Yokai-senjafuda

Depictions of Japanese Ghosts and Monsters

Contents: About the Collection | About the About Page | Tech

Yōkai Senjafuda: Stories about Ghosts and Monsters

Yōkai Senjafuda Digital Exhibit

This digital exhibition focuses on tiny slips of paper —senjafuda 千社札— that depict Japanese ghosts and monsters —yōkai 妖怪. Both senjafuda and yōkai have their roots in Japanese popular culture in the early modern period (17th-19th centuries), and both continue to cast a spell on viewers today.

The phenomenon of senjafuda dates back to the late 18th century. They were originally made by pilgrims to paste on the walls of temples and shrines as a sort of devotional graffiti. Later they became collector’s items, and by the middle of the 19th century they had become miniature masterpieces of woodblock printed art. Senjafuda depict a dizzying variety of themes with meticulous craftsmanship and vivid, stylish graphic design.

Yōkai simply means “monster,” but it’s best understood as referring specifically to monsters (and sometimes ghosts) as imagined in early modern Japan, particularly as depicted in wood-block prints. From Mizuki Shigeru to Studio Ghibli, from The Ring to Yōkai Watch, Japanese popular culture (including anime, manga, books, and film) is full of yōkai imagery.

The University of Oregon’s collection of senjafuda is one of the largest in the world. It includes many senjafuda depicting yōkai. This exhibit uses senjafuda to explore yōkai culture, and yōkai to explore senjafuda culture.

The University of Oregon’s collection of senjafuda is one of the largest in the world. It includes many senjafuda depicting yōkai. This exhibit uses senjafuda to explore yōkai culture, and yōkai to explore senjafuda culture.

Senjafuda collections at the University of Oregon

Two-unit votive slip with double black border. Kabuki scene with young female dancing. Flames on kimono and falling around her. Decorative fan shapes at top with ren mark patterns and black text.

These are the digital collections used to making the digital exhibit.

  1. The Star Collection
  2. The Shōbundō collection

These are categories of ghosts and monsters that are found in the digital exhibit.

Technical Credits - CollectionBuilder

This digital collection is built with CollectionBuilder, an open source framework for creating digital collection and exhibit websites that is developed by faculty librarians at the University of Idaho Library following the Lib-Static methodology.

The site started from the CollectionBuilder-GH template which utilizes the static website generator Jekyll and GitHub Pages to build and host digital collections and exhibits.

More Information Available

Technical Specifications
IMLS Support