Founded in 1938 and published semiannually by Sophia University
MN 34:2 (1979) 209–30Thrift and Diligence: House Codes of Tokugawa Merchant FamiliesJ. Mark Ramseyer
MN 34:2 (1979) 221–30The Codes of Three Merchant HousesTranslated by J. Mark Ramseyer
MN 33:2 (1978) 151–64The Kansei Reforms—Success or Failure?Isao Soranaka
MN 32:4 (1977) 459–83The Organized Peasant: The Wakamonogumi in the Edo PeriodRichard E. Varner
MN 32:3 (1977) 347–64De Coningh on Deshima: Mijn Verblijf in Japan, 1856Huibert Paul
MN 32:2 (1977) 125–52Last Testament in Exile: Yamaga Sokō’s Haisho ZampitsuShuzo Uenaka
MN 32:2 (1977) 131–52Haisho ZampitsuYamaga Sokō, Translated by Shuzo Uenaka
MN 32:2 (1977) 153–88Nishiki no Ura: An Instance of Censorship and the Structure of a SharebonPeter F. Kornicki
MN 32:2 (1977) 167–88A Brothel in the Light of Day: The Other Side of the BrocadeSantō Kyōden, Translated by Peter F. Kornicki
MN 31:4 (1976) 393–413The Popularization of Samurai Values: A Sermon by Hosoi HeishūMargaret B. Dardess and Michiko Yamaguchi Aoki
MN 31:4 (1976) 400–13A Sermon Given by Hosoi Heishū on 14 December 1783Hosoi Heishū, Translated by Michiko Yamaguchi Aoki and Margaret B. Dardess
MN 30:4 (1975) 393–403Tokugawa Yoshinobu and Kōbugattai: A Study of Political InadequacyConrad Totman
MN 30:2 (1975) 177–91Chu Shun-Shui, 1600–82: A Chinese Confucian Scholar in Tokugawa JapanJulia Ching
MN 29:3 (1974) 305–27Bakumatsu Foreign EmployeesH. J. Jones
MN 29:2 (1974) 163–79Thunberg in Japan and His Flora Japonica in JapaneseRichard C. Rudolph
MN 29:1 (1974) 1–54The Case of Christovão FerreiraHubert Cieslik
MN 26:1/2 (1971) 1–15Nakano Family Documents: Satsuma-Chōshū Trade, 1856–66Robert G. Flershem and Yoshiko N. Flershem
Monographs (1970) 1–144Doctor on Desima: Selected Chapters from Jhr. J. L. C. Pompe van Meerdervoort’s Vijf Jaren in Japan (Five Years in Japan, 1857-1863)Translated by Elizabeth P. Wittermans and John Z. Bowers
Monographs (1970) 1–237From Prejudice to Tolerance: A Study of the Japanese Image of the West, 1826-1864Richard T. Chang
MN 24:1/2 (1969) 31–45Sharebon: books for men of modeJames T. Araki
MN 24:1/2 (1969) 79–91Samurai Discontent and Social Mobility in the Late Tokugawa PeriodRay A. Moore
Monographs (1968) 1–296Recent Japanese Philosophical Thought: 1862-1962, A SurveyGino K. Piovesana
MN 22:3/4 (1967) 290–304The Kazunomiya Marriage: Alliance Between the Court and the BakufuEdwin B. Lee
MN 22:3/4 (1967) 305–67Alcock and Harris: Foreign Diplomacy in Bakumatsu JapanJohn McMaster
MN 22:1/2 (1967) 177–210Tominaga Nakamoto, 1715–46: A Tokugawa IconoclastShūichi Katō
MN 21:1/2 (1966) 1–46Takizawa Bakin, 1767–1848: A Restoration that FailedLeon M. Zolbrod
MN 20:3/4 (1965) 253–82Inoue Kowashi, 1843–1895 and the Formation of Modern JapanJoseph Pittau
MN 19:3/4 (1964) 235–42The Acceptance of Western Culture in Japan: General ObservationsJirō Numata
MN 19:3/4 (1964) 254–74The Acceptance of Western Medicine in JapanRanzaburō Ōtori
MN 15:3/4 (1959) 334–49Consanguineous Marriages in Feudal JapanSadao Sugiyama and William J. Schull
MN 9:1/2 (1953) 109–54Kumagai Buzen-no-kami Motonao: Leben und Tod eines christlichen Samurai (Part 2)Hubert Cieslik
MN 8:1/2 (1952) 147–92Kumagai Buzen-no-kami Motanao: Leben und Tod eines christlichen Samurai (Part 1)Hubert Cieslik
MN 7:1/2 (1951) 102–55Die Goningumi im Dienste der ChristenüberwachungHubert Cieslik
MN 4:2 (1941) 497–513Plans of Edmund Roberts for Negotiations in NipponAllan B. Cole
MN 3:1 (1940) 40–60Traductions chinoises d’ouvrages européens au Japon durant la période de fermeture (1614–1853)Henri Bernard
MN 3:1 (1940) 61–74Aizawa Seishisai (1782–1863) und sein Werk ShinronHorst Hammitzsch
MN 2:2 (1939) 355–73The Japanese at Batavia in the XVIIth CenturyNaojirō Murakami
MN 2:2 (1939) 586–595Onna Daigaku: Ein Frauenspiegel der Tokugawa-zeitTranslated by Kenji Koike
MN 1:2 (1938) 350–77Yoshida Shōin (1830–1859): Ein Beitrag zum Verständnis der geistigen Quellen der MeijierneuerungHeinrich Dumoulin