Nuking the Pop Cult Section From Orbit (it's the only way to be sure)

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I understand that those of us with no first-hand exposure to Japan outside anime and mangas will think that listing monsters that vaguely resemble Kasa-obake (or however this translation into English is attempting to explain it, sigh) is somehow important. It isn't. First, nothing in Pop Cult is referenced, which means it shouldn't be there to begin with. Secondly, it embarrassing to the rest of us since it gives undue weight to things that are the definition of trivia. Once you break open an actual book (hint, hint) and do some research that would stand up to academic inquiry (and if you're not old enough to know what academic research requires ... how cute!), in other words take Japanese mythology seriously, then whatever you come up with should and will go into this article. Anything else needs to be drop kicked and deleted.Duende-Poetry (talk) 21:01, 27 November 2011 (UTC)Reply


Hi. The word Karakasa does not mean this Tsukumogami.Karakasa mean "Chinese style umbrella" in Japanese.We call it Karakasa-Obake or Kasabake.Thank you!--Suguri F 13:45, 26 July 2006 (UTC)Reply


MightyAtom 22:32, 22 September 2006 (UTC)==Name Change==Reply

This yokai is not called a karakasa. The article should be re-titled Kasa-Obake, which is the proper term.


Moved page to Kasa-obake, the best name for this type of yokai. MightyAtom 04:54, 6 September 2006 (UTC)Reply

Japanese wiki has the following variations on the name: Karakasakozou (article title), Karakasaobake, Kasaobake, Kasabake. Personaly, I'm not convinced by the "this name is best" argument stated above. Provide a fuller explanation, please. If not, I would rather have this article under Karakasaobake. (Oh, one more thing. I'm changing the translation of the name in the article - Karakasa means literaly Chinese(-style) umbrella, or Tang-style umbrella, to be even more precise. "Old umbrella" is too vague, even if it does transmit the meaning intended.) 213.172.246.76 11:45, 10 September 2006 (UTC)Reply

My Shigeru Mizuki books use the name Kasa Obake, and he is pretty much the authority on yokai, so that is what I went with. There definitely doesn't seem to be a single agreed-upon name for this yokai, however. The Japanese wiki uses Karakasakozou, which I have never heard before and isn't used in any of my Japanese-language yokai books. The website www.obakemono.com uses Karakasa Obake. The website www.youkaimura.org uses Kasa Obake. A quick google search brings up the most results for Kasa Obake.
What do you think? MightyAtom 15:09, 10 September 2006 (UTC)Reply
Granted, I first heard of the name Karakasakozou on the Japanese wiki site, too. I'd still go with Karakasa Obake, it makes most sense linguisticaly - Kasa Obake would be saying as much as "umbrella obake", but there never seems to be one of a more modern style umbrella, they are invariably portrayed as tsukumogami of those old, red umbrellas made of waxed paper. Those are called karakasa, so...
Frankly, I'm just speculating here, but my gut instinct tells me Karakasa would be better. (which, I realise, is no better an argument than yours, so maybe we should just leave it at this at the moment and see if anybody else comments on this. Besides, Mizuki trumps my gut instinct, I suppose :) 213.172.254.110 22:20, 22 September 2006 (UTC) (I really should get a user name...)Reply
Well, seeing as how tsukumogami have to be 100 years old, it isn't surprising that ones of the modern umbrellas are rare. Give them time....give them time.... :P MightyAtom 22:33, 22 September 2006 (UTC)Reply
The Japanese editors simply chose to entitle their article "Umbrella-Boy" (からかさ小僧, karakasakozou) rather than "Umbrella-Spirit" (から傘おばけ,karakasaobake). --sanjuro 12:25, 18 September 2007 (UTC)Reply

Merge tag?

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Does anyone seriously believe this article should be merged? Can we go ahead and remove the merge tag? MightyAtom 06:20, 4 October 2006 (UTC)Reply

I'm going to chime in pro-merge. I just don't think there's enough information on all these separate types of tsukumogami to merit their own articles in the long run, even the ones whose images have become as popular as the umbrella monster's. Kotengu 小天狗 03:48, 25 January 2007 (UTC)Reply

Abilities

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Isn't the karakasa considered to emit some variety of beam from its eye while spinning, thus making it a horror movie monster that can slice people into pieces? -EarthRise33 01:43, 3 February 2007 (UTC)Reply

Errm... No? TomorrowTime 11:47, 27 May 2007 (UTC)Reply

Karakasa doesn't mean Kasa-obake.

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Karakasa only means an old umbrella. 58.91.152.68 (talk) 03:07, 8 July 2010 (UTC)Reply

A Commons file used on this page has been nominated for deletion

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The following Wikimedia Commons file used on this page has been nominated for deletion:

Participate in the deletion discussion at the nomination page. —Community Tech bot (talk) 15:53, 10 August 2019 (UTC)Reply