (sometimes sociopolitical) foundation and demystify the Yokai.
The descriptions in the codex are largely brief and matter of fact and there is an emptiness about these descriptions ,that I find quite sad.
Personally ,if you want to find out a little more about the types of Yokai ,I would skip ahead to the codex because the rest is repetitive waffle. And in the codex itself , don't expect too much but simply to become a little more acquainted with each creature. And then let your imagination continue to do the rest!
Profile Image for Kylie.
415 reviews16 followers
March 15, 2019
I found this engaging due to my interest in the subject; the first half is a discussion of Japanese folklore history, the second a small encyclopaedia of yokai. I liked that he included discussion of some more recent yokai/urban legend creatures as well as the 'classics'. I would recommend this for anyone already slightly knowledgeable on the subject but not for any newcomers or those looking for a casual read as it is highly footnoted and at times delves into critical theory abstractism - for those readers I would advise they try the more accessible Yokai Attack!: The Japanese Monster Survival Guide instead.
Profile Image for AndyWhistle.
36 reviews1 follower
July 17, 2022
Interesting read about yokai through history. The first part of the book is more about the history of yokai and the cultural impact, including perception of yokai, attitudes towards them, and how they propogated through different time periods and media. The second half of the book is the yoaki codex. The codex itself is laid out in a factual manner with descriptions of the yokai's apperance and what they do, as well as when and where they originated.

The book itself can get dry at times and I was hoping for a few more stories to go with the yoaki in the codex, but overall it's an interesting book.
1 review1 follower
April 17, 2021
Very cool subject, not the best writing.

The author focuses more on the sources and texts of yokai than the actual yokai or their stories. Most of this book is dry and reads like a reference manual.

The interpretations of yokai are also a little disappointing. The author attempts to tell a grander tale of yokai as a way to learn about people and their culture. However, the analysis is often shallow and lacks novel insight.

Around 1/5 of the book has some interesting stories, with the remainder feeling like fluff to pad the pages.
Profile Image for Alina.
366 reviews69 followers
April 21, 2017
O kulturze i folklorze Japonii powstały niezliczone dzieła - jest to temat na tyle obszerny, że nie ma możliwości wyczerpać go całkowicie. W Polsce dostępnych jest wiele takich publikacji, ale wydaje mi się, że “Yokai” jest pierwszą wydaną u nas książką, poświęconą w całości badaniom nad tajemniczymi stworami z kraju kwitnącej wiśni.

“Yokai zamieszkują pogranicze między faktem a fikcją, wiarą a wątpliwościami. Ich żywiołem jest królestwo opowieści, w którym prawa natury nie zawsze obowiązują. Stwory nieustannie się zmieniają - są inne w każdym miejscu i w każdym pokoleniu.”

Terminem “yokai” japończycy określają wszelkie potwory, duchy, dziwne istoty i nadprzyrodzone zjawiska, nadając im cechy osobowe i tłumacząc ich działaniem to, czego wytłumaczyć się nie da. Na przykład jeśli idąc przez las nagle czujecie, że nie możecie postawić kolejnego kroku, japończyk powie Wam, że natknęliście się na nurikabe - yokai mające postać gipsowej ściany i zagradzające Wam dalszą drogę. Niektóre ze stworów funkcjonują w lokalnych wierzeniach od setek lat i występują w różnych wariantach, inne są młodymi wytworami XX wieku. Niektóre z nich znane są jako złe, złośliwe istoty, krzywdzące ludzi, inne natomiast jako nieszkodliwi psotnicy. Wszystkie jednak cechuje niezwykła różnorodność i aura tajemniczości, typowe dla japońskiego folkloru.

Książka podzielona jest na dwie części - pierwszą Foster poświęcił na objaśnienie ważnych terminów, związanych z yokai oraz na przekrój ich historii i występowania w powszechnej świadomości i tekstach kultury na przestrzeni wieków. Autor przywołuje wiele ciekawych legend, w których kluczową rolę odegrały tajemnicze stwory, przedstawia sylwetki najbardziej znanych badaczy yokai, a także pokazuje, jak wielki wpływ miały te stworzenia na współczesną kulturę japonii, przenikając do mangi i anime, filmów, literatury, czy nawet do reklamy.

Druga część stanowi swoisty bestiariusz - spis wybranych yokai z krótkimi charakterystykami i ilustracjami. W tej części również poznajemy wiele legend i podań, związanych z konkretnymi stworami. Czyta się ją zdecydowanie łatwiej i szybciej niż pierwszą, bo chociaż cała książka nie jest w ścisłym sensie rozprawą naukową, to jednak przejawia sporo cech tego gatunku.

Do moich ulubionych stworzeń, które poznałam dzięki tej książce, należą na przykład yamabiko - przypominający małpkę stworek, będący personifikacją echa; wspomniany już nurikabe; nurarihyon, zakradający się do domów i wypijający ludziom herbatę, czy kuchi-sake-onna - wytwór miejskiej legendy, postrach wracających ze szkoły uczniów w całej Japonii.

“Yokai” z pewnością nie jest lekką lekturą na jeden wieczór, ale z czystym sumieniem polecam ją wszystkim miłośnikom kultury wschodu i fantastycznych stworzeń oraz tym, którzy lubią poszerzać swoją wiedzę o świecie.
Profile Image for Петър Тушков.
Author 40 books20 followers
March 26, 2017
Изненадващо много интересни аспекти в методологията около изследването на йокай (за фолклористи и хора, които се интересуват от работата на фолклориста). Йокай са първичен бульон, от който през вековете са се оформяли богове, демони, домашни духове, традиции, поверия, суеверия, а в днешно време - градски легенди, комиксови и анимационни герои, корпоративни/събитийни/регионални талисмани, литературни и филмови феномени (йокай не са мъртва материя, а това са модерни проявления на мисленето ни като вид от началото на човешката история). Включени са потрети и на ловци на йокай, постигнали легендарен статус (което е възможен поглед към устойчивия модел на драматичното в изпъкването и съхраняването на сведения за реални исторически личности). И не на последно място книгата е радост за всеки, които иска да усети различното и сходствата в бита и културата на Япония - дребните подробности отпреди повече от хиляда години до наши дни.
Profile Image for Charlotte.
58 reviews
August 25, 2015
In the preface, the author promises a wealth of scholarship applied to language that's not limited to academics and experts. He definitely delivers! "The Book of Yōkai" is interesting and understandable to someone who has no knowledge of Japanese, of Japanese folklore or much culture. But those who've seen Hayao Miyazaki movies will find much to connect to. And there are many insights that can be gleaned about the culture from the history of these creatures. The author takes you through the history of writing about Yōkai in such a way that it feels like a narrative. The second half of the book is a codex, with scattered illustrations. And there's a good index, making this a valuable work for people who are studying the subject.
Profile Image for Vera Marsova.
228 reviews38 followers
June 11, 2021
The first half reads like a protracted list of references 😅.
The second half, however, is a solid introduction to Japanese folklore – the author expatiates on both the stories associated with each mythological creature and the possible geneses of each story, the latter making this introduction particularly interesting.
Profile Image for Katio Marie.
8 reviews1 follower
October 9, 2021
Not very well written. I was looking forward to the history of yokai in a time line. Instead the writing hopped all around, and ran off into tangents here and there. Even as a research based book, it didn’t make for good reading. The index of yokai at the end was also scattered and didn’t provide much in the way of understanding origins or physical attributes, etc.
Profile Image for Dominika.
337 reviews38 followers
March 8, 2020
More academic than I was expecting - a lot of dwelling on nomenclature, half of the book is going around social and folklore studies. But the second half, with specific yokai mentioned, their background explained, was decent.
Profile Image for Miguel.
158 reviews4 followers
January 20, 2016
A fantastic, fun book. I wouldn't call this a complete bestiary of yokai, but I learned a lot from it.
Profile Image for Alexandre.
584 reviews2 followers
August 1, 2021
dnf, gave up when the book started talking about other books about the subject ... It's not bad just it seems to be about everything related to Yokai except actual Yokai.
Profile Image for Andre.
1,420 reviews101 followers
August 28, 2022
Why are introductions always so boring? Because it really was, only when it dealt with terms like mononoke, bakemono, oni and yokai was the reading experience much better. Also, he mentions that depicting ghosts without legs is a japanese tradition and that made wonder: Was that exported to other parts of the world? Because in pre-20th century depictions of ghosts here in germany, they always have legs but later on you see in fiction ghosts without legs. And I can't remember anyone, ever, portraying Yamata no Orochi as having trees on its back. I can't even remember 8 tails being portrayed, only 8 heads.
Sadly, I have to ask, did one-third the book really have to deal with all this history stuff and all these many many authors and books? Who would be able to remember even half of it and I don't think that most people reading this, really care about that part. Heck, it was a chore for me to sit through.
And the chapter on how the yokai sections are ordered really could have been left out, there was no reason for it.
The book only gets better when he actually gets to the yokai, but sadly for me, it happened time and again that there wasn't much stuff for me that was new, even in the long sections, like with the Oni. Nonetheless, it had some interesting stuff, like how the term tsuchigumo (earth-spider) might have been a derogatory and demonizing term by the Japanese for the indigenous inhabitants of Japan. Granted, that is apparently in mythological texts, so who knows whether these people ever existed. There some more new stuff for me, like the element that Tengu were once humans who failed in Buddhism and so became Tengu. And an edo-period depiction of the nurikabe doesn't show a wall with eyes and limbs as is so widely known, but a flat-faced three-eyed elephant. Furthermore, the human faced tree may have originated from a Persion illustration of Alexander the Great and the Feejee mermaid came from Japan and originally was supposed to present a ningyo and not a European mermaid. Also, mostly these snow woman stories sound quite different from this one popular tale. The latter is full of romance and all and apparently a creation by a guy called Hearn which became popular in Japan and used common japanese folklore motives.
And while it is interesting to read certain lesser known details about well known yokai, like the nue once being a bird or the one-eyed rascal possibly originating with human sacrifice where the potential victim gets his eye poked out before, I had the problem that most of these yokai were already familar to me. And things like a human faced bovine that predicts the future is nothing for me. In fact, these yokai have been incredibly mundane in both look and behavior from my perspective as I have seen much weirder stuff. So a dog with a human face, is for me not even a three on the creepiness scale when compared to all the other shit that I have seen. I was so happy when the grimelickers finally appeared, I had really started to wonder whether they would ever come up. And these are the freakiest yokai here, the others are really tame and mundane looking for my standards.
Shortly afterwards, I was done and holy shit, the rest of the book is notes and all, almost 100 pages!!!!
Profile Image for Asa.
60 reviews
April 6, 2025
Foster dives into the rich world of Yokai in this great introductory text for people just starting to learn about Yokai (like myself). Foster does a fantastic job of exploring the definition of Yokai itself, as a linguistic and cultural term, a sort of umbrella term used to relate all strange, otherworldly phenomena. In some ways, Yokai are like the dragons and ogres that are known in the Western canon, but they are also sounds that inspire curiosity or fear in the people who hear them. Foster very effectively works with the versatility of Yokai throughout this book, discussing at length their creative and cultural plasticity that has allowed them to morph and endure into the 21st century. He also makes a very good attempt at exploring a wide range of Yokai, recognizing that it would be difficult to discuss any number of them at length. I really like his range of Yokai, as he talks about some of the most famous, as well as some of the lesser known. Likewise, he explores certain region-specific iterations of Yokai, comparing them to one another and discussing what these differences mean. There are wonderfully selected photographs of Yokai throughout, which add a visual element to this book (and Foster even goes into a great discussion of how visual, text, and verbal media all differ and yet can also coalesce together). All in all, I fear my review here is failing to truly measure the depth and range of Foster's topics in this book. That being said, such a wide range may be a little overwhelming to some readers.
However, I think that Foster's writing style perhaps makes up for that - it is approachable and he explains all of the jargon, as well as translations, that he uses throughout. In that way, I think this book is incredibly accessible to a wide variety of readers, including those just curious in Japanese culture in general and those looking to learn more about Yokai specifically. Foster has a rich bibliography that focuses on Japanese scholars - new and old - which provides a great repository for further research.
In conclusion, I think that this a wonderful book for Japanese culture and Yokai aficionados, as well as sociology, literature, and linguistic enthusiasts (and more), as Foster very much explores Yokai from a multi-disciplinary approach. In the end, it - this book and the very act of creating and believing and Yokai - is all an attempt to make sense of the world that we can hardly make sense of - and it knows it is only an attempt. Yet, all the more worthwhile.
Profile Image for Alana.
329 reviews52 followers
May 5, 2023
Even if my head has been corrupted by old books to the point of conclusive unknowing, my heart, it seems, is still that of an interstitial child’s playing pokemon with the lights out on a school night. Yokai live in the spaces between hours, between the visible and invisible within nature, propelled by the transmorgrification of fear into wonder and then back into fear. Yokai fall beyond human agency, although nevertheless shaped and prodded relentlessly by it. These denizens of the wild unterritories dimly lit are deeply engraved into the landscapes of cultural memory. Someone is going to cut my hair at night on the street. The ludic hand exposed through the hole in the toilet? Will it be kind or unkind this time? One can never tell or know in which direction to hope without insight born into both worlds. Or the case of One hundred, either as a number or years, it is magnificent but never too far out of reach. The hyakkiyagyo, the night of one hundred demons, an important yokai listical edo period scroll subject. And tsukumogami, referring to inanimate objects transformed into yokai after reaching the incantatory age of one hundred. The everyday objects in our life live with us and our longings. A kettle a broom a bottle, will not settle for the status of unimportant relic to be routinely tossed out informed by patterns of hyper consumption.

They’re protozoological, cryptozoological! Yokai bestiaries, compendia, encyclopedia, field guides abound n soaked thru with the archival taxonomic impulse that seeks to make the unknown known and categorizable, documentable. In the past people were afraid of yokai, but now yokai are afraid of people. Folkloristic’s seek to explain the interiority of people’s lives, no longer haunted by nightmares but longing for the nightmares of the past, where yokai have been made innocent nostalgias for a place that no longer exists and we can’t be sure ever really did. Either way, I was born in the wrong generation. I was meant to live in 761 Japan, so I can submit my CV to the government bureau of divination, I want that government paycheck.
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223 reviews2 followers
June 6, 2024
3.5 ⭐

The Book of Yokai explores the history and cultural context of a select group of Yokai. The development of the Yokai and their persistence in popular culture today is covered, alongside some of the myths that surround these mysterious creatures.

This was an interesting look at some of the creatures popular in Japanese mythology. Of the ones I had heard of, my exposure was through Studio Ghibli films like Pom Poko and other anime/manga. There were some recognisable creatures, like Tanuki, Kappa and Kitsune, but even more that I did not know of - a personal favourite being Tofu Boy who just sounds great!
What I found really interesting and surprising was that new Yokai are still springing up as recently as the last century, developed sometimes as advertising symbols then passing into the folklore of Japan.
I found the first half of this book quite dry. The author started by describing their research techniques - primarily taking oral accounts, but there was a lot of documentary evidence going back hundreds of years. They then talked about Yokai of different types and the places they occupy, and how to categorise them.
I was hoping for a bigger focus on the stories from folklore featuring the creatures. There were some included in the second half of the book, which was essentially a bestiary, but they were shortened in favour of including more of people's accounts of the Yokai and their documented history.
I also think I suffered a bit in this by not picking up a physical book. I imagine seeing illustrations would have really brought this to life.
Overall I enjoyed this book, and while it wasn't quite what I was looking for, it's definitely encouraged me to seek out more Japanese folklore and introduced me to some creatures I had never heard of.
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