Here are 10 well-known, classical Japanese stories you can add to your repertoire of traditional Japanese knowledge.
Japanese Culture. Sep 29 Sep 09 If someone asked you to tell them a story, what would you say? Most people probably wouldn't know where to start.
Do you tell a traditional story, something everyone knows, or do you make up an original one? Do you rely on fairy tales and legends, japanese folk heroes do you mix them up to make them new? Whatever you choose, chances are your story is somehow influenced by the stories you heard and learned as a child and have stuck with you until now.
2. Urashima Taro
Here are 10 classic Japanese stories. While you could technically call them folktales, some are more like legends and others are more like fairy tales. Most Japanese people know a lot of them, if not all, and they are also sometimes taught in Japanese culture and language classes.
Momotaro is one of the most loved folktales in Japan as well as one of the most well-known. The name "Momotaro" literally means "Peach Taro," which is a name suffix often seen in Japan.
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You may have heard the story translated as "Peach Japanese folk heroes. The woman and her husband discovered the child when they tried to open the peach to eat it. The child explained that he had been sent by Heaven to be their son. The story of Urashima Taro, the name of the main character, is about a dolk who rescues a turtle and is rewarded with a special trip under the ocean to visit the kingdom of the Dragon God.]
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