Sasae Foundation Publishes 12-Part Short Story on Regional Japan
The foundation chose fiction over a thesis or policy proposal to convey the emotions and conflicts behind regional issues, aiming to make invisible local struggles visible to a national audience.
Reporting from 1 source: ASCII.jp.
The Sasae Foundation, based in Iida City, Nagano Prefecture, released all 12 chapters of the short story 'Akari Foundation: From the Valley to the World' on the note platform on June 30, 2026. The fictional work follows two women in a rural village and a local city, exploring structural challenges such as population decline, regional stagnation, women's working styles, and the difficulties of nonprofit businesses, while presenting the possibility that small local challenges can change society.
The Sasae Foundation, a general incorporated foundation based in Iida City, Nagano Prefecture, published all 12 chapters of the short story 'Akari Foundation: From the Valley to the World' on the note platform on June 30, 2026. The work is entirely fictional but rooted in the author's real observations after moving from Tokyo to Iida City in 2023 and establishing the foundation in 2025.
The story is set in a fictional village called Toyamura and a local city called Shunanshi. It centers on Yuumi Hino, who starts a confectionery shop called Pound Biyori after a small sense of discomfort, and Akari Tsukigi, the representative of the Akari Foundation. The narrative addresses regional stagnation, the undervaluing of women's work, and the difficulty of sustaining socially necessary nonprofit work, framing these as interconnected structural challenges rather than isolated problems.
Author Dai Tanabe, the foundation's representative director, said that numbers, statistics, and policy proposals alone could not convey the emotions, conflicts, hesitations, courage, and hopes of people living in the regions, which is why the work was written as a story rather than a thesis or commentary.
Synthesized by Yomimono from the 1 cited source below, including Japanese-language reporting where cited, then editorially reviewed before publishing.