Kaidan: Japanese Ghost Stories (Limited Offering) – New!

Kaidan: Japanese Ghost Stories (Limited Offering) – New!

Adult Multi-Week | Available

1812 West Main Street Richmond, VA 23220 United States
Letterpress + Book Arts
All Levels
10/3/2025-10/24/2025
6:00 PM-8:30 PM EDT on Fri
$145.00
$130.50

Kaidan: Japanese Ghost Stories (Limited Offering) – New!

Adult Multi-Week | Available

Learn about the some of the most famous ghost stories in Japan, the context in which they were written, and what cultural fears they reflect, as well as how these tales have continued to thrill new readers over the centuries. You will leave class with a primer of Japanese kaidan, or tales of the supernatural and an understanding of how both religion and culture shaped the fears that propelled them.



  • Accessibility notes: Many artmaking processes require the ability to sit or stand for extended periods of time, fine motor skills/finger dexterity, repetitive motions, vision, and some amount of physical strength. VisArts values making classes accessible to everyone, and is always happy to work with students to make accommodations when possible. Please reach out to info@visarts.org with specific questions related to accessibility or accommodations.

    Classes are confirmed one week prior to the start date. In order to help us confirm classes, please register as early as possible.
    This studio is not wheel chair accessible from the interior due to two steps, but is accessible through an exterior door.


    On-site courses do not come with studio access outside of class time. Paid open studio access is available through our Studio Access Program. Please visit visarts.org for more information.

Okamoto-Green, Emily
Emily Okamoto-Green

Emily Okamoto-Green is a half-Japanese essayist, poet, and animal lover. Originally from Shizuoka-ken, Japan's green tea capital, her family relocated to Richmond, VA in 1998. A 2018 Graduate of George Mason University’s Honors and English Honors College, she graduated from GMU again in 2021 with her MFA in Poetry. Her accolades include the Virginia Downs Poetry Award, the Joseph Lohman III Poetry Prize, The Alan Cheuse International Writers Center 2020 fellowship, YesPoetry Magazine’s Poet of the Month, and inaugural winner of the Berkey Essay Contest. Her life highlights include Arthur Sze once saying her poem had a sense of wonder, bowing on stage at Carnegie Hall as a teenaged poet, and any time a cat or dog has come up to her without her first initiating the interaction. Emily tries to spend as much time as possible with her feet in the Atlantic or dreaming of them in the Pacific once more. She currently serves as the Writer in Residence for the Visual Arts Center of Richmond.

Instagram: @emi.dori