Folklore & Myth — Japan
Traditional tales, legends, and mythology
8 books on this shelf
Tales of Old Japan
Published in 1871, "Tales of Old Japan" by Algernon Bertram Freeman-Mitford, Baron Redesdale, is one of the earliest English-language anthologies to introduce Japanese folklore and customs to Western readers, compiled while Mitford served as a British diplomat in Japan during the years surrounding the Meiji Restoration. Per its own Project Gutenberg catalog summary, the collection "presents short stories and firsthand accounts that illuminate Japanese life before the Meiji Restoration," blending adapted tales translated from Japanese sources — including stories of revenge, supernatural creatures, and folk wisdom — with Mitford's own eyewitness observations of traditional ceremonies he personally attended. Its best-known section retells the story of the forty-seven ronin, the samurai vendetta legend that remains one of the most famous narratives in Japanese folklore and theater, alongside tales of shape-shifting foxes and grateful cats. Because Mitford worked from direct access to Japanese informants and ceremonies at a moment when Japan was rapidly opening to the West, the book is regarded as a historically significant firsthand bridge between Japanese oral tradition and the English-speaking world.
Kwaidan: Stories and Studies of Strange Things
Published in 1904, "Kwaidan" ("weird tales") is a collection of Japanese ghost and supernatural stories by Lafcadio Hearn, an Irish-Greek writer who became a naturalized Japanese citizen under the name Koizumi Yakumo after settling in Japan in 1890 and marrying into a samurai family. Many of the tales — including the story of a blind musician summoned to perform for the dead ("Hoichi the Earless") and accounts of man-eating goblins and shape-shifting spirits — were, per Hearn's own account, told to him by his wife or drawn from older Japanese texts, then reshaped in his own literary style for English-speaking readers. The collection closes with essays on insects viewed through Japanese Buddhist ideas of karma and the soul. Hearn spent his final years teaching English literature at Tokyo Imperial University and became one of the most influential Western interpreters of Japanese culture of his era. The book was adapted into the 1964 Japanese anthology film "Kwaidan," directed by Masaki Kobayashi, which won the Special Jury Prize at Cannes and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.
In Ghostly Japan
Published in 1899, "In Ghostly Japan" is an earlier collection by Lafcadio Hearn gathering supernatural stories and reflective essays drawn from Japanese folklore, Buddhism, and everyday spiritual practice. Open Library catalogs the work under subjects including Buddhism, folklore, and Japanese social life and customs, and Hearn's own bibliography (listed on Project Gutenberg alongside his other titles) places it between "Gleanings in Buddha Fields" (1897) and "Shadowings" (1900) in his sustained multi-decade project of interpreting Japanese religion and folk belief for English-speaking readers. The collection opens with a meditative account of a mountain ascent led by a Buddhist teacher and moves through stories touching on cursed objects, reincarnation, and the cultural meaning of incense in Japanese spiritual life, weaving Hearn's firsthand observations from his years living in Japan together with older folk material. Alongside "Kwaidan," it is one of the works most responsible for shaping how English readers encountered Japanese ghost lore and Buddhist folk belief in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
Ancient Tales and Folklore of Japan
First published in 1908, "Ancient Tales and Folklore of Japan" is a collection by Richard Gordon Smith, a British adventurer, naturalist, and yachtsman who lived in Japan in the early twentieth century and gathered folk stories directly from local sources during his time there, rather than working solely from earlier translated texts. Open Library catalogs the work under folklore, mythology, and legends of Japan. The collection sits alongside the roughly contemporaneous work of Mitford and Hearn as part of a wave of Edwardian-era British writers who lived in Japan and worked to record its oral folk tradition in English before industrialization and modernization reshaped rural storytelling culture. Smith's book is distinguished from the more literary retellings of Hearn by its more direct, field-collected character, reflecting his personal fieldwork and travel through Japan during the period. It remains a primary English-language source consulted by later folklorists studying how regional Japanese tales were first transmitted to Western audiences.
The Book of Yōkai: Mysterious Creatures of Japanese Folklore
Published in 2015 by the University of California Press, "The Book of Yōkai" is a scholarly-but-accessible study by folklorist Michael Dylan Foster of yōkai — the broad Japanese category of monsters, ghosts, and supernatural beings that includes tengu mountain goblins, kappa water spirits, and shape-shifting foxes. Per its own publisher description, the book draws on Foster's years of research in Japan to "unpack the history and cultural context of yōkai, tracing their roots, interpreting their meanings, and introducing people who have hunted them through the ages," and includes detailed entries, some with original illustrations, on more than fifty individual creatures. Rather than simply cataloging monsters, the book explicitly examines how yōkai function as a lens for understanding broader processes of Japanese folklore transmission, storytelling, and cultural creativity, and situates their continuing popularity in anime, manga, film, and games within a much older tradition of local legend and regional ghost stories. Foster is a professor of folklore and East Asian studies whose academic work focuses specifically on yōkai and Japanese vernacular belief.
Legend in Japanese Art
First published in 1908, "Legend in Japanese Art" by Henri L. Joly is a reference handbook cataloging the mythological figures, folk legends, and religious symbols that recur throughout Japanese decorative art — sword fittings, netsuke, lacquerware, and prints — cross-referencing the visual motifs collectors and curators encounter against the folk stories and deities behind them. Open Library catalogs the work as both an art handbook and a legends reference for Japan. Because Japanese decorative art of this period drew heavily on Buddhist, Shinto, and folk narrative imagery, Joly's handbook became a standard identification reference for Western museum curators and collectors trying to recognize which legendary figure, deity, or folk creature a given artwork depicted. It functions less as a narrative folklore collection and more as an illustrated encyclopedia connecting Japan's visual art tradition back to the myths and legends it represents.
The Fox's Craft in Japanese Religion and Folklore
Published in 2003 by Routledge, "The Fox's Craft in Japanese Religion and Folklore" is an academic study by Michael Bathgate of the fox (kitsune) as a figure in Japanese religious life and folk narrative, with particular attention to its association with the Shinto deity Inari, one of the most widely worshipped kami in Japan. Open Library catalogs the book under foxes, Inari, and the religious aspects of animals in Japanese folklore. The book examines how the fox operates simultaneously as a trickster figure in folk tales — capable of shape-shifting into human form, often to deceive or test people — and as a sacred messenger associated with Inari shrines found throughout Japan, arguing that these seemingly contradictory roles reflect deeper patterns in how Japanese religious and folk traditions understand the boundary between the animal, human, and divine worlds.
Yanagita Kunio and the Folklore Movement
This Routledge Library Editions reissue, dated 2015, republishes Ronald A. Morse's study of Yanagita Kunio (1875-1962), the Japanese scholar widely regarded as the founder of minzokugaku, or native Japanese folklore studies. Open Library catalogs the book among works on folklorists and Japanese social life and customs. Yanagita began his career as a government agricultural bureaucrat before turning to the systematic collection and study of Japanese rural folk tales, customs, and oral tradition, most famously compiling "The Legends of Tono" (Tono Monogatari, 1910), a landmark collection of folk legends from the Tono region that helped establish folklore as a serious field of Japanese scholarship rather than mere antiquarian curiosity. Morse's study traces how Yanagita built an entire academic movement around preserving Japan's vanishing rural oral tradition during a period of rapid modernization, and situates his influence on how later Japanese folklorists, including scholars building on his methods, approached the collection of yōkai tales and regional legends still referenced by folklore scholarship today.