Furisode-no-kai
furisode-no-kai
The Furisode That Burned Edo: The Furisode Fire
The *Furisode-no-kai* is characterized by the fact that it is an "anomaly where an object and a disaster become one," lacking the form of a specific yokai. Its core consists of a dual structure: on the inside, there is the curse of an object where a *furisode* imbued with the thoughts of the dead takes the life of its new owner (a passion akin to a *tsukumogami*); on the outside, there is the great disaster where the fire burning the *furisode* loses control and burns down the entire city. The former is a typical example of the many "cursed garments and mementos" tales in Edo, while the latter is the real historical tragedy of the Great Fire of Meireki. The originality of this ghost story lies in stitching the two together. For the residents of Edo, fires were the greatest terror. While praised as "Fires and brawls are the flowers of Edo," once a fire spread, the wooden cityscape easily turned to ashes. The *Furisode-no-kai* can be said to be a product of imagination unique to urban ghost stories, translating that terror into an easily digestible tale of a single garment's fate, giving a face and a reason to an indiscriminate disaster.