Ginko embodies liminality. He has no fixed home, no long-term relationships, and a physical body that attracts Mushi (due to a past encounter with a Mushi of light). His missing left eye, replaced by a green prosthetic of Mushi origin, symbolizes his existence between the human and the non-human.
This reflects the Shinto and Buddhist concept of 無常 ( mujō —impermanence), but Urushibara deepens it: impermanence is not to be mourned but to be recognized as the engine of beauty. The melancholic score by Toshio Masuda (using minimal piano and traditional Japanese flutes) reinforces that the sadness in Mushishi is not tragic but ecological—like watching autumn leaves fall. Mushishi
The anime uses long pauses, scenes of pure nature (no dialogue, no music, just wind and water), and episodes that end without a moral. In "The Banquet of the Faint," a woman who can see Mushi is driven to near-madness, but the story does not conclude with her being "saved." Instead, Ginko helps her find a small, imperfect peace. This narrative strategy aligns with post-humanist thought, particularly Donna Haraway’s "staying with the trouble." The goal is not solution but sustainable coexistence. Ginko embodies liminality