Founded in 1938 and published semiannually by Sophia University
MN 69:2 (2014) 306–309Hijikata Tatsumi and Butoh: Dancing in a Pool of Gray Grits by Bruce BairdWilliam Marotti
MN 69:2 (2014) 309–14Bones of Contention: Animals and Religion in Contemporary Japan by Barbara R. AmbrosEllen Schattschneider
MN 69:2 (2014) 2014Monumenta Nipponica Volume 69, Number 2, 2014
MN 69:1 (2014) 1–54A Medieval Warrior in Early Modern Japan: A Translation of the Otogizōshi Hōgan Miyako BanashiMathew W. Thompson
MN 69:1 (2014) 15–54Hōgan Miyako Banashi: The Tale of Yoshitsune in the CapitalMathew W. Thompson, Translated by Mathew W. Thompson
MN 69:1 (2014) 55–101Benevolence, Charity, and Duty: Urban Relief and Domain Society during the Tenmei FamineMaren Ehlers
MN 69:1 (2014) 103–109Japanese Historiography and the Gold Seal of 57 C.E.: Relic, Text, Object, Fake by Joshua A. FogelGina L. Barnes
MN 69:1 (2014) 109–13Knowing the Amorous Man: A History of Scholarship on Tales of Ise by Jamie L. NewhardRobert N. Huey
MN 69:1 (2014) 113–16Schreib-Riten (shorei 書礼): Untersuchungen zur Geschichte der japanischen Briefetikette by Markus RüttermannW. J. Boot
MN 69:1 (2014) 117–21Another Stage: Kanze Nobumitsu and the Late Muromachi Noh Theater by Lim Beng ChooShelley Fenno Quinn
MN 69:1 (2014) 121–23The Chronicle of Lord Nobunaga by Ōta Gyūichi, trans. and ed. J. S. A. Elisonas, J. P. LamersMorten Oxenboell
MN 69:1 (2014) 124–29An Imperial Concubine’s Tale: Scandal, Shipwreck, and Salvation in Seventeenth-Century Japan by G. G. RowleyC. Miki Wheeler
MN 69:1 (2014) 130–32Publishing the Stage: Print and Performance in Early Modern Japan ed. Keller Kimbrough, Satoko ShimazakiMichael G. Watson
MN 69:1 (2014) 132–36Shunga: Sex and Pleasure in Japanese Art ed. Timothy Clark, C. Andrew Gerstle, Aki Ishigami, Akiko Yano; Shunga: Sex and Humor in Japanese Art and Literature ed. C. Andrew Gerstle, Timothy Clark; Shunga: Erotic Art in Japan by Rosina BucklandAllen Hockley
MN 69:1 (2014) 137–41Obtaining Images: Art, Production and Display in Edo Japan by Timon ScreechElizabeth Lillehoj
MN 69:1 (2014) 142–45Beriberi in Modern Japan: The Making of a National Disease by Alexander R. BaySusan L. Burns
MN 69:1 (2014) 145–48The Kyoto School: An Introduction by Robert E. CarterErin McCarthy
MN 69:1 (2014) 148–52Troubled Natures: Waste, Environment, Japan by Peter Wynn KirbyTom Gill
MN 69:1 (2014) 2014Monumenta Nipponica Volume 69, Number 1, 2014
MN 68:2 (2013) 163–206The Early History of the Noh Play: Literacy, Authorship, and ScriptednessNoel John 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
MN 68:2 (2013) 2013Monumenta Nipponica Volume 68, Number 2, 2013
MN 68:1 (2013) 1–36Rewriting Murasaki: Vernacular Translation and the Reception of Genji Monogatari during the Tokugawa PeriodRebekah Clements
MN 68:1 (2013) 37–68Masamune Hakuchō Reads Genji: A Translation of “Genji Monogatari: Hon’yaku to Gensaku”Michael Emmerich
MN 68:1 (2013) 53–68Genji Monogatari: Hon’yaku to GensakuHakuchō Masamune, Translated by Michael Emmerich
MN 68:1 (2013) 69–77Translating the Corpus of Ancient Japanese LawHerman Ooms
MN 68:1 (2013) 79–88Of Allochthons and Alibis: Otherworldly Ideologies in Seventh- and Eighth-Century JapanDavid B. Lurie
MN 68:1 (2013) 89–94Realms of Literacy: Early Japan and the History of Writing by David B. LurieJohn Timothy Wixted
MN 68:1 (2013) 94–99Optical Allusions: Screens, Paintings, and Poetry in Classical Japan (ca. 800–1200) by Joseph T. SorensenRoselee Bundy
MN 68:1 (2013) 99–101How Ajātaśatru Was Reformed: The Domestication of “Ajase” and Stories in Buddhist History by Michael RadichThierry Jean Roboüam
MN 68:1 (2013) 101–107From Sovereign to Symbol: An Age of Ritual Determinism in Fourteenth-Century Japan by Thomas Donald ConlanMikael S. Adolphson
MN 68:1 (2013) 107–10Japan and the Culture of the Four Seasons: Nature, Literature, and the Arts by Haruo ShiraneElizabeth Oyler
MN 68:1 (2013) 110–14Mount Fuji: Icon of Japan by H. Byron EarhartGaynor Sekimori
MN 68:1 (2013) 114–18Im Wettstreit mit dem Westen: Japans Zeitalter der Ausstellungen 1854–1941 by Daniel HedingerMichael Facius
MN 68:1 (2013) 119–21Ainu Spirits Singing: The Living World of Chiri Yukie’s “Ainu Shin’yōshū” by Sarah M. StrongGary L. Ebersole
MN 68:1 (2013) 121–24Sex in Japan’s Globalization, 1870–1930: Prostitutes, Emigration and Nation-Building by Bill MihalopoulosBarbara Molony
MN 68:1 (2013) 125–28The People’s Post Office: The History and Politics of the Japanese Postal System, 1871–2010 by Patricia L. MaclachlanEiji Kawabata