Askew, David (2003) ‘Empire and the Anthropologist: Torii Ryūzō and Early Japanese Anthropology’ , Japanese Review of Cultural Anthropology4: 133–154 .
2.
Barshay, Andrew E. (1996) ‘Toward a History of the Social Sciences in Japan’ , Positions4(2): 217–251 .
3.
Fabian, Johannes (1983) Time and the Other: How Anthropology Makes its Object. New York: Columbia University Press .
4.
Kuwayama, Takami (2004) Native Anthropology: The Japanese Challenge to Western Academic Hegemony. Melbourne: Trans Pacific Press .
5.
McCormack, Gavan and Yoshio Sugimoto (1988) ‘Introduction: Modernization and Beyond’, in G. McCormack and Y. Sugimoto (eds) The Japanese Trajectory: Modernization and Beyond, pp. 1–14. Cambridge, New York and Melbourne: Cambridge University Press .
6.
Miyoshi, Masao and H.D. Harootunian (1988) ‘Introduction’ [editorial introduction to feature articles on ‘Postmodernism and Japan’] , South Atlantic Quarterly87(3): 387–399 .
7.
Nakao, Katsumi (2000) ‘Joron: Shokuminchi jinruigaku no shatei’ [Introduction: The Scope of Colonial Anthropology] in K. Nakao (ed.) Shokuminchi Jinruigaku no Tenbō[A Prospect of Colonial Athropology], pp. 15–44. Tokyo: Fukyo-sha .
8.
Ota, Yoshinobu (1998) Transposition no Shisō: Bunka Jinruigaku no Sai-Sōzō[Transposition: Reconceptualization of Cultural Anthropology]. Kyoto: Sekaishisō-sha .
9.
Shimizu, Akitoshi (1998) ‘Nihon no jinruigaku’ [Japanese Anthropology] in T. Funabiki (ed.) Bunka Jinruigaku no Susume[An Encouragement of Cultural Anthropology], pp. 111–133. Tokyo: Chikuma Shobō .
10.
Yamaguchi, Masao (1966) ‘Jinruigakuteki ninshiki no sho-zentei: Sengo nihon jinruigaku no shisō jōkyō’ [Conditions of Anthropological Perception: Anthropological Thoughts in Postwar Japan] , Shisō[Thought]508: 21–33 .