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Yōkai

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A ukiyo-e painting of yōkai by Kawanabe Kyosai.

Yōkai, also known as ghost-and-monsters or god-and-demons or simply ghost-monsters or god-demons, are undead creatures in old Japanese stories, such as oni, kappa or tengu. They have mysterious supernatural powers. There are thousands of yōkai. In the Edo period, yōkai were characters in story books. Recently, many new yōkai have been made. There is even a yōkai dictionary. The yōkai are ghost/monster or deity/demon hybrids in Japanese tradition. In the past people believed they caused disease, accidents and natural disasters. People were often scared of them.

Famous yōkai

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The most famous yōkai are Tengu, Oni (Japanese ogre), and Kyubi no Kitsune (a fox with nine tails). When some people and animals are filled with hate, they became yōkai. For example, Sutoku. Sutoku (Japanese ancient emperor) died filled with hate. Then, he became a Tengu and caused a disaster. Also, a cat which lived too long time became Nekomata.[1]

Yōkai as subculture

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Recently, yōkai are familiar with people as subculture in Japan.

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In recent decades, the yōkai have been frequently depicted in Japanese fiction and media, particularly in horror or fantasy-themed works, such as in manga, anime and films, as well as in videogames, a notable example of this is the manga GeGeGe no Kitarō, written by mangaka Shigeru Mizuki, of which is entirely based on the yōkai myth. Other examples includes the manga series Death Note, Pet Shop of Horrors, Good Luck Girl!, light novel Ghost Hunt, the 2011 animated film A Letter to Momo and RPG videogame franchise Yo-kai Watch.

References

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  1. "Yokai wiki". Archived from %5bhttps://web.archive.org/web/20141007024528/http://www.youkaiwiki.com/entry/2013/06/26/233556 Archived%5d 2014-10-07 at the %5b%5bWayback Machine%5d%5d%5b%5bCategory:Webarchive template wayback links%5d%5d the original on 7 October 2014. Retrieved 20 October 2014. {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)