Seven Demon Stories from Medieval Japan

Home > Other > Seven Demon Stories from Medieval Japan > Page 41
Seven Demon Stories from Medieval Japan Page 41

by Noriko T. Reider


  2002.

  ZNET

  Zoku Nihon emaki taisei

  Abe Tsuyoshi. Mononofudomo: Konjaku monogatari no bushitachi. Tokyo: Tokyo Tosho Shup-

  pankai, 2010.

  Akimoto Kichirō, ed. Fudoki. Vol. 2 of NKBT. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 1958.

  Akiyama Terukazu. “Amewakahiko zōshi emaki o meguru shomondai.” Kokka 985.12

  (1975): 3–25.

  Amano Fumio. “Shuten Dōji: nihon kaanibarizumu no keifu no nakade.” Kokubungaku kai-

  shaku to kanshō 22.16 (1977): 104–5.

  Amano Fumio. “Shuten Dōji kō.” Nōkenkyū to hyōron 8 (1979): 16–27.

  Amino Yoshihiko. Igyō no ōken. Tokyo: Heibonsha, 1986.

  Andō Tamiji. Shōmetsu to saisei no yūgi: Haseo zōshi no eizō to jikan. Tokyo: Kinjudō Shuppan, 2006.

  Andrews, Allan E. The Teachings Essential for Rebirth: A Study of Genshin’s Ōjōyōshū. Tokyo: Sophia University, 1973.

  Aoki Kazuo, Inaoka Kōji, Sasayama Haruo, and Shirafuji Noriyuki, eds. Shoku Nihongi, vol.

  4. Vol. 15 of SNKBT. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 1995.

  Apuleius. Cupid & Psyche. Ed. E.J. Kenney. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990.

  Araki Hiroyuki. “Onihachi denshō o megutte—tsuchigumo to yamauba.” Shizen to bunka

  60.3 (1999): 4–9.

  Araki, James T. “Bunshō Zōshi: The Tale of Bunsho, the Saltmaker.” MN 38.3 (Autumn

  1983): 221–49.

  Araki, James T. “Otogi-zōshi and Nara-ehon.” MN 36.1 (1981): 1–20.

  Arntzen, Sonja, trans. The Kagerō Diary: A Woman’s Autobiographical Text from Tenth-Century

  Japan. Ann Arbor: Center for Japanese Studies, University of Michigan, 1997.

  DOI: 10.7330/9781607324904.c009

  262

  Bibliography

  Asahara Yoshiko, Haruta Akira, and Matsuo Ashie, eds. Yashiro-bon kōya-bon taishō Heike

  monogatari, vol. 3. Tokyo: Shinten-sha, 1990.

  Asami Kazuhiko, ed. Jikkinshō. Vol. 51 of SNKBZ. Tokyo: Shōgakukan, 1997.

  Aston, William G., trans. Nihongi: Chronicles of Japan from the Earliest Times to AD 697. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner, 1896. Rpt. London: George Allen and Unwin, 1956.

  Averbuch, Irit. The Gods Come Dancing: A Study of The Japanese Ritual Dance of Yamabushi

  Kagura. New York: Cornell University East Asian Program, 1995.

  Ayusawa Hisashi. Minamoto no Raikō. Tokyo: Yoshikawa Kōbunkan, 1968.

  Baba Akiko. Oni no kenkyū. Tokyo: Chikuma Shobō, 1988. Rpt. of Tokyo: San’ichi Shobō, 1971.

  Baba Kazuo. “‘Tsuchigumo’ no kenkyū—jō, chū, ge.” Kikan hōgaku 59.06 (1989): 88–93;

  60.09 (1989): 88–93; 62.03 (1990): 78–81.

  Baird, Merrily C. Symbols of Japan: Thematic Motifs in Art and Design. New York: Rizzoli International Publications, 2001.

  Bakhtin, Mikhail M. The Dialogic Imagination. Trans. Caryl Emerson and Michael Holquist.

  Austin: University of Texas Press, 1981.

  Bender, Mark. Plum and Bamboo: China’s Suzhou Chantefable Tradition. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2003.

  Bethe, Monica, and Karen Brazell, trans. “Yamamba.” In Traditional Japanese Theater: An

  Anthology of Plays, ed. Karen Brazell, 207–25. New York: Columbia University Press,

  1998.

  Blacker, Carmen. “The Divine Boy in Japanese Buddhism.” Asian Folklore Studies 22 (1963): 77–88.

  Bock, Felicia Gressitt, trans. Engi-Shiki: Procedures of The Engi Era. Tokyo: Sophia University, 1970.

  Bodiford, William M. Sōtō Zen in Medieval Japan. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1993.

  Borgen, Robert. Sugawara no Michizane and the Early Heian Court. Honolulu: University of

  Hawaii Press, 1994. Rpt. of Cambridge, MA: Council on East Asian Studies, Har-

  vard University, distributed by Harvard University Press, 1986.

  Bosuton Bijutsukan Nihon bijutsu no shihō. Ed. Tokyo kokuritsu hakubutsukan, Nagoya Boston Bijubutsukan, Kyūshū kokuritsu hakubutsukan, Osaka shiritsu hakubutsukan, and

  NHK Puromōshon. Tokyo: NHK Puromōshon, 2012.

  Carter, Steven D. Regent Redux: A Life of The Statesman-Scholar Ichijō Kaneyoshi. Ann Arbor: Center for Japanese Studies, University of Michigan, 1996.

  Chigiri Kōsai. Oni no kenkyū. Tokyo: Tairiku Shobō, 1977.

  Chikamatsu Monzaemon. Chikamatsu jōrurishū. Ed. Shuzui Kenji and Ōkubo Tadakuni. Vol.

  50 of NKBT. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 1959.

  Chikamatsu Monzaemon. “Kako no Kyōshin nanahaka meguri.” Vol. 9 of Chikamatsu

  zenshū, 225–338. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 1988.

  Chikamatsu Monzaemon. Chikamatsu jōrurishū. Ed. Matsuzaki Hitoshi, Hara Michio, Iguchi

  Hiroshi, and Ōhashi Tadayoshi. Chikamatsu jōrurishū. 2 vols. Vols. 91 and 92 of

  SNKBT. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 1995.

  Chikamatsu Monzaemon. “Kan hasshū tsunagi uma.” Vol. 2 of Chikamatsu jōruri shū. Vol.

  92 of SNKBT, 355–462. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 1995.

  Chikamatsu Monzaemon. “Tethered Steed and the Eight Provinces of Kantō.” In Chika-

  matsu 5 Late Plays, trans. and annotated by C. Andrew Gerstle, 325–427. New York:

  Columbia University Press, 2001.

  Childs, Margaret H. “Chigo Monogatari: Love Stories or Buddhist Sermons?” MN 35

  (1980): 127–51.

  Childs, Margaret H. “Didacticism in Medieval Short Stories: Hatsuse Monogatari and

  Akimichi.” MN 42.3 (Autumn 1987): 253–88.

  Chō Yōichi. “Toyokuni no tsuchigumo.” Kōbe jogakuin daigaku ronshū 22.3 (1976): 99–118.

  Bibliography

  263

  Como, Michael. Weaving and Binding: Immigrant Gods and Female Immortals in Ancient Japan.

  Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2009.

  Copeland, Rebecca L., and Esperanza Ramirez-Christensen, eds. The Father-Daughter Plot:

  Japanese Literary Women and the Law of The Father. Honolulu: University of Hawaii

  Press, 2001.

  Cornell, Laurel L. “The Deaths of old Women: Folklore and Differential Mortality in

  Nineteenth-Century Japan.” In Recreating Japanese Women, 1600– 1945, ed. Gail Lee

  Bernstein, 71–88. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991.

  Daniels, F. J. Selections from Japanese Literature. London: Lund Humphries, 1958.

  Dix, Monika. “Hachikazuki: Revealing Kannon’s Crowning Compassion in Muromachi

  Fiction.” Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 36.2 (2009): 279–93.

  Doi Kōchi. Shinwa・ densetsu no kenkyū. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 1973.

  Dorson, Richard M. Folk Legends of Japan. Rutland, VT: Charles Tuttle, 1962.

  Dykstra Yoshiko and Yoko Kurata, trans. “The Yokube-Soshi: Conflicts between Social

  Convention, Human Love, and Religious Renunciation.” Japanese Religions 26.2 (July

  2001): 117–29.

  Earhart, H. Byron. “Introduction.” In Shugendō: Essays on the Structure of Japanese Folk Religion, by Miyake Hitoshi, 1–7. Ann Arbor: Center for Japanese Studies, University of

  Michigan, 2001.

  Eiseibunko Museum. Haseo sōshi. Accessed November 13, 2013. http://www.eiseibunko

  .com/collection/chusei1.html.

  Eishin. Hokekyō jikidanshō: Kindaiin zōhon, vol. 1. Kyoto: Rinsen Shoten, 1979.

  Engi-shiki: Procedures of The Engi Era. Trans. with intro and notes by Felicia Gressitt Bock.

  Tokyo: Sophia University, 1970.

  Eubanks, Charlotte. Miracles of Book and Body: Buddhist Textual Culture and Medieval Japan.

  Berkeley: University of California Press, 2011.

  Fairchild, William P. “Shamanism in Japan.” Folklore Studies 21 (1962): 1–122.

  Farris, William Wayne. Sacred Texts and Buried Treasures: Issues in the Historical Archaeology of Ancient Japan. Honolulu: University
of Hawaii Press, 1998.

  Fogel, Joshua A. Articulating the Sinosphere: Sino-Japanese Relations in Space and Time.

  Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2009.

  Foster, Michael Dylan. The Book of Yokai: Mysterious Creatures of Japanese Folklore. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2015.

  Foster, Michael Dylan. Pandemonium and Parade: Japanese Monsters and the Culture of Yōkai.

  Berkeley: University of California Press, 2009.

  Franz, Marie-Louise von. Shadow and Evil in Fairy Tales. Zurich: Spring Publications, 1974.

  Fróis, Luís. “Nichiō bunka hikaku.” Trans. Okada Akio. In Nihon ōkokuki, Nichiō bunka

  hikaku. Vol. 11 of Daikōkai jidai sōsho, 495–636. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 1965.

  Fujii Takashi, ed. Muromachi jidai monogatari shū. Vol. 9 of Otogi zōshi kenkyū sōsho. Tokyo: Kuresu Shuppan, 2003.

  Fujioka Tadaharu, Inukai Kiyoshi, Nakano Kōichi, and Ishii Fumio, eds. Izumi Shikibu

  nikki, Murasaki Shikibu nikki, Sarashina nikki, Sanuki no suke no nikki. Vol. 26 of SNKBZ. Tokyo: Shōgakukan, 1994.

  Fujishiro Tsuguo. “Kongetsu no ono ‘Kochō.’ ” Kadan 12.2 (1998): 122–25.

  Fujiwara Akihira. Shin Sarugōki. Ed. Kawaguchi Hisao. Tokyo: Heibonsha, 1983.

  Fujiwara Kintō. Hokuzanshō. Ed. Shintō taikei hensankai. Tokyo: Shintō taikei hensankai,

  1992.

  Fujiwara Michinaga. Midō kanpakuki zen chūshaku Kankō yonen. Ed. Yamanaka Yutaka.

  Kyoto: Shibunkaku Shuppan, 2006.

  Fujiwara Michinaga. Midō kanpakuki zen chūshaku Kannin gannen. Ed. Yamanaka Yutaka.

  Takashina Shoten, 1985.

  264

  Bibliography

  Fujiwara no Sanesuke. Shōyūki: Zōho shiryō taisei bekkan. 3 vols. Ed. Zōho shiryō taisei kankōkai. Kyoto: Rinsen Shoten, 1965.

  Fujiwara Tadazane and Nakahara no Moromoto. Chūgaishō. Ed. Yamane Taisuke and

  Ikegami Jun’ichi. In Gōdanshō, Chūgaishō, Fukego Vol. 32 of SNKBT, ed. Gotō Akio, Ikegami Jun’ichi, and Yamane Taisuke, 255–359. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 1997.

  Fukagawa Tōru, ed. Heihō hijutsu ikkansho, Hokinaiden kin’u gyokutoshū, Shokunin yuraisho.

  Vol. 3 of Nihon koten isho sōkan. Tokyo: Gendai Shichō Shinsha, 2004.

  Fukasawa Shichirō. “Narayamabushi kō.” In Narayamabushikō, Fuefukigawa, 245–77. Tokyo:

  Shinchōsha, 1981.

  Fukuda Akira, ed. “Mukashibanashi no keitai.” Vol. 4 of Nihon mukashibanashi kenkyū shūsei.

  Tokyo: Meicho Shuppan, 1984.

  Fukui Teisuke, annotated. Ise monogatari. In Taketori monogatari, Ise monogatari, Yamato monogatari, Heichū monogatari. Vol. 12 of SNKBT. Tokyo: Shogakukan, 1994.

  Fukushima Yoshikazu. “Tsuchigumo densetsu no seiritsu ni tsuite.” Jinbun ronkyū 21.2

  (1971): 47–74.

  Gan, Bao. Sōshinki. Trans. Takeda Akira. Tokyo: Heibonsha, 1964.

  Gan, Bao. Sou shen ji. Ed. Wang Shaoying. Beijing: Zhonghua shu ju, 1979.

  Geddes, John Van Ward. “A Partial Translation and Study of the Jikkinshō.” 2 vols. PhD

  dissertation, Washington University, St. Louis, Mo, 1976.

  Genshin. Ōjōyōshū. Ed. Ishida Mizumaro. Vol. 6 of NST. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 1970.

  Gerstle, Andrew, trans. Chikamatsu 5 Late Plays. New York: Columbia University Press,

  2001.

  Gerstle, Andrew. “Gidayū botsugo no Chikamatsu: Kokusen’ya kassen, Kanhasshū tsunagi-

  uma.” In Chikamatsu no jidai. Vol. 8 of Iwanami Kōza Kabuki Bunraku, ed. Torigoi Benzō, Uchiyama Mikiko, and Watanabe Tantoisu, 165–86. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten,

  1998.

  Gifushi rekishi hakubutsukan, ed. Kijin to majinai. Gifu: Gifushi rekishi hakubutsukan, 1989.

  Glassman, Hank. The Face of Jizō: Image and Cult in Medieval Japanese Buddhism. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2012.

  Goodich, Michael. Other Middle Ages: Witnesses at the Margins of Medieval Society. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1998.

  Gorai Shigeru. Oni mukashi. Tokyo: Kadokawa Shoten, 1984.

  Gosukō-in. Kanmon nikki. 3 vols. Tokyo: Kunaichō Shoryōbu, 2002–6.

  Hamanaka Osamu. “Otogi zōshi ‘Izumi shikibu’ ‘Koshikibu’ ron.” Kokubungaku: kaishaku to

  kanshō 60.8 (1995): 119–24.

  Hanada Kiyoteru. “Gajinden (shō).” In Muromachi shōsetsu shū. Vol. 15 of Hanada Kiyoteru zenshū, 418–69. Tokyo: Kōdansha, 1978.

  Hanawa Hokiichi, ed. Gunsho ruijū. Vols. 5, 27, and 28. Tokyo: Zoku gunsho ruijū kanseikai, 1986–87.

  Hanawa Hokiichi, ed. “Jinkyōron.” Vol. 32 of Zoku Gunsho ruijū, 223–48. Tokyo: Zoku

  gunsho ruijū kanseikai, 1958.

  Hanawa Hokiichi, ed. Zoku gunsho ruijū. Parts 1 and 2 of vol. 32. Tokyo: Zoku gunsho ruijū

  kanseikai, 1958 and 1977.

  Hanawa Hokiichi, ed. Zoku gunsho ruijū. Part 1 of Hoi 2. Tokyo: Zoku gunsho ruijū kanseikai, 1985.

  Hara Yukie. “Heianchō ni okeru ‘obasute’ no denshō to tenkai.” Nihon bungaku fūdo gakkai

  kiji 22 (1997): 18–28.

  Hara Yukie. “‘Obasute’ kō—yōkyoku to kago no aida.” Geinō 10 (2004): 23–34.

  Hasegawa Tadashi, ed. Taiheiki. Vol. 54 of SNKBZ. Tokyo: Shogakukan, 1994.

  Hayami Tasuku. Jigoku to gokuraku: Ōjōyōshū to kizoku shakai. Tokyo: Yoshikawa Kōbunkan,

  1998.

  Bibliography

  265

  Hayashiya Tatsusaburō. “Gōsonsei seiritsuki ni okeru machishū bunka.” In Chūsei bunka no

  kichō, 215–35. Tokyo: Tokyo daigaku shuppan, 1953.

  Hayek, Matthias. “The Eight Trigrams and Their Changes: An Inquiry into Japanese Early

  Modern Divination.” Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 38.2 (2011): 329–68.

  Hayek, Matthias, and Hayashi Makoto, eds. “Editors’ Introduction: Onmyōdō in Japanese

  History.” Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 40.1 (2013): 1–18.

  Higo Kazuo. “Yamata no orochi (shō).” In Ijin・ ikenie. Vol. 7 of Kaii no minzokugaku, ed.

  Komatsu Kazuhiko, 28–77. Tokyo: Kawade Shobō, 2001.

  Hijikata Yōichi. “Haseo kyō sōshi.” Vol. 5 of Taikei monogatari bungaku shi, ed. Mitani Eiichi, 80–89. Tokyo: Yūseidō, 1991.

  Hiroshima University Library. “Hanayo no hime.” In Hiroshima daigaku toshokan Hiroshima

  daigaku shozō Nara ehon Muromachi jidai monogatari, ed. Itō Kunio. Accessed January

  2009. http://opac.lib.hiroshima-u.ac.jp/portal/dc/kyodo/naraehon/research/01/.

  Hirota Tetsumichi. “Jinzō ningen no setsuwa to ronri.” In Eizan no waka to setsuwa, ed. Arai Eizō, 155–73. Kyoto: Sekai Shisōsha, 1991.

  Hisamatsu Sen’ichi and Nishio Minoru, eds. Karon-shū, Noh gakuron-shū. Vol. 65 of NKBT.

  Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 1961.

  Honda, H. H., trans. The Shin Kokinshu: The 13th-Century Anthology Edited by Imperial Edict.

  Tokyo: Hokuseido, 1970.

  Honda Yasuji. “Dengaku.” Vol. 21 of Sekai daihyakka jiten. Tokyo: Heibonsha, 1972.

  Hori Ichirō. Folk Religion in Japan: Continuity and Change. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1968.

  Hsüan Hua. The Wonderful Dharma Lotus Flower Sutra, vol. 2. Trans. Buddhist Text Transla-

  tion Society. San Francisco: Sino American Buddhist Association, 1977. (10 vols.,

  1976–82.)

  Hudson, Mark J. Ruins of Identity: Ethnogenesis in the Japanese Islands. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1999.

  Ichiko Teiji. Chūsei shōsetsu no kenkyū. Tokyo: Tokyo daigaku shuppan, 1955.

  Ichiko Teiji. Mikan chūsei shōsetsu. Vol. 18 of Koten bunko. Tokyo: Koten Bunko, 1948.

  Ichiko Teiji, ed. Heike monogatari. 2 vols. Vols. 45 and 46 of SNKBZ. Tokyo: Shōgakukan, 1994.

  Ichiko Teiji, ed. Otogi zōshi. Vol. 13 of Zusetsu Nihon no koten. Tokyo: Shūeisha, 1980.

  Ichiko Teiji, ed. Otogi zō
shi. Vol. 38 of NKBZ. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 1958.

  Ichiko Teiji, Akiya Osamu, Sawai Taizō, Tajima Kazuo, and Tokuda Kazuo . Muromachi jidai

  monogatari shū. Vols. 54 and 55 of SNKBT. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 1989 and 1992.

  Ichiko Teiji and Noma Kōshin. Otogi zōshi, Kana zōsh. Vol. 16 of Nihon koten kanshō kōza.

  Tokyo: Kadokawa Shoten, 1963.

  Idema, Wilt L. Personal Salvation and Filial Piety: Two Precious Scroll Narratives of Guanyin and Her Acolytes. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2008.

  Igeta Ryōji, Tabata Yasuko, and Fukawa Kiyoshi, eds. Ie to kyōiku. Tokyo: Waseda daigaku shuppanbu, 2006.

  Ii Haruki. Emaki Ōeyama Shuten Dōji, ashibikie no sekai. Ed. Itsuō Bijutsukan. Kyōto: Shibunkaku Shuppan, 2011.

  Ikeda Hiroko. A Type and Motif Index of Japanese Folk-Literature. Helsinki: Suomalainen

  Tiedeakatemia, 1971.

  Ikeda Hiroshi, ed. Chūsei, kinsei dōkashū. Vol. 180 of Koten bunko. Tokyo: Koten Bunko, 1962.

  Ikenouchi Josui. “Tsuchigumo no Kochō ni tsuite.” Nōgaku 1.11 (1903): 13–15.

  Imahori Taitsu. Gonja no kegen— Tenjin, Kūya, Hōnen. Tokyo: Shibunkaku Shuppan, 2006.

  Imamura Shōhei, dir. Narayamabushi kō. VHS. Public Media Home Vision, 1983.

  Inaba Kikuo. “Nihon kankyō bunkashi ni kansuru kenkyū: Obasute to yamauba no

  kankeisei.” Osaka keidai ronshū 54.5 (2004): 33–46.

  266

  Bibliography

  Inada Kōji, Ōshima Tatehiko, Kawabata Toyohiko, Fukuda Akira, and Mihara Yukihisa,

  eds. Nihon mukashibanashi jiten. Tokyo: Kōbundō, 1977.

  Inagaki Hisao. A Dictionary of Japanese Buddhist Terms: Based on References in Japanese Literature.

  Union City, CA: Heian International, 1988.

  Inai Hitomi. “ ‘Hanayo no hime’ ni tsuite no ichi kōsatsu.” Aibun 22 (September 1986):

  26–28.

  Inamoto Mariko. “Ban dainagon emaki to GoShirakawa.” In Imēji to patoron: bijutsushi o manage tame no 23 shō, ed. Inamoto Mariko and Ikegami Hidehiro, 53–68. Tokyo: Seiunsha,

  2009.

  Inamoto Yasuo. “Kentōshi sono hikari to kage—Nara jidai o chūshin ni.” In Dai Kentōshi-

  ten: Heijō sento 1300-nen kinen, ed. Nara Kokuritsu hakubutsukan, 6–16. Nara: Nara

  Kokuritsu hakubutsukan, 2010.

  Inoue Katsushi. “ ‘Kako no Kyōshin nanahaka meguri’ no jōen nendai.” Kinsei bungei 85.01

  (2007): 1–13.

 

‹ Prev