Founded in 1938 and published semiannually by Sophia University
Monumenta Nipponica Volume 68, Number 2 (2013)
MN 68:2 (2013) 163–206The Early History of the Noh Play: Literacy, Authorship, and ScriptednessNoel J. Pinnington
MN 68:2 (2013) 207–31Commemorating Failure: The Four Hundredth Anniversary of England’s Trading Outpost in JapanAdam Clulow
MN 68:2 (2013) 233–80Kanokogi Kazunobu: Pioneer of Platonic Fascism and Imperial Pan-AsianismChristopher W. A. Szpilman
MN 68:2 (2013) 281–84Traversing the Frontier: The Man’yōshū Account of a Japanese Mission to Silla in 736–737 by H. Mack HortonTorquil Duthie
MN 68:2 (2013) 284–89The Face of Jizō: Image and Cult in Medieval Japanese Buddhism by Hank GlassmanSusanne Formanek
MN 68:2 (2013) 289–92Japoniæ Insvlæ: The Mapping of Japan; Historical Introduction and Cartobibliography of European Printed Maps of Japan to 1800 by Jason C. HubbardBruce L. Batten
MN 68:2 (2013) 293–96The Premise of Fidelity: Science, Visuality, and Representing the Real in Nineteenth-Century Japan by Maki FukuokaKaren M. Fraser
MN 68:2 (2013) 296–301Kokugaku in Meiji-period Japan: The Modern Transformation of ‘National Learning’ and the Formation of Scholarly Societies by Michael WachutkaHelen Hardacre
MN 68:2 (2013) 301–13The Invention of Religion in Japan by Jason Ānanda Josephson; A Discipline on Foot: Inventing Japanese Native Ethnography 1910–1945 by Alan ChristyIan Reader
MN 68:2 (2013) 313–16Reading Colonial Japan: Text, Context, and Critique ed. Michele M. Mason, Helen J. S. LeeElise Foxworth
MN 68:2 (2013) 316–21Empire of Dogs: Canines, Japan, and the Making of the Modern Imperial World by Aaron Herald SkabelundElmer Veldkamp
MN 68:2 (2013) 321–27Wer und was bin ich? Zur Phänomenologie des Selbst im Zen-Buddhismus by Shizuteru UedaBret W. Davis
MN 68:2 (2013) 327–31From Postwar to Postmodern, Art in Japan 1945–1989 ed. Doryun Chong, Michio Hayashi, Kenji Kajiya, Fumihiko SumitomoMing Tiampo