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Kitsune in popular culture

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The following is a list of appearances made by kitsune (Japanese foxes) in various works of popular fiction. For information on kitsune in traditional Japanese culture, please see the main article.

Embedded in popular folklore as they are, kitsune have made appearances in many contemporary Japanese works. A few Western authors have also made use of the kitsune legends. In anime, kitsune are often depicted as kemonomimi, usually as female, seductive, and fond of alcohol. Specific depictions of kitsune include:

Kitsune in television and radio[edit]

  • An episode of The X-Files is titled Kitsunegari, which is Japanese for "fox-hunt" (referring to Fox Mulder), and is discussed in that episode.
  • Jewel Staite plays the role of a creature referred to as a "kitsune" in the "Girl Next Door" episode of Supernatural. Other than the fox-like eyes and claws, this version of a kitsune holds little in common with the traditional interpretation.
  • On the 2011 American TV series Teen Wolf, a main character named Kira Yukimura and her mother are both kitsunes. Kira is a thunder kitsune. Added to this, another leading character of the same show, "Stiles Stilinski" was possessed by a Nogitsune ("Yako (fox)") during its third season.
  • In Lovecraft Country, Jamie Chung plays Meeh Ji-Ah, a kumiho, which is the Korean version of an evil kitsune. In the show, she is doomed to be trapped in a human body until she has killed 100 men, which she does in the throes of passion.[1] The main character, Tic, is destined to be number 100.

Kitsune in animation and comics[edit]

  • Shuichi Minamino — the human alias of Kurama, a main character of Yu Yu Hakusho — is the reincarnation of a kitsune thief named Yōko Kurama.
  • In xxxHolic, Watanuki eventually acquires the Kudakitsune (pipe-fox-spirit) which first appears as a furry serpent but later morphs into a more traditional Kitsune (with nine tails). In earlier arcs, he also meets two Kitsune who sell Kitsune Oden (Oden with fried tofu) to him in exchange for a lucky arrow.
  • The series Crescent Moon by Haruko Iida and Stuart Hazleton has a demon fox named Misoka Asagi as the unofficial leader of the Moonlight Bandits.
  • The digimon Renamon and her Digivolved forms from the third season of the Digimon anime (known in Japan as Digimon Tamers) were inspired by the kitsune.
  • Ryutarō and his show girls from Pom Poko are foxes living as humans. Ryutarō is sympathetic to the tanukis' cause, and offers for the tanuki who can transform to live in the human world. Eventually they do so.
  • A shapeshifting kyūbi no kitsune named Sakura Bokuseiinmonzeninari is one of the main characters of the anime/manga series Hyper Police. Technically, she only has eight and a half tails.
  • The spirit of a kyūbi no kitsune, called the Nine-Tailed Demon Fox, was sealed within Naruto Uzumaki, the main character of the anime/manga Naruto. Naruto has lines that suggest fox-like whiskers on his face and has a prankster personality.
  • The Pokémon Vulpix (Rokon in Japanese) and Ninetales (Kyukon) are based on Kitsune. The "evolution" of Vulpix into Ninetales is a direct parallel to the change in color and abilities when a fox gains its ninth tail after a thousand years. In episode 234 (US name: Just Waiting On A Friend) in the Pokémon anime, a 200-year-old Ninetales is featured which gained supernatural powers (primarily of creating illusions) by growing old.
  • A kitsune named Yōko (a common Japanese feminine name, but also another word for a kitsune) is one of the main characters of the anime and manga Tactics.
  • Konno Mitsune of Love Hina is almost exclusively referred to as "Kitsune" due to her sly prankster nature, her fondness for alcohol, and her almost always closed eyes, which make her appear fox-like.
  • In Rurouni Kenshin, Takani Megumi is nicknamed "Kitsune" and even portrayed as one in some episodes by Goro Fujita (Hajime Saitou).
  • In the series Angel Tales (Tenshi no Shippo) there are two kitsune: Akane is a young benevolent guardian spirit, while her mother seeks to become a nine-tailed fox and throw humans into a pit of fear.
  • One of the key allies in the anime/manga Hell Teacher Nūbē is the kitsune known as Tamamo, who has many aspects of his abilities, such as his illusion abilities and fire capabilities, similar to the classic fox creatures.
  • In the anime Cardcaptor Sakura, the spirit of the Dash Card, one of the many Clow Cards, almost resembles a one-tailed kitsune.
  • In the manga series Soul Hunter, the character So Dakki is a charmingly amusing but vapid bimbo. Her Valley Girl behavior is a cover for her true nature as an incredibly intelligent and horrendously evil fox spirit.
  • In Inukami!, Yoko, initially introduced as an Inukami (dog spirit), is actually a kitsune.
  • In the anime Kanon, Makoto Sawatari was later found out as a magical Kitsune who gave up her life and memories to become a human girl.
  • In the anime Air Gear, a student named Kitsune appears.
  • In the children's anime Yo-kai Watch, a Mysterious-Clan Yokai called Kyubi appears, whose resemblance is very much inspired by nine-tailed foxes. Kyubi lives to steal women's hearts, and transforms into a handsome young man to do so. As a Fire-class Yokai, Kyubi has also occasionally been shown to throw fireballs.
  • In the Hiveworks webcomic Sister Claire, Clementine and Gabby encounter a creature called a kitsune in a dungeon. This creature fits the description of a kitsune transformed into a female human.
  • In Ushio and Tora, the chief antagonist Hakumen no Mono is a kitsune.
  • In Inuyasha, the young kitsune Shippo is a friend to Kagome.
  • One of the main antagonists in Nura: Rise of the Yokai Clan is a kyūbi no kitsune named Hagoromo Gitsune, the leader of a faction of yōkai based in Kyoto and considered to be the mightiest yokai alive. The protagonist's grandfather defeated her 400 years ago, but because of her unique ability to reincarnate herself, she returns to bedevil the protagonist in the present day.
  • The title character of the manga and anime series The Helpful Fox Senko-san is a kitsune.
  • In Ninjago: Secrets of the Forbidden Spinjitzu, Akita (voice by Tabitha St. Germain) is a female Formling who has the ability to morph between the form of a white three-tailed wolf with red markings on both her face/tails and a human woman, she is based on a kitsune.

Kitsune in video games[edit]

  • In the game Fortnite, in season 10, there is a pet called Kitsune.
  • In the game Minimon: Adventure of Minions, the Minion Vulpa is based on the Kitsune, from her three (six when Awakened) tails to her fire and Curse skills.
  • In the game Arknights, the operator character Suzuran is a fox-girl with nine tails. Her Elite 2 artwork also depicts a nine-tailed fox behind her.

Kitsune in comics and graphic novels[edit]

  • Neil Gaiman's The Sandman: The Dream Hunters is a short story featuring a kitsune protagonist, lushly illustrated by Yoshitaka Amano.
  • Great Kitsune, an anthropomorphic nine-tailed fox in the webcomic Housepets! illustrated and written by Rick Griffin.
  • One of the two main characters of Andi Watson's comic Skeleton Key is a transplanted kitsune with a sweet tooth named Kitsune.
  • Lorelei and Issac in the webcomic Black Tapestries appear as anthropomorphic foxes (Lorelei being a werefox) and both often behave as tricksters. Lorelei is also fond of alcohol and has many personality similarities to the modern depiction of Kitsune. Kitsune are mentioned as an explanation or how Lorelei briefly ended up in our universe, as drunken student occultists try to summon a Kitsune and summon the were-fox Lorelei instead (much to her confusion and rage). It should be noticed that neither Lorelei nor Issac are "Kitsune" as they are merely anthropomorphic foxes (Lorelei not full-time).
  • An issue of the Psycho Circus comic book, starring the members of the band KISS as cosmic beings, featured a story where a feudal-era samurai is trapped in a traveling circus populated by kitsune.
  • In one of Stan Sakai's Usagi Yojimbo color specials, Usagi becomes mystically enthralled by a villainous Kitsune while Tomoe Ame realizes the situation and tries to free him. The series later features a female fox character with the stage name "Kitsune", who is simply a mortal trickster and master thief.
  • In the IDW version of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles comics, a female witch named Kitsune is a member of the Pantheon, is the youngest of the group who seeks to bring her father back and is the lover of Sheredder who she had aided through the years.

Kitsune in film and literature[edit]

  • Shuri Kurogane tells the story of the nine-tailed fox in Ran, Akira Kurosawa's epic retelling of King Lear. Kurogane, appalled at an order to behead Lady Sué, instead throws a stone fox head at his lord Jiro's feet and likens his manipulation by Lady Kaede to the mischief caused by a legendary Kitsune.

Kitsune in roleplaying and card games[edit]

  • White Wolf Game Studio's Werewolf: The Apocalypse roleplaying game features a race of shapeshifting fox-people known as the "Kitsune". These are two versions. The first version being the kitsune who follow the pre-corrupted Wyrm of Balance, have magical powers and are immune to silver. The second version being the kitsune who were created by Luna amongst other changes and expansions on kitsune society and paths, in Hengeyokai: Shapeshifters of the East.
  • In Skinchangers, a book from White Wolf Game Studio's newer World of Darkness setting, Kitsune are again seen. They appear as a collection of varieties of different fox spirits renowned for their talents as tricksters. They are separated into the obedient servants of Inari who only trick those who deserve it (Inari Seha) and the cruel tricksters who defy their patron (Inari Kihar). There are four varieties of kitsune: kitsune ka (which remain in fox form), kitsune unu (which take on humanoid form), kitsune sedu (spirits that Claim mortals in similar manner of other spirits, and are almost invariably Inari Kihar), and siten uzu. The siten uzu are notable in that they do not possess mortals but still reside in a human's body. Almost always Inari Seha, they 'hide out' in a human for some reason (usually to escape pursuers) for the length of the mortal's lifespan. As compensation, the human is allowed to draw upon a measure of the kitsune's power. The book provides rules for siten uzu as player characters.
  • In the Magic: The Gathering collectible card game, the kitsune appear in the Champions of Kamigawa block as a race of noble, plains-dwelling anthropomorphic foxes. Several different kitsune characters are mentioned by name on the cards and in the fiction based on the cards, including the legendary fox cleric "Eight-and-a-Half-Tails."
  • There are multiple references to Kitsune in D20 System supplements. Initially, such appearances were in creature supplements for settings inspired by East Asian folklore such as Jade Dragons and Hungry Ghosts by Green Ronin Publishing and Creatures of Rokugan by Alderac Entertainment Group. In 2006, the D20 System Publisher Dog Soul Publishing published Kitsunemori, by Matthew A.J. Gregory and Alejandro Melchor, a fantasy setting in which the Kitsune take center stage, including complete character generation rules for Kitsune and character classes specific to Kitsune.
  • There is a Kitsune in the Collectible Miniatures Game, Dreamblade.

Kitsune in music[edit]

  • Kitsuné Music is the name of a French record label focusing on electronic music. It is part of the Kitsuné Fashion Label created by Gildas Loaëc (Roulé) and Masaya Kuroki.
  • The Kitsune Ensemble is a New York chamber group that performs music inspired by Japanese culture and history.
  • Japanese metal idol band Babymetal refer to the kitsune myth in their lyrics and include the use of fox masks, hand signs, and animation interludes during live shows.[2]
  • Japanese musician Daoko once made a song directly referencing the kitsune in both lyrics[3] and music video.[4]

References[edit]

  1. Langmann, Brady (2020-09-21). "The Kumiho From 'Lovecraft County' Is Actually Much Scarier in Ancient Mythology". Esquire. Retrieved 2021-06-16.
  2. "Metal Hammer UK issue 273". Metal Hammer. 2015-07-21. Retrieved 2015-08-14.
  3. http://lyricstranslate.com/es/%E3%83%A1%E3%82%AE%E3%83%84%E3%83%8D-girl-fox.html#ixzz3x1RTPOjZ
  4. Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: daoko - メギツネ feat. PAGE, GOMESS (Prod. COASARU). YouTube.


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