Monumenta Nipponica Volume 24, Number 3, 1969
MN 24:3 (1969) 211–17Kawabata Yasunari: Bridge-Builder to the WestFrancis H. Mathy
MN 24:3 (1969) 219–33Garakuta BunkoJames R. Morita
MN 24:3 (1969) 235–47Available Japanese Folk TalesFanny Hagin Mayer
MN 24:3 (1969) 249–58A Jōmon Site at NinomiyaCharles T. Keally
MN 24:3 (1969) 259–72The Sources of English Liberal Concepts in Early Meiji JapanMikiso Hane
MN 24:3 (1969) 273–88The Logic of The Species as DialecticsHajime Tanabe, Translated by David A. Dilworth and Taira Satō
MN 24:3 (1969) 289–314Atemiya: A Translation from the Utsubo monogatariTranslated by Edwin A. Cranston
MN 24:3 (1969) 315–25Shi (Death)Kunikida Doppo, Translated by Thomas E. Swann
MN 24:3 (1969) 327–35Haha (Mother)Dazai Osamu, Translated by David J. Brudnoy and Yumiko Oka
MN 24:3 (1969) 337–39I Can SpeakDazai Osamu, Translated by David J. Brudnoy and Kazuko Shimizu
MN 24:3 (1969) 341–43Kojiki by Donald PhilippiJ. Edward Kidder, Jr.
MN 24:3 (1969) 343–46A History of the Development of Japanese Thought from 592 to 1868 by Nakamura HajimeJaime Barrera
MN 24:3 (1969) 346–47Nihon Jōdo-kyō seiritsu-katei no kenkyū–Shinran no shisō to sono genryū (Development of the Jōdo Sect–Shinran’s Thought and its Origin) by Shigematsu AkihisaShun’ichi H. Takayanagi
MN 24:3 (1969) 347–49Genji monogatari no Bukkyō-shisō (Buddhist Thought in the Tale of Genji) by Shigematsu NobuhiroShun’ichi H. Takayanagi
MN 24:3 (1969) 350–51Books Received