Traversing humans, animals, and yōkai: An exploration of posthumanist implications in Japanese folklore through selected stories from Japanese Legends and Folklore by A. B. Mitford and Japanese Folktales by Yei Theodora Ozaki

Japanese folklore frequently portrays animals as active agents within human society, challenging anthropocentric assumptions that privilege human dominance. This study examines selected Japanese folktales through Cary Wolfe’s posthumanist framework to analyse representations of animals and human–ani...

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Main Author: Yong, Lydia Pei Wen
Format: Final Year Project / Dissertation / Thesis
Published: 2025
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Online Access:http://eprints.utar.edu.my/7469/1/2300071_FYP.pdf
http://eprints.utar.edu.my/7469/
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author Yong, Lydia Pei Wen
author_facet Yong, Lydia Pei Wen
author_sort Yong, Lydia Pei Wen
building UTAR Library
collection Institutional Repository
content_provider Universiti Tunku Abdul Rahman
content_source UTAR Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
description Japanese folklore frequently portrays animals as active agents within human society, challenging anthropocentric assumptions that privilege human dominance. This study examines selected Japanese folktales through Cary Wolfe’s posthumanist framework to analyse representations of animals and human–animal relationships. The primary texts consist of selected fox (kitsune) and rabbit narratives from A. B. Mitford’s Japanese Legends and Folklore and Yei Theodora Ozaki’s Japanese Folktales. Using qualitative textual analysis, the study focuses on non-human agency, interspecies interaction, and ethical reciprocity within the narratives. The analysis demonstrates that animals are not portrayed merely as symbolic figures, but as autonomous beings capable of moral judgement, emotional response, and reciprocal engagement with humans. Motifs such as shapeshifting, revenge, gratitude, and coexistence consistently destabilise rigid human–animal hierarchies and challenge the notion of human exceptionalism. These findings suggest that Japanese folklore articulates posthumanist sensibilities that predate the formal development of posthumanist theory in Western academic discourse. By situating Japanese folktales within a posthumanist framework, this study expands the scope of posthumanist literary analysis beyond its predominantly Western focus and highlights traditional folklore as a critical site for rethinking human–nonhuman relations.
format Final Year Project / Dissertation / Thesis
id my-utar-eprints.7469
institution Universiti Tunku Abdul Rahman
publishDate 2025
record_format eprints
spelling my-utar-eprints.74692026-02-26T10:05:41Z Traversing humans, animals, and yōkai: An exploration of posthumanist implications in Japanese folklore through selected stories from Japanese Legends and Folklore by A. B. Mitford and Japanese Folktales by Yei Theodora Ozaki Yong, Lydia Pei Wen PE English Japanese folklore frequently portrays animals as active agents within human society, challenging anthropocentric assumptions that privilege human dominance. This study examines selected Japanese folktales through Cary Wolfe’s posthumanist framework to analyse representations of animals and human–animal relationships. The primary texts consist of selected fox (kitsune) and rabbit narratives from A. B. Mitford’s Japanese Legends and Folklore and Yei Theodora Ozaki’s Japanese Folktales. Using qualitative textual analysis, the study focuses on non-human agency, interspecies interaction, and ethical reciprocity within the narratives. The analysis demonstrates that animals are not portrayed merely as symbolic figures, but as autonomous beings capable of moral judgement, emotional response, and reciprocal engagement with humans. Motifs such as shapeshifting, revenge, gratitude, and coexistence consistently destabilise rigid human–animal hierarchies and challenge the notion of human exceptionalism. These findings suggest that Japanese folklore articulates posthumanist sensibilities that predate the formal development of posthumanist theory in Western academic discourse. By situating Japanese folktales within a posthumanist framework, this study expands the scope of posthumanist literary analysis beyond its predominantly Western focus and highlights traditional folklore as a critical site for rethinking human–nonhuman relations. 2025-10 Final Year Project / Dissertation / Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf http://eprints.utar.edu.my/7469/1/2300071_FYP.pdf Yong, Lydia Pei Wen (2025) Traversing humans, animals, and yōkai: An exploration of posthumanist implications in Japanese folklore through selected stories from Japanese Legends and Folklore by A. B. Mitford and Japanese Folktales by Yei Theodora Ozaki. Final Year Project, UTAR. http://eprints.utar.edu.my/7469/
spellingShingle PE English
Yong, Lydia Pei Wen
Traversing humans, animals, and yōkai: An exploration of posthumanist implications in Japanese folklore through selected stories from Japanese Legends and Folklore by A. B. Mitford and Japanese Folktales by Yei Theodora Ozaki
title Traversing humans, animals, and yōkai: An exploration of posthumanist implications in Japanese folklore through selected stories from Japanese Legends and Folklore by A. B. Mitford and Japanese Folktales by Yei Theodora Ozaki
title_full Traversing humans, animals, and yōkai: An exploration of posthumanist implications in Japanese folklore through selected stories from Japanese Legends and Folklore by A. B. Mitford and Japanese Folktales by Yei Theodora Ozaki
title_fullStr Traversing humans, animals, and yōkai: An exploration of posthumanist implications in Japanese folklore through selected stories from Japanese Legends and Folklore by A. B. Mitford and Japanese Folktales by Yei Theodora Ozaki
title_full_unstemmed Traversing humans, animals, and yōkai: An exploration of posthumanist implications in Japanese folklore through selected stories from Japanese Legends and Folklore by A. B. Mitford and Japanese Folktales by Yei Theodora Ozaki
title_short Traversing humans, animals, and yōkai: An exploration of posthumanist implications in Japanese folklore through selected stories from Japanese Legends and Folklore by A. B. Mitford and Japanese Folktales by Yei Theodora Ozaki
title_sort traversing humans, animals, and yōkai: an exploration of posthumanist implications in japanese folklore through selected stories from japanese legends and folklore by a. b. mitford and japanese folktales by yei theodora ozaki
topic PE English
url http://eprints.utar.edu.my/7469/1/2300071_FYP.pdf
http://eprints.utar.edu.my/7469/
url_provider http://eprints.utar.edu.my