Thursday, January 19, 2023

Japanese Kappa Folklore in a Mystery

In the detective novel The Honjin Murders the author, Seishi Yokomizo, describes a murder involving the last generation of the landowner family named Ichiyanagi. In reading the novel, besides the fascination with a really good locked room story, I especially enjoyed the many details about Japanese life before the upheavals of World War II changed everything. Here is the author’s introduction to the family:

“According to the village elders, the wealthy Ichiyanagi family wasn’t originally from O—village at all, but from the neighbouring town of K—. This automatically made them unpopular among the narrow-minded villagers…. However, when the shogun was overthrown, and the imperial system was reinstated in the late 1860s, the family head realized that he was about to lose the honjin. He had the foresight to act before the old feudal system collapsed completely and moved his family to their current location. He was able to take advantage of the turmoil of the time and acquire farmland dirt cheap, instantly becoming a rich landowner. That was why the local folk liked to call the Ichiyanagi family a bunch of upstart kappa, mythical water goblins. This word was a local term of abuse for people who moved from K—town to O—village.” (The Honjin Murders p. 18)

The water goblins called kappa are fascinating. Several years ago I did a bit of exploring about this folkloric tradition, and since I am currently thinking a lot about Japanese culture, here’s a repeat of the blog post I did at that time.

Demons, Cucumbers, and Social Criticism 

Netsuke of a seated Kappa, signed Hokushō
or Kitamasa. Late 1700s. (British Museum)

Kappamaki -- cucumber sushi rolls. I generally prefer
my sushi to have more fillings than just cucumbers.
A kappa in Japanese folklore is a scary water demon about the size of a child. A kappa might drag unsuspecting passers-by into its native stream or river and harm or drown them. In Japanese, kappa also means cucumber, and a Kappamaki is a cucumber sushi roll. I love Japanese folklore with its unexpected connections!

Maybe kappas, who are sometimes green, resemble cucumbers. Or maybe kappas like to eat cucumbers. I'm not going to try to understand the connection, just to report a few things about kappas that I checked because I was intrigued by the Netsuke in the British Museum last week.

"Illustrated Guide to 12 types of Kappa," Japan, mid-19th century. (Wikipedia)

If you're walking in the countryside and a kappa seizes you, you're in trouble, but there's one thing you can do. Get him to politely bow to you and thus tip his head down. Because the kappa's great strength comes from the water in a little dent on top of his head, you can defeat him by tricking him into spilling it. Or grab a kappa's arm: it will easily come off and now you have a bit of negotiating power with the kappa. Like many folkloric creatures, these dangerous demons also have healing powers, if you can get them to help you.

In the past, reports of kappa sightings might have been due to actual encounters with a really nasty Japanese giant salamander that did attack people, or might have been responses to dimly-seen river otters standing on their back legs, I read. Or maybe kappas really did exist -- Japan was full of mysterious things back then. The Daily Mail newspaper in England in 2014 reported a finding of "real" kappa bones.

Ryunosuke Akutagawa's "Kappa,"
cover illustration by the author.
Besides searching the web for diverse facts about kappas, I have been reading the story "Kappa" by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (1892-1927). My 1940s English-language edition includes a translator's introduction with a collection of quotes from 200 years ago about reported encounters of samurai and other Japanese people with Kappas. Scary little beasts!

Akutagawa's tale begins in a "lunatic asylum." Patient No. 23 repeats his story over and over "his hands clasped all the time round his knees, and his eyes looking now and then out of the iron bars of the window." (p. 27)

Three years earlier, the patient tells, he was walking in a foggy valley when he encountered a kappa, chased it, and fell down into the underground habitat of all the kappas. It was a topsy-turvy land where the values, the customs, the politics, and the relations between the sexes were all bizarrely different from those in Japan. Women chased after men, babies were asked before birth if they really wanted to live, and kappas ate kappa flesh cannibalistically. The lunatic patient described talking to a number of different leading kappa personalities, from whom he learned about their art, music, poetry, manufacturing, military exploits, and lifestyles, which all highlighted aspects of his native Japanese culture.

Here's a description of kappa political behavior from a conversation he has with Gael, a kappa industrialist and very influential man:
"'Quorax' is only a meaningless interjection like 'Oh.' But it was the name of a political party whose primary concern was supposed to be the promotion of the welfare of the kappa race. 
"'The Quorax Party is under the control of Loppé,' said Gael. 'As you know,  he is a famoous kappa statesman. Bismarck said that honesty is the best diplomacy, but Loppé is honest not only in his diplomacy but also in his management of home affairs.....'" 
"'But that speech of Loppé's --' 
"'Come now, just listen. That speech of his is of course a lie, every bit of it. But as everybody knows that it is a lie, it is an honest speech after all, isn't it? No one but you and your countrymen will call it a lie simply because it is a lie. We kappas do not -- well, it doesn't matter.'" (p. 70)
Other kappa behavior and attitudes were just as unlike human behavior and attitudes as this. Unlike human behavior? Well, sometimes too much like human behavior, just different in detail. Akutagawa creates an imaginary kappa world that remains pretty intriguing nearly a century later, though I would not say the story is completely successful as satire -- I'm not sure why. Maybe it cuts too close to the bone.

Blog post © 2016, 2023 mae sander. Images as credited.

17 comments:

  1. That was such an interesting post. I had never heard about those little kappas. I’d love to go back to Japan and see if I can find one … -:) This is the thing about blogs, here I am getting on on years and I can learn new things daily. There is so much to know in this world, how can anyone be bored? Thanks for your lovely enlightening post.

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  2. These kappa sound scary but really fascinating. I had never heard of them, but then cultures can be so complex it is hard to know everything about them. Thanks for the lesson.

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  3. Folklore intrigues me. I wonder if the kappa was created as a way to keep children away from the water?

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  4. I was most impressed with this post because I had never heard of kappas. And I would NOT want to be near one. I don't want to end up in an asylum. I did appreciate all your research you conducted before you created this post.

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  5. Hello,
    The Kappa sightings sounds scary, interesting folklore tales. The Kappas are new to me. Take care, have a happy weekend!

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  6. Wow, this is sure interesting and a bit scary.
    Japanese and Chinese really have some rituals unknown here.
    Sad!
    In Perth we joined the Chinese New Year celebrations. Here we have many Chinese students but no festivities (reckon their own "fault" or they too hard want to integrate).

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  7. I have led such a sheltered life! Thanks for the post. What a character.

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  8. I just finished an old children's book (the author won the Nobel Prize for Literature, surprisingly) from Sweden that featured small elf-like people which the Swedish call tomtars (singular is tomte).

    I wonder why these small people are common in folktales.

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  9. An interesting post about kappas, Mae. It's fun to learn about other cultures through their books!

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  10. Hello :=) Fascinating story, about Japanese folklore. I have never heard of the menacing Kappa little people. All the pictures of them look scary, however their importance has been recognised by the British Museum as a relic of past Japanese culture and superstition so their
    story lives on, as it should do.
    Have a great weekend.
    All the best.

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  11. Hello Mae,

    Yes, the Kappa is a strange critter. I am happy to see their stories continue in the Japanese Culture. Thank you for linking up and sharing your post. Take care, have a happy weekend.

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  12. I would ceratinly eat the cucumber rolls!

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  13. Hi Mae, I had to stop by and see why you said (strange critter) on your link up with Saturday’s Critters. Now I’ll be smiling all day after seeing the Kappa. Thanks for sharing! John

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  14. Hello Mae,
    Very interesting post. Thank you for putting this together.

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  15. Nice to read about Kappa. I've read similar stories from Indian folklore.

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  16. Interesting! I love learning about mythical creatures.

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  17. Hi there Mae!

    I've just added The Honjin Murders to my TBR and made a note to refer back to your post when I get a chance to read it.

    How very interesting and well researched!

    Great post Mae!

    Elza Reads

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