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The Book of Yokai: Mysterious Creatures of Japanese Folklore by
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Arthur Graham
is on page 133 of 336
Often characterized as a "mountain goblin," tengu tend to have birdlike characteristics and superlative martial arts skills and are often associated with Buddhism and mountain ascetic practices.
— Sep 28, 2025 08:03AM
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Arthur Graham
is on page 129 of 336
The word tsuchigumo, literally "earth spider," seems to have been used as a derogatory and demonizing label for the indigenous inhabitants of Japan. That is, the people writing the texts used the term negatively to describe the natives they were conquering; they portrayed them as having short bodies and long arms and legs, and as living in holes in the ground.
— Sep 28, 2025 07:55AM
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Arthur Graham
is on page 124 of 336
Strictly speaking, setsubun refers to a "joint" in the year when one season changes into another [...], much like New Year's Eve, a dividing point between the old year and the new and therefore a ritually meaningful moment of transition. This is a crack in the flow of time, a potentially dangerous bridge between one period and another, during which both good and bad spirits might enter.
— Sep 28, 2025 07:50AM
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Arthur Graham
is on page 117 of 336
It is said that when a tree reaches the age of one hundred, it has a kami that will show its form.
— Sep 28, 2025 07:44AM
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Arthur Graham
is on page 33 of 336
One question often asked about yōkai is whether people actually believe in them. [...] Implicit in a question like this, however, is the assumption that there are only two possibilities—belief or doubt. One thing yōkai teach us is that between belief and doubt, between the literal and the metaphorical, lies a zone of ambiguity that is fertile ground for the imagination.
— Sep 19, 2025 06:28AM
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Arthur Graham
is on page 14 of 336
Yōkai begin where language ends.
— Sep 18, 2025 07:31AM
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