Checkout
- Digital Price: $14.00 USD (All sales final)
- Monumenta Nipponica
- Sophia University
- Review
- Special Duty: A History of the Japanese Intelligence Community by Richard J. Samuels (review) Volume 75, Number 1, 2020, pp. 165-168
To further meet your research needs, the complete digital issue from this journal is also available for purchase for $40.00 USD.
This issue contains 22 articles in total
- Anti-Nuclear Protest in Post-Fukushima Tokyo: Power Struggles by Alexander Brown (review)
- Dynasties and Democracy: The Inherited Incumbency Advantage in Japan by Daniel M. Smith (review)
- Miyazakiworld: A Life in Art by Susan Napier (review)
- Japan at the Crossroads: Conflict and Compromise after Anpo by Nick Kapur (review)
- Japan Rearmed: The Politics of Military Power by Sheila A. Smith (review)
- Sanitized Sex: Regulating Prostitution, Venereal Disease, and Intimacy in Occupied Japan, 1945–1952 by Robert Kramm (review)
- Tokyo Boogie-Woogie: Japan's Pop Era and Its Discontents by Hiromu Nagahara (review)
- Thought Crime: Ideology and State Power in Interwar Japan by Max M. Ward (review)
- Japan's Imperial Underworlds: Intimate Encounters at the Borders of Empire by David R. Ambaras, and: Lost Histories: Recovering the Lives of Japan's Colonial Peoples by Kirsten L. Ziomek (review)
- Special Duty: A History of the Japanese Intelligence Community by Richard J. Samuels (review)
- Contesting the Myths of Samurai Baseball: Cultural Representations of Japan's National Pastime by Christopher T. Keaveney (review)
- Japan's Castles: Citadels of Modernity in War and Peace by Oleg Benesch and Ran Zwigenberg (review)
- Playing War: Children and the Paradoxes of Modern Militarism in Japan by Sabine Frühstück (review)
- The Making of Japanese Settler Colonialism: Malthusianism and Trans-Pacific Migration, 1868–1961 by Sidney Xu Lu (review)
- Transforming Empire in Japan and East Asia: The Taiwan Expedition and the Birth of Japanese Imperialism by Robert Eskildsen (review)
- Cultivating Femininity: Women and Tea Culture in Edo and Meiji Japan by Rebecca Corbett (review)
- A Bowl for a Coin: A Commodity History of Japanese Tea by William Wayne Farris (review)
- China and Japan: Facing History by Ezra F. Vogel (review)
- How to Read a Japanese Poem by Steven D. Carter (review)
- The Massacre of Koreans in Yokohama in the Aftermath of the Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923
- The Author as Protagonist: Professionalizing the Craft of the Kusazōshi Writer
- A Format of Their Own: The Hundred-Poem Sequences of Sone no Yoshitada, Minamoto no Shitagō, and the Priest Egyō
In order to purchase digital content, you must be logged into your MyMUSE account.
For questions, please see Purchasing MUSE Content