Tradition / Region: Japanese folklore (Tokushima, Shikoku)
Alternate Names: Aka-eri
Category: Fox
The Myth
Near Sendasuka Nishi on Chiejima Island there once lay a deep and gloomy body of water known as Dongan Pond. Willow trees leaned over its banks, bamboo thickets surrounded it, and the surface of the water shone a murky blue-black. People already whispered that kappa and raccoon dogs haunted the place.
Around the Taishō period, another rumor spread.
A strange being called Akaeri was said to live in the bushes near the pond. Those who claimed to see it described a creature about the size of a ten-year-old child, with a red body and the features of a fox. Yet what made it most unsettling was not its shape, but its posture.
Akaeri did not skulk or creep like an animal. It sat at the edge of the thicket facing the pond, legs crossed and back straight, like a person quietly resting. From a distance it looked almost human, but the red body and fox-like face betrayed its true nature.
The sight of it was so eerie that schoolchildren walking from Nishichiejima to the elementary school avoided the pond entirely, choosing longer routes rather than pass near the bushes. Workers traveling nearby also spoke of it. One plasterer returning each day would say that a strange red creature sat there again, unmoving, watching the water.
Whether it was spirit, fox, or something else, the figure remained part of the pond’s reputation. And long after the stories faded, people still remembered Dongan Pond as a place where something red once sat silently at the water’s edge, waiting in the reeds.
Gallery
Sources
Tyz-Yokai Blog. (n.d.). Akaeri. Retrieved March 1, 2026, from https://tyz-yokai.blog.jp/archives/1013136220.html.
Interpretive Lenses
Religious Readings
- Christian Ascetic Deep Dive
Philosophical Readings
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Psychological Readings
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Political / Social Readings
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