Founded in 1938 and published semiannually by Sophia University
MN 60:4 (2005) 437–79Gender in Early Classical Japan: Marriage, Leadership, and Political Status in Village and PalaceAkiko Yoshie and Janet R. Goodwin
MN 53:2 (1998) 237–55Studies of Japan, Area Studies, and the Challenges of Social TheoryIan Reader
MN 52:3 (1997) 381–97A Golden Age of Fatherhood? Parent-Child Relations in Japanese HistoriographyHarald Fuess
MN 52:1 (1997) 103–16Japan in 1996
MN 51:1 (1996) 107–20Japan in 1995
MN 50:1 (1995) 103–16Cultural Survey, 1994
MN 49:1 (1994) 61–74Cultural Survey, 1993
MN 48:2 (1993) 247–59Cultural Survey, 1992
MN 47:1 (1992) 99–105Cultural Survey, 1991
MN 46:1 (1991) 105–10Cultural Survey, 1990
MN 45:1 (1990) 87–94Cultural Survey, 1989
MN 44:2 (1989) 151–69Not the Least Deserving: The Philosophes and the Religions of JapanJ. A. G. Roberts
MN 43:4 (1988) 465–70Cultural Survey, 1988
MN 40:1 (1985) 39–67The Danka SystemKenneth A. Marcure
MN 32:4 (1977) 459–83The Organized Peasant: The Wakamonogumi in the Edo PeriodRichard E. Varner
Monographs (1973) 1–205An Outline of a Theory of CivilizationYukichi Fukuzawa, David A. Dilworth and G. Cameron Hurst
Monographs (1971) 1–323The Function of Television for Children and AdolescentsTakeo Furu
MN 26:3/4 (1971) 415–29Generational Differences in Values and Attitudes Between Japanese College Students and their Fathers, with some Implications for Historical Change of ValuesTsuyoshi Kato
MN 25:1/2 (1970) 107–35Caste’ In Japanese Social Stratification: A Theory and a CaseJohn B. Cornell
Monographs (1969) 1–123An Encouragement of LearningYukichi Fukuzawa
Monographs (1969) 1–287The Development of Educational Broadcasting in JapanMitoji Nishimoto
MN 24:1/2 (1969) 79–91Samurai Discontent and Social Mobility in the Late Tokugawa PeriodRay A. Moore
Monographs (1968) 1–135Religious Attitudes of Japanese Men: A Sociological SurveyFernando M. Basabe
MN 23:3/4 (1968) 431–43Case studies of social change in the Region of Oshimizu GumiRobert G. Flershem
MN 23:1/2 (1968) 90–101Serious television drama: The Japanese Audience – Its Composition and CharacteristicsJosé María de Vera
Monographs (1967) 1–140Educational Television in JapanJosé María de Vera
Monographs (1967) 1–183Japanese Youth Confronts Religion: A Sociological SurveyFernando M. Basabe
MN 22:3/4 (1967) 402–36The Japanese Woman’s Movement: Ichikawa Fusae, A Pioneer in Woman’s SuffrageDee Ann Vavich
MN 21:1/2 (1966) 61–96Attitudes of Japanese Students Toward Foreign CountriesFernando M. Basabe
Monographs (1965) 1–191Higher Education in Postwar Japan: The Ministry of Education’s 1964 White PaperJohn E. Blewett
MN 20:3/4 (1965) 359–73Socio-Economic Dualism in JapanCarlo Caldarola
MN 17:1/4 (1962) 67–125Amerikanische Demokratie als Lebensform im japanischen Schul- und Familiensystem: Ein pädagogisches Experiment in einem moralischen VakuumHeinz Loduchowski
MN 15:3/4 (1959) 334–49Consanguineous Marriages in Feudal JapanSadao Sugiyama and William J. Schull
MN 14:1/2 (1958) 40–60Fukuzawa Yukichi on Family RelationshipsCarmen Blacker
MN 13:1/2 (1957) 39–66Veränderungen der japanischen Sozialstruktur nach dem zweiten WeltkriegKarl F. Zahl
MN 12:3/4 (1956) 195–240The Paekchŏng of Korea: A Brief Social HistoryHerbert Passin
MN 11:3 (1955) 247–67Untouchability in the Far EastHerbert Passin
MN 9:1/2 (1953) 304–29KyūhanjōCarmen Blacker
MN 8:1/2 (1952) 412–15Kō: Japanese ConfraternitiesLucy S. Itō
Monographs (1941) 1–107Japanische Ansprachen und Gebete aus einem alten Rituale, gedruckt zu Nagasaki 1605Johannes Laures
MN 3:2 (1940) 414–26Nisshinkan: Eine Daimyatsschule der TokugawazeitKenji Koike
MN 2:2 (1939) 586–595Onna Daigaku: Ein Frauenspiegel der Tokugawa-zeitTranslated by Kenji Koike
MN 1:1 (1938) 165–72Tokugawa Japan as a Field for the Student of Social OrganisationN. Skene Smith