Founded in 1938 and published semiannually by Sophia University
MN 51:4 (1996) 518–520The Beginnings of Western Music in Meiji Era Japan by Ury EppsteinGerald Groemer
MN 51:4 (1996) 521–523Art of Edo Japan: The Artist and the City, 1615–1868 by Christine GuthKaren M. Gerhart
MN 51:4 (1996) 523–526Educating Hearts and Minds: Reflections on Japanese Preschool and Elementary Education by Catherine C. LewisDaiyo Sawada
MN 51:4 (1996) 526–527Jomon of Japan: The World’s Oldest Pottery by Douglas Moore KenrickPeter Bleed
MN 51:4 (1996) 1996Monumenta Nipponica Volume 51, Number 4, 1996
MN 51:3 (1996) 279–307A Tour of Duty: Kurume Hanshi Edo Kinban Nagaya EmakiConstantine Nomikos Vaporis
MN 51:3 (1996) 309–16Nishida and HearnMichiko Yusa
MN 51:3 (1996) 313–16Tanabe Ryūji, Koizumi YakumoKitarō Nishida, Translated by Michiko Yusa
MN 51:3 (1996) 317–56Hero as Murderer in ChikamatsuC. Andrew Gerstle
MN 51:3 (1996) 338–56Futago Sumidagawa: Twins at the Sumida RiverMonzaemon Chikamatsu, Translated by C. Andrew Gerstle
MN 51:3 (1996) 357–74Purely Mass or Massively Pure? The Division between ‘Pure’ and ‘Mass’ LiteratureMatthew C. Strecher
MN 51:3 (1996) 375–77Japanese Loyalism Reconstrued: Yamagata Daini’s Ryūshi shinron of 1759 by Bob Tadashi WakabayashiKate Wildman-Nakai
MN 51:3 (1996) 377–80The Meiji Unification through the Lens of Ishikawa Prefecture by James C. BaxterJames L. McClain
MN 51:3 (1996) 380–81The Lumber Industry in Early Modern Japan by Conrad TotmanPhilip C. Brown
MN 51:3 (1996) 382–83Avatars of Vengeance: Japanese Drama and the Soga Literary Tradition by Laurence R. KominzStanleigh H. Jones
MN 51:3 (1996) 383–86Visions of Power: Imagining Medieval Japanese Buddhism by Bernard Faure, Phyllis BrooksSteven Heine
MN 51:3 (1996) 386–87Shapers of Japanese Buddhism by Yusen Kashiwahara, Koyu Sonoda, Gaynor SekimoriPaul O. Ingram
MN 51:3 (1996) 387–88A New Woman of Japan: A Political Biography of Katō Shidzue by Helen M. HopperLinda L. Johnson
MN 51:3 (1996) 389–91Japanese Women: New Feminist Perspectives of the Past, Present and Future by Kumiko Fujimura-Fanselow, Atsuko KamedaMerry I. White
MN 51:3 (1996) 391–92Sociology and Society of Japan by Nozomu KawamuraWilliam W. Kelly
MN 51:3 (1996) 392–94Kendō: Its Philosophy, History and Means to Personal Growth by Minoru KiyotaKarl F. Friday
MN 51:3 (1996) 394–97Makiko’s Diary: A Merchant Wife in 1910 Kyoto by Nakano Makiko, Kazuko SmithHelen M. Hooper
MN 51:3 (1996) 397–400Picturing Japaneseness: Monumental Style, National Identity, Japanese Film by Darrell William DavisBrian Lewis
MN 51:3 (1996) 400–402Meiji Revisited: The Sites of Victorian Japan by Dallas FinnJohn Mock
MN 51:3 (1996) 402–405A Poisonous Cocktail? Aum Shinrikyo’s Path to Violence by Ian Reader; The Cult at the End of the World. The Incredible Story of Aum by David E. Kaplan, Andrew Marshall; Holy Terror: Armageddon in Tokyo by D. W. BrackettRichard A. Gardner
MN 51:3 (1996) 1996Monumenta Nipponica Volume 51, Number 3, 1996
MN 51:2 (1996) 143–51Ōe no Masafusa and the Practice of Heian AutobiographyMarian Ury and Robert Borgen
MN 51:2 (1996) 148–51Bonen no Ki: A Record of My Twilight YearsŌe no Masafusa, Translated by Marian Ury and Robert Borgen
MN 51:2 (1996) 153–70Female Self-Writing: Takamure Itsue’s Hi no Kuni no Onna no NikkiRonald P. Loftus
MN 51:2 (1996) 171–87Dodoitsubō Senka and the Yose of EdoGerald Groemer
MN 51:2 (1996) 189–217The Way of Yin and Yang: A Tradition Revived, Sold, AdoptedLee A. Butler
MN 51:2 (1996) 219–44An Errant Priest: Sasayaki TakeFrederick G. Kavanagh
MN 51:2 (1996) 225–44The Whispering BambooTranslated by Frederick G. Kavanagh
MN 51:2 (1996) 245–56Recent German Books on JapanCarl Steenstrup
MN 51:2 (1996) 257–59Ikki: Social Conflict and Political Protest in Early Modern Japan by James W. WhiteAnne Walthall
MN 51:2 (1996) 259–61Japan Encounters the Barbarian: Japanese Travellers in America and Europe by W. G. BeasleyRoy S. Hanashiro
MN 51:2 (1996) 262–63Saigō Takamori: The Man Behind the Myth by Charles L. YatesSidney DeVere Brown
MN 51:2 (1996) 263–65Principle, Praxis, and the Politics of Educational Reform in Meiji Japan by Mark E. LincicomeDonald Roden
MN 51:2 (1996) 265–68Wind in the Pines: Classic Writings of the Way of Tea as a Buddhist Path by Dennis HirotaTheodore M. Ludwig
MN 51:2 (1996) 268–70The Passionate Art of Kitagawa Utamaro by Shūgō Asano, Timothy ClarkDonald Jenkins
MN 51:2 (1996) 270–72Lacquerware from the Weston Collection: A Selection of Inro and Boxes by Julia MeechHugh Wylie
MN 51:2 (1996) 273–75Discourses of the Vanishing: Modernity, Phantasm, Japan by Marilyn IvyEyal Ben-Ari
MN 51:2 (1996) 276–77Textiles and Industrial Transition in Japan by Dennis L. McNamaraBarbara Molony
MN 51:2 (1996) 1996Monumenta Nipponica Volume 51, Number 2, 1996
MN 51:1 (1996) 1–15The Nature of the Kami: Ueda Akinari and Tandai Shōshin RokuSusanna Fessler
MN 51:1 (1996) 8–15Selections from Tandai Shōshin RokuAkinari Ueda, Translated by Susanna Fessler
MN 51:1 (1996) 17–52The Visions of a Creative Artist: Zenchiku’s Rokurin Ichiro Treatises (Part 4)Zenchiku, Translated by Mark J. Nearman
MN 51:1 (1996) 53–79In Pursuit of Himiko: Postwar Archaeology and the Location of YamataiWalter Edwards