Founded in 1938 and published semiannually by Sophia University
Monographs (1966) 1–163Folk Cultures of Japan and East AsiaJoseph Pittau
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 249–65Tanizaki Jun-ichirō, 1886–1965Edward D. Seidensticker
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 266–72Yokoi Shōnan’s View of ChristianityRichard T. Chang
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 273–304The Ryukyuan Government Scholarship Students to China 1392–1868: Based on a Short Essay by Nakahara Zenchū, 1962Mitsugu Matsuda
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 305–21Great Britain and the Emergence of Japan as a Naval PowerJohn Curtis Perry
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 322–33The Psychological Orientation of The Mother-Child Relationship in JapanBetty B. Lanham
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 334–45Lessons from Japanese ImperialismHilary Conroy
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 346–53Perspectives on Japanese Foreign PolicyDouglas H. Mendel, Jr.
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 354–91Absolute Nothingness: Preliminary Considerations on a Central Notion in the Philosophy of Nishida Kitarō and the Kyoto SchoolHans Waldenfels
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 396–409ShukkonkyōTōkoku Kitamura, Translated by Kenneth Strong
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 392–409“Shukkonkyō” or The Magic MirrorKenneth Strong
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 410–13Readings in Japanese Language and Linguistics. Part I. Selections by Joseph K. Yamagiwa; Part II. Annotations by Joseph K. YamagiwaAngelus Aschoff
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 413–14Zen to rinri (Zen and Ethics) by Ōta TeizōFumiaki Momose
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 414–15The Nature and Truth of the Great Religions. Toward a Philosophy of Religion by August Karl ReischauerJoseph J. Spae
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 415–17Kumamoto bando kenkyū, Nihon protestantism no ichi genryū to tenkai, (Studies on Kumamoto Band, A Stream of Japanese Protestantism and Its Development) by Institute for Humanistic Sciences, Dōshisha UniversityShun’ichi H. Takayanagi
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 417–18Kinsei Nihon no hihanteki seishin, (Critical Spirit in Pre-Meiji Japan) by Nakamura HajimeShun’ichi H. Takayanagi
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 418–19Science and Religion by Daisaku IkedaNobuo Koyama
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 419–20Ochikubo Monogatari or The Tale of the Lady Ochikubo: A Tenth Century Japanese Novel by Wilfrid Whitehouse, Eizo YanagisawaMisako Himuro
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 420–21W. B. Yeats and Japan by Shōtarō OshimaPatrick O'Flanagan
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 422Oyatoi gaikokujin Meiji Nihon no wakiyaku tachi, (Foreign Employees and Their Role in the Meiji Era) by Umetani NoboruShun’ichi H. Takayanagi
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 423–24Nihon bunkashi ronkō (Essays on the Cultural History of Japan) by Nishida NaojirōShun’ichi H. Takayanagi
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 424–29Nihon ongaku no rekishi (History of Japanese Music) by Kikkawa EishiRamiro Planas
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 429–30Political Modernization in Japan and Turkey by Robert E. Ward, Dankwart A. RustowWilliam A. Laney
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 430–31Geht Japan nach Links? by Ingeborg Y. Wendt; Nihon wa sakei suru ka? (Japanese translation of Ingeborg Y. Wendt, Geht Japan nach Links?) by Ingeborg Y. Wendt, Tanaka GenHitoshi Aiba
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 432Season of Violence and Other Stories by Shintaro Ishihara, John G. Mills, Yoshie Takayama, Ken TremayneJohn M. Connolly
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 431–32……Hiroshima Plus 20 by the New York TimesWilliam A. Laney
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 436Annual Customs and Festivals in Peking. As Recorded in the YEN-CHING SUI-SHIH-CHI by Tun Li-ch’en, Derk BoddeMichael R. Saso
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 433–36The Films of Akira Kurosawa by Donald Richie; The Japanese Movie: An Illustrated History by Donald RichieJosé María de Vera
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 437Kuan-Tzu, A Repository of Early Chinese Thought by W. Allyn RickettMichael R. Saso
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 436–37The Cantonese Speaker’s Dictionary by Roy T. CowlesMichael R. Saso
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 432–33Yamamoto: The Man Who Menaced America by John Deane PotterWilliam A. Laney
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 422–23They Came to Japan. An Anthology of European Reports on Japan, 1543–1640 by Michael CooperArcadio Schwade
MN 21:3/4 (1966) 1966Monumenta Nipponica Volume 21, Number 3/4, 1966
MN 21:1/2 (1966) 1–46Takizawa Bakin, 1767–1848: A Restoration that FailedLeon M. Zolbrod
MN 21:1/2 (1966) 47–60Japanese Management: The Cultural BackgroundWilliam H. Brown
MN 21:1/2 (1966) 61–96Attitudes of Japanese Students Toward Foreign CountriesFernando M. Basabe
MN 21:1/2 (1966) 97–113Intra-Familial Linguistic Usage in JapanHerbert Passin
MN 21:1/2 (1966) 114–24“Excessive Competition” in Japanese BusinessMartin Bronfenbrenner
MN 21:1/2 (1966) 125–70The “Five Ranks” Dialectic of the Sōtō-Zen School in the Light of Kuei-Fêng Tsung-Mi’s “Ariya-Shiki” SchemeAlfonso Verdú
MN 21:1/2 (1966) 177–202Ugetsu MonogatariAkinari Ueda, Translated by E. Dale Saunders
MN 21:1/2 (1966) 171–202“Ugetsu Monogatari” or Tales of Moonlight and RainE. Dale Saunders
MN 21:1/2 (1966) 203–209The Land of Natural Affirmation: Pre-Buddhist JapanAlicia Orloff Matsunaga
MN 21:1/2 (1966) 210–12Nishida Kitarō, hito to shisō, (Nishida Kitarō: Man and Thought) by Shimomura ToratarōLothar G. Knauth
MN 21:1/2 (1966) 212–14Studies in Shinto Thought by Muraoka Tsunetsugu, D. M. Brown, J. T. ArakiFrancisco Pérez Ruiz
MN 21:1/2 (1966) 214–16The Three Pillars of Zen: Teaching, Practice, and Enlightenment by Philip KapleauWilliam Johnston
MN 21:1/2 (1966) 217–18Chih-I (538–597). An Introduction to the Life and Ideas of a Chinese Buddhist Monk by Leon HurvitzHeinrich Dumoulin
MN 21:1/2 (1966) 218–19Abstraktion und Intuition als Wege zur Wahrheit in Yoga und Zen by Alfonso VerdúBenito Ortolani
MN 21:1/2 (1966) 219–20Nihon Kiristokyō bunken mokuroku, Meiji ki (A Bibliography of Christianity in Japan-Meiji Era) Part II (1859–1912) by Committee on Asian Cultural Studies; Nihon shisōshi bunken kaidai (A Descriptive Bibliography of Japanese Intellectual History) by Ōkura seishinbunka kenkyūjoShun’ichi H. Takayanagi