More great stuff from PT:
Kage-e (”shadow pictures”) — a popular form of Edo-period woodblock print — were appreciated by children and adults and commonly used as party gags. These pictures consist of two parts: a “shadow” image and a “real” image. The shadow image, which typically bears the shape of a common, easily identifiable object, is viewed first. The real image, viewed second, reveals the surprising true identity of the shadow.
When I was 25 I had some swelling in my scrotum sack — it turned out to be related to a hernia. I didn’t exactly look like this…but something similar.
Hopefully that didn’t just ruin it for you. The above is actually a Japanese raccoon dog, known as a tanuki, crushing a hunter under the weight of its mammoth testicles.
Not living in Japan, the legend of the tanuki is nothing I’ve encountered personally.
Tanuki, from Wikipedia:
Statues of tanuki can be found outside many Japanese temples and restaurants, especially noodle shops. These statues often wear big, cone-shaped hats and carry bottles of sake in one hand, and a promissory note (a bill it will never pay) or empty purse in the other hand. Tanuki statues always have large bellies. Older depictions of the tanuki show them as having large testicles as well, although this feature is often omitted in contemporary sculpture.
The comical image of the tanuki is thought to have developed during the Kamakura era. The actual wild tanuki has unusually large testicles, a feature that has inspired humorous exaggeration in artistic depictions of the creature. Tanuki may be shown with their testicles flung over their backs like travellers’ 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.

1 response so far ↓
1 Brian // Apr 21, 2008 at 9:09 am
Also makes an appearance in Super Mario 3.
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