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    • Kuchisake-onna

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      • Kuchisake-onna (口裂け女, 'Slit-Mouthed Woman') is a malevolent figure in Japanese urban legends and folklore. Described as the malicious spirit, or onryō, of a woman, she partially covers her face with a mask or other item and carries a pair of scissors, a knife, or some other sharp object.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuchisake-onna
  1. In Black Skin. White Masks, Frantz Fanon transposes psychoanalysis from its gender-based framework of subject formation in order to interrogate racial subjectivity in the colonial context.

    • Gwen Bergner
    • 1995
  2. For example, white men succeed in colonizing black men to the extent that they are not subject to black men's dictates regarding "their" (black men's) women (i.e., black women).19 This relation between colonial power and the circulation of women reveals Fanon's scathing condemnation of black women's desire in the second chapter of Black Skin ...

    • Gwen Bergner
    • Where Did The The Kuchisake Onna Legend originate?
    • The Spirit’s Dangerous Question: ‘Watashi, Kirei?’
    • The Kuchisake Onna Legend Today

    Like many urban legends, the origins of the kuchisake onna can be difficult to trace. It’s believed that the story first emerged during the Heian period (794 C.E. to 1185 C.E.). As the Atlantic reports, the kuchisake onnamay have once been the wife of a samurai who mutilated her after she was unfaithful. Other versions of the story state that a jea...

    Legend states that kuchisake onna stalks her victims at night and will often approach lone travelers. Wearing a surgical face mask — in modern retellings — or holding a fan over her mouth, the spirit asks them a simple but dangerous question: “Watashi, kirei?”or “Am I beautiful?” If her victim says no, then the vengeful spirit will immediately atta...

    Though an ancient legend, stories of the kuchisake onna have endured for hundreds of years. Yokai reports that they spread during the Edo Period (1603 until 1867) though kuchisake onna encounters were often blamed on a different, shapeshifting spirit called kitsune. And in the 20th century, this creepy legend enjoyed a new resurgence. As Nipponrepo...

    • Austin Harvey
  3. Kuchisake-onna (口裂け女, 'Slit-Mouthed Woman')[1] is a malevolent figure in Japanese urban legends and folklore. Described as the malicious spirit, or onryō, of a woman, she partially covers her face with a mask or other item and carries a pair of scissors, a knife, or some other sharp object.

  4. emblematic of woman's inability to determine her own meaning within patriarchal signification, Fanon's recovers a certain power of self-definition. Freud addresses his question to men, not women, and elicits masculine desire for women rather than feminine desire. But Fanon is both subject and object, enunciator and addressee of this question of

  5. 2 days ago · Clues About Showbird's Life & Career Were Revealed. During The Masked Singer season 12 premiere, Showbird sang "Just Fine" by Mary J. Blige. She began her clue package by saying that, honestly, she was confused about being on the show because she never imagined all of what she had for herself. She said that she was "a total tomboy growing up ...

  6. Jan 1, 1995 · Though Fanon's analysis of black women's sexual desire has been dismissed as obviously sexist, the terms of his critique reveal norms of gender, class, and sexuality by which black women are bound and against which he formulates black masculinity.