•
Tōno Monogatari (遠野物語) – Yanagita's most famous work,
Tōno Monogatari, is a record of folk legends, stories, and traditions (as opposed to a
folk tale) gathered in
Tōno, a city in
Iwate Prefecture, Japan. Famous
yōkai in the stories include
kappa and
zashiki-warashi . The work includes a number of stories featuring the hunter , a local of Tōno. •
Kagyūkō (蝸牛考) – Yanagita revealed that the distribution of dialects for the word
snail forms
concentric circles on the Japanese archipelago (
Center versus periphery theory of dialectical diffusion over time). •
Momotarō no Tanjō (桃太郎の誕生) – In this work, Yanagita provides analysis into themes of Japanese folklore and society. The name of the work is derived from the famous Japanese tale of
Momotarō, as one of the examples he uses in his commentary on folktales as a form of reference material for understanding Japanese culture. In this work, he analyzes Momotarō to discuss some facets of Japanese society as a whole. His methodology in this has since been followed by many ethnologists and anthropologists. •
Kaijō no Michi (海上の道) – This piece, published only a year before Yanagita's death, records the history, culture, and folk tradition of the
Okinawa islands of Japan. In his studies of Okinawa, Yanagita sought the origins of Japanese culture in the area, though many of his speculations were denied by later researchers. It is also said that his inspiration for this research came from picking up a
palm nut borne by the
Kuroshio Current when he was wandering on a beach in the cape of
Irago Misaki,
Aichi Prefecture. •
Kunio Guide to the Japanese Folk Tale – This is a selection of Japanese folktales and data from Yanagita Kunio's
Nihon mukashi-banashi meii (日本昔話名彙), translated by Fanny Hagin Meyer. •
Nochi no Kari-kotoba no Ki (後狩詞記) – He privately published a work based on his travels around
Kyūshū, focusing on the traditions and ways of life of a mountain community from
Miyazaki Prefecture, including details about their hunting practices and the vocabulary used to discuss it. This work is considered one of the first works of Japanese folklore studies from Japan. ==See also==