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MONSTER MASHUP JAPANESE POPULAR CULTURE FROM THE 18 TH CENTURY TO THE 21 ST Glynne Walley UO Portland Workshop August 19, 2016

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Page 1: MONSTER MASHUP JAPANESE POPULAR …...MONSTER MASHUP JAPANESE POPULAR CULTURE FROM THE 18TH CENTURY TO THE 21ST Glynne Walley UO Portland Workshop August 19, 2016 Tōfu Boy (Tōfu

MONSTER MASHUP JAPANESE POPULAR CULTURE

FROM THE 18TH CENTURY TO THE 21ST

Glynne Walley UO Portland Workshop

August 19, 2016

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Tōfu Boy (Tōfu kozō) •  A yōkai (monster, spook, etc.) •  Appears on dark, rainy nights and offers

you tofu (or steals your tofu) •  Big head, sometimes only one eye •  That’s all… •  First appears in late 18th century – popular

in illustrated fiction, comic books, etc. •  Urban legend? •  Marketing gimmick? •  Comic book character

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The Boss of the monsters, the Overlooker, appears and summons all his spooky cronies.

The Boss’s grandson, Bigheaded Boy, threatens tofu-peddlers on drizzly nights so he can bring back a block.

From: Bakemono chakutōchō (Monsters, Reporting for Duty) •  1788 •  Illustrated by Kitao

Shigemasa •  A kibyōshi

(“yellowback) •  Visual-verbal

sequential narratives: comics

•  Mass printed and sold – very popular

•  Some for children, some for adults

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My points: •  Japanese popular culture does not begin

with modernity •  Modern Japan: post-1868 •  “Early Modern Japan”: 1600-1868

•  Early Modern Japan has popular culture

•  “Traditional” culture not monolithic, unchanging

•  Modern-contemporary Japanese popular

culture draws on early modern Japanese popular culture •  re-uses genres, tropes, characters,

stories •  deploys them as critiques of modernity

•  Geisha, samurai, etc. •  Monsters

•  yōkai 妖怪 •  bakemono 化物 Above: Tōfu Boy statue on Mizuki

Shigeru Road, Sakai-minato, Tottori

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Early modern popular culture? •  Urban commercial culture

•  Centered in Edo (Tokyo), Kyoto, Osaka, Nagoya, etc. •  Cash-based, driven by urban commoner merchant class (bourgeoisie)

•  Print culture and media •  Woodblock printing meant mass production of books and prints •  No newspapers, but broadsides •  National distribution through booklenders (mobile pay libraries) •  Not-quite-universal literacy

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Early modern popular culture? •  Performance culture and media

•  Kabuki theaters in major cities – several companies, supported by ticket sales

•  Traveling and local troupes in countryside

•  Supported by print media – souvenir prints, review books, “novelizations,” etc.

•  Early modern popular culture: •  mass, not elite •  mediated by print •  commercial •  urban, quasi-national

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What kind of stories? •  Romance, tragedy, comedy, history, parody, fantasy, crime •  Horror

•  Ghosts •  Monsters •  Gods/demons/wizards •  Shape-shifting animals •  Animate objects •  i.e., yōkai

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Early modern monsters in context – 1 •  As horror

•  Example: Yotsuya kaidan (The Yotsuya Horror) •  Kabuki play, premiered 1825 •  Samurai Iemon and wife Oiwa

•  Iemon poisons Oiwa so he can marry up

•  Disfigures her face, later she dies

•  She comes back to haunt him •  Lantern transforms into her

face •  Horror

•  Vengeful female ghost •  Wicked samurai

•  Stage play, but story repeated and spread through prints and books

•  Left: Arashi Rikan II as Iemon, by Hokuei, 1832

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Early modern monsters in context – 2 •  As object of inquiry

•  Philosophical – do they exist? •  Historical/literary – where are they written

about? •  Taxonomical/philological – how many are

there and what are they called? •  Early modern encyclopedic impulse

Illustrated Night-Parade of a Hundred Monsters (Ezu hyakki yagyō) (4 vols.), 1776-84, by Toriyama Sekien •  Above: ubume (ghost of woman who died in

childbirth) •  Right: tanuki (real animal, shape-shifter,

trickster)

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Early modern monsters in context – 3 – As figures of fun •  Fairy-Tale Monsters board game (Mukashi banashi bakemono sugoroku),

Ichijusai Yoshikazu, 1858 •  note shape-shifted tanuki, Oiwa lantern, Tōfu Boy

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Early modern monsters in context – 3 – As figures of fun •  Kuniyoshi’s tanuki prints (ca. 1842)

Tanuki •  “raccoon dog,” like badgers •  real animals •  in legend, shape-shifting tricksters •  reputed to have large, malleable scrota…

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Early modern monsters in context – 4 – As vehicles of satire or parody •  Kuniyoshi’s prints parody common

occupations •  Bargeman •  Fortune-teller

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Early modern monsters in context – 4 – As vehicles of satire or parody

Bride of the Monster! (Bakemono no yomeiri) •  or: The Monster Takes a Bride? •  or: Bridezilla! •  1807 comic book by Jippensha Ikku, ill.

Katsukawa Shun’ei •  Archetypal marriage story: arranged

marriage, betrothal, ceremony, childbirth •  Common theme in children’s

storybooks – preparation for later life •  The twist: they’re all monsters

•  Left: •  Bride and groom exchange last toast on

wedding night •  Who’s the boy at right? Tofu Boy? •  Sexual symbolism abounds…

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Childbirth scene •  In a graveyard (because monsters) – but is new mother dead? •  Midwives bathing baby

•  “Midwife” homophonous with monster ubume… •  Physician prescribing medicine – but is it useless?

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Baby’s first shrine visit scene •  Priest is an animated scepter – kind of monster •  He chants – “purge, purge your purses” – punning harau (expel evil

spirits) and harau (pay) •  Satire on money-grubbing priests…

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Modern uses of early modern monsters – 1 •  The Yotsuya Horror – horror •  Example:

•  Dir. Nakagawa Nobuo, 1959 •  (Eng. “The Ghost Story of Yotsuya,” etc.) •  Fairly faithful version of play •  (No lantern, though) •  link to trailer

•  The vengeful woman ghost is huge in J-horror •  The Ring •  The Grudge •  etc.

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Modern uses of early modern monsters – 1 •  The Yotsuya Horror – horror

•  Example: •  Kuime (“Over Your Dead Body”) •  Dir. Miike Takashi, 2015 •  Starring Ichikawa Ebizo, kabuki actor •  Interweaves two stories

•  actors rehearsing stage version of Yotsuya kaidan

•  same actors having an affair, he kills her, she haunts him – like play characters…

•  link to trailer

•  Traditional story è gender/archetypes?

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Modern uses of early modern monsters – 2 •  Mizuki Shigeru (1922-2015) •  Manga author/artist •  Best known for use of yōkai, i.e.,

“traditional” monsters

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Mizuki Shigeru •  Best known for a children’s-manga character:

•  Ge-Ge-Ge no Kitarō ゲゲゲの鬼太郎 •  “ge” is a grossing-out sound (“Eww,

Kitarō”?) •  Gege (from “Shigeru”) was author’s

childhood nickname •  Kitarō is a boy who lives in a graveyard

and associates with monsters •  His father is a disembodied eye,

bathes in a soup bowl, sometimes hides in Kitarō’s empty left eye socket

•  His friends include traditional monsters and modern

•  If kids send a letter by Monster Mail asking for help, Kitarō helps

•  Hugely popular – everybody knows Kitarō •  5 different anime series (1968, 1971,

1985, 1996, 2007) •  Example: title sequence of 1996

version

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•  Kitarō reminds us of the old, grimy, broken, smelly underside of high-tech modern Japan

•  Kitarō represents an escape from modernity?

•  Early modern monsters as the return of the repressed?

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Modern uses of early modern monsters – 2 •  Later started researching and

cataloging traditional monsters •  Compendium of Japanese

Monsters (Nihon yōkai taizen), 1994, rev. and expanded 2014

•  895 entries! •  Monsters as object of knowledge?

Folklore? history?

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Modern uses of early modern monsters – 3 •  Studio Ghibli – anime

•  Miyazaki Hayao (b. 1941) •  Takahata Isao (b. 1935)

•  Pom Poko (Heisei tanuki gassen ponpoko), 1994 •  Dir. Takahata

•  Spirited Away (Sen to Chihiro no kamikakushi), 2001 •  Dir. Miyazaki

•  Two alternative interpretations of Mizuki’s use of yōkai

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Spirited Away (Sen to Chihiro no kamikakushi), 2001 •  Dir. Miyazaki

•  Alice in Wonderland refraction

•  Chihiro, adolescent girl •  Moving to a new suburb •  On the way family stops at

abandoned amusement park •  Parents are turned into swine •  Chihiro transported to alternate

world, has to save them •  She’s put to work at a public

bathhouse patronized by monsters and gods

•  (clip from DVD)

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Miyazaki and yōkai •  few actual traditional monsters, but traditional setting •  conflates gods and yōkai •  takes place in Tokyo suburb •  persistence of ancient spirituality in modern Japan?

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Pom Poko (Heisei tanuki gassen ponpoko), 1994 •  Dir. Takahata

•  Environmental fable

•  Colony of tanuki are threatened by spreading suburbs

•  They organize to attack construction workers using shape-shifting skills

•  (clips from DVD)

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Takahata and yōkai •  also takes place in Tokyo suburb •  modern Japan threatens ancient ways •  yōkai as site of resistance to modernity? standing athwart history yelling

“stop”? •  yōkai as eco-terrorists?

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For modern popular culture, early modern monsters offer: •  genuine horror •  laughs •  knowledge of the past •  connection to the past •  alternative to the present