词条 | Japanese raccoon dog | ||
释义 |
| image = Tanuki_By_Iwanafish-_Cropped.jpg | image_caption = | status = LC | status_system = IUCN2.3 | genus = Nyctereutes | species = procyonoides | species_link = Raccoon dog | subspecies = viverrinus | authority = Beard, 1904 }} The Japanese raccoon dog (Nyctereutes procyonoides viverrinus[1]), also known as {{nihongo|tanuki|狸 or たぬき||{{IPA-ja|taꜜnɯki|}}}} in Japanese, is a subspecies of the Asian raccoon dog. Researchers{{who|date=January 2016}} have suggested that they be considered a separate species, N. viverrinus, or that raccoon dogs of Japan could be further divisible into separate subspecies as N. p. procyonoides (hondo-tanuki) and N. p. albus (ezo-tanuki), but both views are controversial. As the tanuki, the animal has been significant in Japanese folklore since ancient times. The legendary tanuki is reputed to be mischievous and jolly, a master of disguise and shapeshifting, but somewhat gullible and absentminded. It is also a common theme in Japanese art, especially statuary. "Tanuki" is often mistakenly translated into English as "badger" or "raccoon" (as used in the US version of the movie Pom Poko and outlined in Tom Robbins' book Villa Incognito), two unrelated types of animals with superficially similar appearances. Traditionally, different areas of Japan had different names for raccoon dogs as animals, which would be used to denote different animals in other parts of the country, including badgers and wild cats; however, the official word in the standard Tokyo dialect is now "tanuki", a term that also carries the folkloric significance. NameWhile tanuki are prominent in Japanese folklore and proverbs, they were not always clearly distinguished from other animals with a similar appearance. In local dialects, tanuki and mujina ({{lang|ja|狢}}, kyujitai: 貉) can refer to raccoon dogs or badgers. An animal known as tanuki in one region may be known as mujina in another region. In the modern Tokyo standard dialect, tanuki refers to raccoon dogs and anaguma refers to badgers. Regional dishes known as tanuki-jiru ("tanuki soup") do not contain actual tanuki. Some northern, very rural communities may eat tanuki stew (tanuki shichuu).[2] Originally, the kanji for tanuki, {{lang|ja|狸}} (kyujitai: 貍) was used to refer to other mid-sized mammals, mostly wild cats.{{Citation needed|date=February 2007}} Since wild cats live only in limited regions of Japan (e.g. Iriomote, Okinawa), the characters are believed to have begun being used to mean "raccoon dog" instead starting around the Japanese feudal era. This shift in meaning, along with the rarity of the raccoon dog outside Japan, may have contributed to confusion over the proper translation of tanuki into other languages. In Japanese slang, tanuki gao ("raccoon dog face") can refer to a face that looks like that of the animal, or a person's facial expression of feigned ignorance.[3] By contrast, kitsune gao ("fox face") refers to people with narrow faces, close-set eyes, thin eyebrows, and high cheekbones. Taxonomic disputesSome debate exists in the scientific community regarding speciation between the other subspecies of raccoon dog and the Japanese subspecies in that due to chromosomal, behavioral, and weight differences, the Japanese raccoon dog could be considered a separate species[4] (i.e. Nyctereutes viverrinus rather than N. procyonoides viverrinus). The Japanese raccoon dog has a relatively smaller stomach and shorter fur of lesser insulation value than mainland raccoon dogs.[5] Genetic analysis has confirmed unique sequences of mtDNA, classifying the Japanese raccoon dog as a distinct isolation species, based on evidence of eight Robertsonian translocations. The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Canid Group's Canid Biology and Conservation Conference in September 2001 rejected the classification of the Japanese raccoon dog as a separate species, but its status is still disputed, based on its elastic genome.[6] A not mutually exclusive position advanced by some researchers is that Japanese raccoon dogs could be further divided into separate subspecies as N. p. procyonoides (hondo-tanuki) and N. p. albus (ezo-tanuki).{{citation needed|date=December 2011}} Conservation and exhibition{{expand section|1=
|date=February 2013}} The IUCN places the raccoon dog at "least concern" status due to the animal's wide distribution in Japan and abundant population, including as an introduced species throughout northeastern Europe. In many European countries, it is legal to hunt raccoon dogs, as they are considered a harmful and invasive species.[7] This species is rarely exhibited in zoological parks. For example, only two zoos accredited by the American Zoo and Aquarium Association – Zoo Atlanta in Atlanta, Georgia, and the Red River Zoo in Fargo, North Dakota – currently exhibit this species in the United States. The Hangzhou Zoo in China and the River Safari in Singapore also have Japanese raccoon dogs. In the UK, Chew Valley Animal park near Bristol in the South West of England has a breeding pair.{{citation needed|date=May 2018}} {{anchor|Bake-danuki}}In folklore and traditionThe tanuki has a long history in Japanese legend and folklore. Bake-danuki ({{lang|ja|化け狸}}) are a kind of tanuki yōkai (ghost) found in the classics and in the folklore and legends of various places in Japan. Although the tanuki is a real, extant animal, the bake-danuki that appears in literature has always been depicted as a strange, even supernatural animal. The earliest appearance of the bake-danuki in literature, in the chapter about Empress Suiko in the Nihon Shoki written during the Nara period, there are such passages as "in two months of spring, there are tanuki in the country of Mutsu ({{lang|ja|春二月陸奥有狢}}),[8] they turn into humans and sing songs ({{lang|ja|化人以歌}}).[9] ".[10][11] Bake-danuki subsequently appear in such classics as the Nihon Ryōiki[10][12][13] and the Uji Shūi Monogatari.[10] In some regions of Japan, bake-danuki are reputed to have abilities similar to those attributed to kitsune (foxes): they can shapeshift into other things or people,[10][13] and can possess human beings.[10][14] Many legends of tanuki exist in the Sado Islands of Niigata Prefecture and in Shikoku, and among them, like the Danzaburou-danuki of Sado, the Kinchō-tanuki and Rokuemon-tanuki of Awa Province (Tokushima Prefecture), and the Yashima no Hage-tanuki of Kagawa Prefecture, the tanuki that possessed special abilities were given names, and even became the subject of rituals. Apart from these places, tanuki are treated with special regard in a few cases.[15] The character {{lang|ja|狸}}, pronounced lí in modern Mandarin, was originally a collective name for medium-sized mammals resembling cats in China, with the leopard cat as its nucleus. When this character was brought to Japan, it could not be suitably applied to any animals. Japanese intellectuals used the character to signify tanuki, stray cats, wild boars, Eurasian badgers, weasels, and Japanese giant flying squirrels.[12][13] From time immemorial, Japanese tanuki were deified as governing all things in nature, but after the arrival of Buddhism, animals other than envoys of the gods (foxes, snakes, etc.) lost their divinity. Since all that remained was the image of possessing special powers, they were seen as evil or as yōkai, with tanuki being a representative type. Some also take the viewpoint that the image of the tanuki has overlapped with that of the mysterious and fearful {{lang|ja|狸}} of China (leopard cat).[13] However, since Japanese tanuki do not have the fearsome image that the leopard cats of China do, unlike in China, their image took the form of a more humorous kind of monster,[13] and even in folktales like "Kachi-kachi Yama", and "Bunbuku Chagama", they often played the part of foolish animals.[14][16] Compared with kitsune, which are the epitome of shape-changing animals, one saying is "the fox has seven disguises, the tanuki has eight ({{lang|ja|狐七化け、狸八化け}})". The tanuki is thus superior to the fox in its disguises, but unlike the fox, which changes its form for the sake of tempting people, tanuki do so to fool people and make them seem stupid. Also, a theory is told that they simply like to change their form.[13] The comical image of the tanuki having a large scrotum is thought to have developed during the Kamakura era, where goldsmiths would use tanuki pelts for the process of hammering gold nuggets into leaf. Due to the actual wild tanuki having disproportionately large testicles, a feature that has inspired humorous exaggeration in artistic depictions, and how gold nuggets share a homophone with testicles in the Japanese language, such associations would come to memetically link them together into its folklore image tradition of being a creature of wealth and whimsy. Tanuki may be shown with their testicles flung over their backs like travelers' packs, or using them as drums. As tanuki are also typically depicted as having large bellies, they may be depicted as drumming on their bellies instead of their testicles — particularly in contemporary art.{{citation needed|date=September 2015}} Bake-danuki by areaStories of bake-danuki are told in each area of Japan, especially in Shikoku, and whenever mysterious events occur, it would be the work of a tanuki. There are also ones known internationally like the Inugami Gyoubu and his 808 followers of his household.
Danzaburou-danuki (Sado island, Niigata Prefecture), Shibaemon-tanuki (Awaji Island, Hyōgo Prefecture), Yashima no Hage-tanuki (Yashima, Kagawa Prefecture)
In the folklore of the Morin-ji, in Tatebayashi, Gunma Prefecture, a tanuki was disguised as a teapot belonging to a monk named Shukaku, and boiled tea that would never run out no matter how much one draws from it. In the Morinji no Kama from Konjaku Hyakki Shūi by Toriyama Sekien, it was named "Bunbuku" from the expression {{nihongo|"Bunbukuka"|文武火}}, meaning "literary and military fire", where the literary fire means the fire for reading by, and the military fire means destructive fire.
In the Gugyō-ji in Iinuma, Ibaraki Prefecture, there is a grave for this tanuki. It disguised as a monk for the temple, but one day, it took a nap and showed its true form. However, it was said that due to working there for a long time, this tanuki was then made a page.[13]
In Edo, as one of the seven mysteries of the town, there were sounds of a drum that come from nowhere that can be heard in the middle of the night that were called "tanuki-bayashi". It was the basis for the nursery rhyme, Shōjō-ji no Tanuki-bayashi, passed down at Shōjō-ji.
Oomachi town, Kitaazumi District, Nagano Prefecture (now Ōmachi city). It was a tanuki who climbed a large tree, caught the attention of passersby, and dangled white bags.[17]
Minamikawachi District, Osaka Prefecture. Upon passing by a certain hill during the night, there would be a voice saying "will you chase me, will you chase me (oware yo ka, oware yo ka)," and when a stout-hearted man says "should I chase, should I chase (outaro ka, outaro ka)," one would have already gone on top of a large stump of a pine tree. If one tries to return home and split it with a knife, the old tanuki would show its true form and apologize.[18]
Tamana District, Kumamoto Prefecture and Hyūga, Miyazaki Prefecture. It is said that the old tanuki would disguise itself as an old woman with a jūbako in her hand. In Kumamoto, the jūbakobaba would furthermore, while saying "as a jūbakobaba (old woman with a jūbako), do you need a treat or not," deceive people with a rock-like object.[19][20]
The fūri can be seen in the Gazu Hyakki Yagyō, the Wakan Sansai Zue, and the Bencao Gangmu, with statements like "like wind among rocks, it climbs trees, and has a swiftness like flying birds." It is said that by looking for a particular kind of grass and holding it out to a bird, it can serve as bait.
Horie village, Itano District, Tokushima Prefecture (now Naruto). In the middle of night, it would disguise itself as a child in a red denchū (a sleveless hanten), who insistently begs to be carried on one's back. Since it seems pleasant even when one carries it on one's back, it would beat on that person's shoulders.[21]
Ikeda, Miyoshi District, Tokushima Prefecture (now Miyoshi). During times like rainy evenings, it would disguise itself as a person an invite people to shelter under its umbrella. When a person who doesn't have an umbrella goes under it, it is said that they'd be taken to an unbelievably out-there place.[21]
Yutani, Hashikura, Miyoshi District, Tokushima Prefecture (now Miyoshi). It is said to lure people and cause them to be hanged by the neck.[21]
Gakushima, Oe District, Tokushima Prefecture (now Yoshinogawa). It would disguise itself as a young priest and stand in the way of passersby, and if one gets angry and cuts it with a sword, it would multiply in numbers all night long.[21]
Handa, Mima District, Tokushima Prefecture (now Tsurugi). When people cross a bridge named "Bōzu Bridge", before they know it, they would find their hair shaven.[21]
Hyūgadani Muyachō Kokuwajima, Naruto, Tokushima, Tokushima Prefecture. This tanuki would disguise itself as a white wine bottle, but when people try to pick it up, it would roll around making it impossible for people to catch it.[21]
Tokushima Prefecture. On the small hill of Takaoka along the Yoshino River, it would disguise itself as a rabbit and run at ease, and when people find it and think of it as a suitable catch, they would end up running around Takaoka hill several times.[21]
Kagawa Prefecture. It would transform its appearance into a piece of cotton and roll along the roadside, but when people try to pick it up, it would start to move and rise to the sky.[22] Ongoing popular traditionA common schoolyard song in Japan makes explicit reference to the tanuki's testicles:
It continues for several verses, with many regional variations.[23] The legendary tanuki has eight special traits that bring good fortune, possibly created to coincide to the hachi symbol (八, meaning 'eight') often found on the sake bottles the statues hold. The eight traits are these:
The statues available all over Japan of the tanuki are Shigaraki ware, a style of pottery long associated with tanuki imagery. According to Alice Gordenker, the modern version of the tanuki was developed by a potter named Tetsuzo Fujiwara, who moved to Shiga Prefecture in 1936 and whose pottery was admired even by the emperor.[23] In popular cultureTanuki are a recurring theme in Japanese popular culture. The first exposure of non-Japanese to tanuki often comes through exported Japanese media; however, they are often described as "raccoons" in translation or assumed as such if no species is given.[26] Notable appearances of tanuki in popular culture include:
Tanuki often appear alongside kitsune. For example, in Pom Poko, kitsune are seen coexisting with human society as gangsters and prostitutes, in contrast to the tanuki who attempt to resist it;[27] and in Animal Crossing, the player's town is sometimes visited by an unscrupulous kitsune art dealer named Redd. In Super Mario 3D Land, Luigi's equivalent of Mario's Tanooki suit instead resembles a fox. In Kirby's Dream Land 3, the bosses of the third world are a large tanuki and kitsune. They also appear in Right Back at Ya. In Naruto, Gaara and Naruto, the holder of the Nine-Tails, are the only two jinchûriki to appear in the first part of the series, possessing tailed beasts that resemble a tanuki and a kitsune. In Japanese cooking, the words "tanuki" and "kitsune" designate two varieties of the udon dish. Tanuki udon contains the flakes of fried tempura batter ("tenkasu"), while Kitsune udon contains fried tofu ("abura-age"). Notes1. ^{{Cite web|url=https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=726881#null|title=ITIS Standard Report Page: Nyctereutes procyonoides viverrinus|website=www.itis.gov|access-date=2017-06-25}} 2. ^Nicol, C.W., "Talking tanuki — or whatever you call them", Japan Times, 4 January 2015, p. 21 3. ^Dictionary entry for "tanuki gao"{{dead link|date=May 2017|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}. 4. ^{{cite journal |last=Kauhala |first=Kaarina |year=1994 |title=The Raccoon Dog: a successful canid |journal=Canid News |volume=2 |pages=37–40 |url=http://www.canids.org/PUBLICAT/CNDNEWS2/racoondg.htm |accessdate=2008-08-19 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080625021140/http://www.canids.org/PUBLICAT/CNDNEWS2/racoondg.htm |archivedate=2008-06-25 |df= }} 5. ^Sillero-Zubiri, Claudio; Hoffman, Michael; and MacDonald David W. Canids: Foxes, Wolves, Jackals, and Dogs: Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan. Gland, Switzerland and Cambridge, UK: IUCN; 2004. p136. 6. ^{{cite journal|last=Nie|first=Wenhui|author2=Jinhuan Wang |author3=Polina Perelman |author4=Alexander S. Graphodatsky |author5=Fengtang Yang |date=November 2003|title=Comparative chromosome painting defines the karyotypic relationships among the domestic dog, Chinese raccoon dog and Japanese raccoon dog|journal=Comparative Chromosome Painting Defines the Karyotypic Relationships Among the Domestic Dog, Chinese Raccoon Dog and Japanese Raccoon Dog|volume=11|issue=8|pages=735–740 |doi=10.1023/B:CHRO.0000005760.03266.29 |url=http://www.springerlink.com/content/n32l1k5t13l2k530/|format=fee required|accessdate=2008-08-19}} 7. ^{{ cite web | title=Racoon Dog at IUCN Red List | publisher=IUCN | url=http://oldredlist.iucnredlist.org/details/summary/14925/0 | accessdate=May 26, 2014}} 8. ^{{cite book|title=Dōbutsu Yōkaitan|page=106}} 9. ^The translation of this into modern Japanese can be found on page 13 of {{nihongo||『DISCOVER妖怪 日本妖怪大百科 VOL.07』|Discover Yōkai Nihon Yōkai Daihyakka}}. Furthermore, the 「狢」 in the document here are not mujina, but rather, signify tanuki 10. ^1 2 3 4 {{Cite book|title=Dōbutsu Yōkaitan|volume=2|pages=105–139}} 11. ^{{Cite book|last1=Murakami|first1=Kenji|editors={{nihongo|Kōdansha Comic Create|講談社コミッククリエイト}}|title={{nihongo||DISCOVER妖怪 日本妖怪大百科|Discover Yōkai Nihon Yōkai Daihyakka}}|year=2008|publisher=Kōdansha|series=KODANSHA Official File Magazine|volume=07|isbn=978-4-06-370037-4|page=15|chapter={{nihongo||妖怪となった狐と狸|Yōkai to natta kitsune to tanuki}}}} 12. ^1 {{Cite book|title=Tanuki to sono sekai|pages=209–212}} 13. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 {{Cite book|title=Gensō sekai no jūnintachi|pages=235–240}} 14. ^1 {{Cite book|last1=Sano|first1=Kenji|title=Minkan shinkō jiten|page=184|display-authors=etal}} 15. ^{{Cite book|last1=Miyazawa|first1=Teruaki|title={{nihongo||狸の話|Tanuki no hanashi}}|year=1978|publisher=Arimine Shoten|pages=226–230}} 16. ^{{Cite book|title=Tanuki to sono sekai|page=35}} 17. ^{{Cite book|author=Tokihiko Ōto|editors=Minzokugaku Kenkyuu Shohen (Folkloristics Research Compilation) |others=Kunio Yanagita, 監修|script-title=ja:綜合日本民俗語彙|year=1955|publisher=平凡社|volume=3|id={{NCID|BN05729787}} |page=1354 |language=Japanese |trans-title=Sogo Japanese folk vocabulary}} 18. ^{{Cite book|author=大藤時彦他|editor=民俗学研究所編|others=柳田國男, 監修|script-title=ja:綜合日本民俗語彙|year=1955|publisher=平凡社|volume=1|id=NCID BN05729787|page=308|language=Japanese|trans-title=Sogo Japanese folk vocabulary}} 19. ^{{Cite journal|author=能田太郎|date=August 1935|script-title=ja:玉名郡昔話 (3)|journal=昔話研究|volume=1|issue=4|id= NCID AN00407060|page=25|language=Japanese}} 20. ^{{Cite journal|author=加藤恵|date=December 1989|script-title=ja:県別日本妖怪事典|journal=歴史読本|volume=第34巻|issue=24(515)|page=331|id=NCID AN00133555|language=Japanese}} 21. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 {{Harvnb|笠井|1927|pp=261–263}} 22. ^{{Cite journal|author=三宅周一|date=August 1939|script-title=ja:妖怪語彙|journal=民間伝承|volume=4巻|issue=11号|page=2|id=NCID AN00236605|language=Japanese}} 23. ^1 {{cite news|url=http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2008/07/15/news/tanuki-genitals/#.UTKcefLAFzs|title=Tanuki genitals|last=Gordenker|first=Alice|date=25 July 2008|work=The Japan Times|accessdate=3 March 2013}} 24. ^Shigaraki Tourist Association {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111229142821/http://www.e-shigaraki.org/e/knowledge-eightluck-e/ |date=2011-12-29 }}. E-shigaraki.org. Retrieved on 2011-01-24. 25. ^Tanuki – Japanese God of Restaurateurs, Japanese Buddhism & Shintoism Photo Dictionary. Onmarkproductions.com. Retrieved on 2011-01-24. 26. ^1 {{cite book|title=The Japanification of Children's Popular Culture|year=2008|publisher=Scarecrow Press|editor=Mark I. West|chapter=Japanese Dominance of the Video-game Industry}} 27. ^1 {{cite book |title=Emerging Worlds of Anime and Manga, Volume 1|year=2006|publisher=University of Minnesota Press|editor=Frenchy Lunning|chapter=The Werewolf in the Crested Kimono}} 28. ^Loughrey, Clarisse. "[https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/news/zootropolis-new-anchors-change-animal-depending-on-what-country-youre-in-a6916651.html Zootropolis' new anchors change animal depending on what country you're in]." The Independent. March 7, 2016. Retrieved on March 7, 2016. References
External links{{commons category|Tanuki}}
7 : Canines|Tanuki (raccoon dog)|Mammals of Japan|Endemic fauna of Japan|Shapeshifting|Japanese folklore|Articles containing video clips |
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