Monumenta Nipponica Volume 57, Number 3, 2002
MN 57:3 (2002) 271–307Secret Buddhas: The Limits of Buddhist RepresentationFabio Rambelli
MN 57:3 (2002) 309–37The Unfinished Cartography: Murakami Haruki and the Postmodern Cognitive MapChiyoko Kawakami
MN 57:3 (2002) 339–48“A” RevisitedRichard A. Gardner
MN 57:3 (2002) 349–58The Ambiguous Legacy of Modern Japanese PhilosophyJohn C. Maraldo
MN 57:3 (2002) 359–72The Polymorphous Canon: Identity and InventionPaul Gordon Schalow
MN 57:3 (2002) 373–75Prisoners from Nambu: Reality and Make-Believe in 17th-Century Japanese Diplomacy by Reinier H. HesselinkWillem Remmelink
MN 57:3 (2002) 375–78Emperor of Japan: Meiji and His World, 1852–1912 by Donald KeeneStephen S. Large
MN 57:3 (2002) 378–81Nakae Tōju (1608–1648) et Kumazawa Banzan (1619–1691): Deux penseurs de l’epoque d’Edo by Jean-François SoumJacques Joly
MN 57:3 (2002) 381–83Reconfiguring Modernity: Concepts of Nature in Japanese Political Ideology by Julia Adeney ThomasBrett L. Walker
MN 57:3 (2002) 384–86Translating the West: Language and Political Reason in Nineteenth-Century Japan by Douglas R. HowlandKōichirō Matsuda
MN 57:3 (2002) 386–89Travels in Manchuria and Mongolia: A Feminist Poet from Japan Encounters Prewar China by Yosano Akiko, Joshua A. FogelG. G. Rowley
MN 57:3 (2002) 389–91Bodies of Memory: Narratives of War in Postwar Japanese Culture by Yoshikuni IgarashiJulian Dierkes
MN 57:3 (2002) 392–93Adaptations of Western Literature in Meiji Japan by J. Scott MillerPeter F. Kornicki
MN 57:3 (2002) 394–96Fiktion versus Wirklichkeit: Die moderne historische Erzählung in Japan. Modell einer Genretheorie und -typologie zur rekishi shōsetsu by Harald MeyerMargaret Mehl
MN 57:3 (2002) 396–99Requiem on the Great Meridian and Selected Essays by Kinoshita Junji, Brian Powell, Jason DanielMari Boyd
MN 57:3 (2002) 399–402Eine gewisse Farbe der Fremdheit: Aspekte des Übersetzens Japanisch-Deutsch-Japanisch by Irmela Hijiya-KirschnereitAsa-Bettina Wuthenow
MN 57:3 (2002) 402–405Art in the Encounter of Nations: Japanese and American Artists in the Early Postwar Years by Bert Winther-TamakiAllen Hockley
MN 57:3 (2002) 406–408Japanese Education Reform: Nakasone’s Legacy by Christopher P. HoodPeter Cave
MN 57:3 (2002) 408–409The Price of Death: The Funeral Industry in Contemporary Japan by Hikaru SuzukiEyal Ben-Ari
MN 57:3 (2002) 410–12Women on the Verge: Japanese Women, Western Dreams by Karen KelskyJames Farrer