Bibtex List of Materials Related to the Study of Japanese History

Bibtex List of Materials Related to the Study of Japanese History

BibTex List of Materials Related to the Study of Japanese History compiled by Chris Spackman January 21, 2003 References [1] Atsuko Abe. The Relationship between Japan and the European Union: Domestic Politics and Transnational Relations. Athlone Press, 1999. [2] Kob¯ o¯ Abe. Women in the Dunes. Knopf, 1964. Translated by E. Dale Saunders. [3] Kob¯ o¯ Abe. Friends. Grove, 1969. Translated by Donald Keene. [4] Kob¯ o¯ Abe. The Box Man. Putnam Perigee, 1981. Translated by E. Dale Saunders. [5] Hallett E. Abend. Japan Unmasked. 1941. [6] Joyce Ackroyd. Told Round a Brushwood Fire: The Autobiography of Arai Hakuseki. University of Arizona Press, 1980. translated by Joyce Ackroyd. [7] Roy H. Akagi. Japan’s Foreign Relations, 1542-1936. 1936. [8] Motojiro Akashi. Rakka Ryusui: Colonel Akashi’s Report on His Secret Cooperat?? 1988. [9] George Akita. Foundations of Constitutional Government in Modern Japan, 1868-1900. Harvard University Press, 1967. [10] George Akita. An examination of e.h. norman’s scholarship. The Journal of Japanese Studies, 3(2), 1977. 1 [11] Ryunosuke Akutagawa. Rashomon and Other Stories. Liveright, 1952. Translated by Takashi Kojima. [12] Ryunosuke Akutagawa. Japanese Short Stories. Liveright, 1961. Trans- lated by Takashi Kojima. [13] Rutherford Alcock. The Capital of the Tycoon: A Narrative of Three Years’ Residence in Japan. Harper, 1863. 2 volumes. [14] G. C. Allen. A Short Economic History of Modern Japan, 1867–1937. Macmillan, 1946. [15] G. C. Allen. Appointment in Japan. Athlone Press, 1983. [16] Laura W. Allen. Images of the poet saigyo as recluse. The Journal of Japanese Studies, 21(1), 1995? [17] Louis Allen. The End of the War in Asia. Hart-Davis, 1976. [18] Gary Dean Allinson. The moderation of organized labor in postwar japan. The Journal of Japanese Studies, 1(2), 1974. [19] Anne Allison. Nightwork: Sexuality, Pleasure and Corporate Masculinity in a Tokyo Hostess Club. University of Chicago Press, 1994. [20] Anne Allison. Memoirs of the orient. The Journal of Japanese Studies, 27(2), 2001. [21] Gary D. Allison. Suburban Tokyo. University of California Press, 1979. [22] David R. Ambaras. Social knowledge, cultural cabital, and the new middle class in japan, 1895–1912. The Journal of Japanese Studies, 24(1), 1998. [23] Marie Anchordoguy. Japan at a technological crossroads: Does change support convergence theory? The Journal of Japanese Studies, 23(2), 1997. [24] Joseph L. Anderson and Donald Ritchie. The Japanese Film: Art and Industry. Princeton University Press, 1982. [25] Stephen J. Anderson. The political economy of japanese saving: How postal savings and public pensions support high rates of household saving in japan. The Journal of Japanese Studies, 16(1), 1990. [26] Tsuruo Ando. Performing Arts of Japan: Bunraku, the Puppet Theater. Walker/Weatherhill, 1970. 2 [27] Masaharu Anesaki. Religious Life of the Japanese People. Kokusai Bunka Shinkokai, 1961. [28] Masaharu Anesaki. History of Japanese Religion. Tuttle, 1963. [29] Michiko Y. Aoki and Margaret B. Dardess, editors. As the Japanese See It. University Press of Hawaii, 1981. [30] David E. Apter and Nagayo Sawa. Against the State: Politics and Social Protest in Japan. Harvard University Press, 1984. [31] Hakuseki Arai. Lessons from History. University of Queensland, 1982. translated by Joyce Ackroyd. [32] Tatsuo Arima. The Failure of Freedom: A Portrait of Japanese Intellectu- als. Harvard University Press, 1969. [33] Takeo Arishima. A Certain Woman. Tokyo University Press, 1978. Trans- lated by Kenneth Strong. [34] Sawako Ariyoshi. The Doctor’s Wife. Kodansha, 1978. Translated by Wakako Hironaka and Ann Siller Kostant. [35] Sawako Ariyoshi. The River Ki. Kodansha, 1982. Translated by Mildred Tahara. [36] Sawako Ariyoshi. The Twilight Years. Kodansha, 1984. Translated by Mildred Tahara. [37] Peter J. Arnesen. The Medieval Japanese Daimyo. Yale University Press, 1979. [38] Peter J. Arnesen. The struggle for lordship in late heian japan: The case of aki. The Journal of Japanese Studies, 10(1), 1984. [39] Sadao Asada. Japan and the World, 1853–1952: A Bibliographic Guide to Japanese Scholarship in Foreign Relations. Columbia University Press, 1989. [40] Asahi Shimbunsha, editor. The Pacific Rivals: A Japanese View of Japanese-American Relations. Weatherhill & Asahi, 1972. [41] W. G. Aston. A History of Japanese Literature. Appleton, 1899. [42] W. G. Aston. Nihongi: Chronicles of Japan from the Earliest Times to A.D. 697. Tuttle, 1972. translated by W. G. Aston. 3 [43] Reiko Abe Auestad. Nakano shigeharu’s “goshaku no sake”. The Journal of Japanese Studies, 28(1), 2002. [44] Lewis Austin. Japan: The Paradox of Progress. Yale University Press, 1976. [45] Hans H. Baerwald. The Purge of Japanese Leaders Under the Occupation. University Press, 1959. [46] Hans H. Baerwald. Japan’s Parliament: An Introduction. Cambridge University Press, 1974. [47] Jackson Bailey, editor. Listening to Japan. Praeger, 1973. [48] W. Macmahon Ball. Japan, Enemy or Ally? Cassell, 1949. [49] W. Macmahon Ball. Intermittent Diplomat: The Japan and Batavia Di- aries of W. Macmahon Ball. Melbourne University Press, 1988. Edited by Alan Rix. [50] J. G. Ballard. Empire in the Sun. Simon and Schuster, 1984. [51] Nobuya Bamba. Japanese Diplomacy in a Dilemma: New Light on Japan’s China Policy, 1924–1929. University of British Columbia Press, 1973. [52] Doris G. Bargen. A Woman’s Weapon, Spirit Possession in the Tale of Genji. University Press of Hawaii, 1997. [53] Rodney Barker. Hiroshima Maidens: A Story of Courage, Compassion, and Survival. Viking, 1985. [54] Michael A. Barnhart. Japan Prepares for Total War: The Search for Eco- nomic Security, 1919–1941. Cornell University Press, 1987. [55] Andrew E. Barshay. State and Intellectual in Imperial Japan. University of California Press, 1988. [56] Andrew E. Barshay. Imagining democracy in postwar japan: Reflections on maruyama masao and modernism. The Journal of Japanese Studies, 18(2), 1992. [57] James R. Bartholomew. The Formation of Science in Japan: Building a Research Tradition. Yale University Press, 1989. 4 [58] David H. Bayley. Forces of Order: Police Behavior in Japan and the United States. University of California Press, 1975. [59] Richard K. Beardsley, John W. Hall, and Robert E. Ward. Village Japan. University of Chicago Press, 1959. [60] W. G. Beasley, editor. Select Documents on Japanese Foreign Policy, 1853–1868. Oxford University Press, 1955. translated by W. G. Beasley. [61] W. G. Beasley. The Modern History of Japan. Praeger, 1963. [62] W. G. Beasley. The Meiji Restoration. Stanford University Press, 1972. [63] W. G. Beasley, editor. Modern Japan: Aspects of History, Literature, and Society. Allen & Unwin, 1975. [64] W. G. Beasley. Japanese Imperialism, 1894-1945. Oxford University Press, 1987. [65] W. G. Beasley. The Rise of Modern Japan. St. Martin’s, 1995. [66] E. R. Beauchamp, editor. Windows on Japanese Education. Garland, 1991. [67] Edward R. Beauchamp and Akira Iriye, editors. Foreign Employees in Nineteenth Century Japan. Westview Press, 1990. [68] George M. Beckman. The Making of the Meiji Constitution: The Oli- garchs and the Constitutional Development of Japan, 1868–1891. Uni- versity of Kansas, 1957. [69] George M. Beckmann. The Modernization of China and Japan. Harper & Row, 1962. [70] George M. Beckmann and Okubo Genji. The Japanese Communist Party, 1922–1945. Stanford University Press, 1969. [71] Harumi Befu. Japan, An Anthropological Interpretation. Harper & Row, 1971. [72] Edward Behr. Hirohito: Behind the Myth. Villard Books, 1989. [73] Ronald Bell. The Japanese Experience. Weatherhill, 1973. [74] Robert N. Bellah. Tokugawa Religion: The Values of Pre-Industrial Japan. Free Press, 1957. 5 [75] Eyal Ben-Ari and Sabine Fruhstuck. “now we show it all!” normalization and the management of violence in japan’s armed forces. The Journal of Japanese Studies, 28(1), 2002. Fix umlauts in Fr-u-hst-u-ck. [76] Isaiah Ben-Dasan. The Japanese and the Jews. Weatherhill, 1972. [77] Ruth F. Benedict. The Chrysanthemum and the Sword. Houghton Mifflin, 1946. [78] David Bergamini. Japan’s Imperial Conspiracy. Morrow, 1971. [79] Gordon M. Berger. Parties Out of Power in Japan, 1931-1941. Princeton University Press, 1977. [80] Gail Bernstein. Japanese Marxist: A Portrait of Kawakami Hajime. Har- vard University Press, 1978. [81] Mary Elizabeth Berry. Hideyoshi. Harvard University Press, 1982. [82] Mary Elizabeth Berry. Public peace and private attachment: The goals and conduct of power in early modern japan. The Journal of Japanese Studies, 12(2), 1986. [83] Mary Elizabeth Berry. The Culture of Civil War in Kyoto. University of California Press, 1994. [84] Michael P. Birt. Samurai in passage: Tranformation of the sixteenth- century kanto. The Journal of Japanese Studies, 11(2), 1985. [85] Thomas A. Bisson. Shadow Over Asia: Rise of Militant Japan. 1941. [86] Herbert P. Bix. The pitfalls of scholastic criticism: A reply to norman’s critics. The Journal of Japanese Studies, 4(2), 1978. [87] Herbert P. Bix. Peasant Protest in Japan, 1590–1884. Yale University Press, 1986. [88] Herbert P. Bix. The showa emperor’s “monologue” and the problem of war responsibility. The Journal of Japanese Studies, 18(2), 1992. [89] Herbert P. Bix. Inventing the “symbol monarchy” in japan, 1945–1952. The Journal of Japanese Studies, 21(2), 1995. [90] John R. Black. Young Japan: Yokohama and Yedo 1858–79. Oxford University Press, 1969. 6 [91] Carmen Blacker. The Japanese Enlightenment: A Study of the Writings of Fukuzawa Yukichi. Cambridge University Press, 1964. [92] Carmen Blacker. The Catalpa Bow: A Study of Shamanistic Practices in Japan. Allen & Unwin, 1975. [93] Michael Blaker. Japanese International Negotiating Style. Columbia Uni- versity Press, 1977. [94] David Blath. Long Engagements: Maturity in Modern Japan. Stanford University Press, 1980. [95] David Blath, editor. Work and Lifecourse in Japan. SUNY Press, 1983. [96] William M. Bodiford. Sot¯ o¯ Zen in Medieval Japan. University Press of Hawaii, 1993. [97] Harold Bolitho. Treasures Among Men: The Fudai Daimyo in Tokugawa Japan. Yale University Press, 1974. [98] Sarane Spence Boocock. Controlled diversity: An overview of the japanese preschool system.

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