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Monumenta Nipponica

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Monumenta Nipponica
DisciplineJapanese studies
LanguageEnglish
Edited byBettina Gramlich-Oka
Publication details
History1938-present
Publisher
FrequencySemiannual
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Monum. Nippon.
Indexing
ISSN0027-0741 (print)
1880-1390 (web)
JSTOR00270741
Links

Monumenta Nipponica is a semi-annual academic journal of Japanese studies, published in English. It is affiliated with Sophia University (Tokyo).[1] The journal is one of the oldest English-language academic journals in the field of Asian studies, being founded in 1938.[2] Although the journal originally published articles in several languages, such as French and German, the journal has published almost entirely in English since the early 1950s.

Contents

Each issue contains two to three main research articles, and around twenty-five reviews of recent books in Japanese studies, dealing with Japanese society, culture, history, religion, literature, art, anthropology, and related topics in Japanese and Asian studies. The journal occasionally publishes translations of Japanese language works.

Back issues of Monumenta Nipponica are accessible through JSTOR. From volume 60 (2005), all issues, including the most recent ones, are accessible through Project MUSE.[1]

Editors

The following persons have been editors-in-chief of Monumenta Nipponica:

  • Vols. 1–6 (1938–1943)—Johannes B. Kraus (founder)
  • Vols. 7–17 (1951–1961)—Wilhelm Schiffer
  • Vols. 17-18 (1962–1963)—Wilhelm Schiffer, Francis Mathy
  • Vols. 19–23 (1964–1968)—Joseph Pittau
  • Vols. 24–25 (1969–1970)—Edmund R. Skrzypczak
  • Vols. 26–52:1 (1971–1997)—Michael Cooper
  • Vols. 52:2–65:1 (1997–2010)—Kate Wildman Nakai
  • Vols. 65:2–67:2 (2010–2012)—Mark R. Mullins
  • Vols. 68:1–69:2 (2013–2014)—Richard A. Gardner, Caroline Hirasawa
  • Vols. 70:1–70:2 (2015)—Richard A. Gardner, Bettina Gramlich-Oka
  • Vols. 71:1– (2016–present)—Bettina Gramlich-Oka, Sven Saaler

References

  1. ^ a b "Monumenta Nipponica". Sophia University. Retrieved 2017-07-19.
  2. ^ "Monumenta Nipponica". Sophia University. Retrieved 2017-07-19.

Further reading

External links