Text References
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Gossamer Years: The Diary of a Noblewoman of Heian Japan[M]. Tuttle Publishing, 2011.
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Ambros, B. (1997). Liminal journeys: Pilgrimages of noblewomen in mid-Heian Japan. Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, 301-345.
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McCullough, W. H. (1967). Japanese Marriage Institutions in the Heian Period. Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies, 27, 103-167.
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Nickerson, P. (1993). The Meaning of Matrilocality. Kinship, Property, and Politics in Mid-Heian. Monumenta Nipponica, 48(4), 429-467.
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Haruko, W., & Phillips, D. P. (1993). Women and the Creation of the “Ie” in Japan: An Overview from the Medieval Period to the Present. U.S.-Japan Women’s Journal. English Supplement, 4, 83–105. http://www.jstor.org/stable/42772054
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Haruko, W., & Gay, S. (1984). Marriage and Property in Premodern Japan from the Perspective of Women’s History. Journal of Japanese Studies, 10(1), 73–99. https://doi.org/10.2307/132182
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Stalker, N. K. (2018). 3. The Rule of Taste: Lives of Heian Aristocrats (794–1185). In Japan (pp. 50-78). University of California Press.
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Pandey, R. (2004). Poetry, sex and salvation: the ‘courtesan’and the noblewoman in medieval Japanese narratives. Japanese Studies, 24(1), 61-79.
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Horton, H. M. (2003). Portrait of a Medieval Japanese Marriage: The Domestic Life of Sanjōnishi Sanetaka and His Wife. Japanese Language and Literature, 130-154.
Photo References
1. Figure 2. Ishiyama-dera engi emaki. Osaka Barrier on Sugawara no Takasue no Musume's Pilgrimage to Ishiyama. Illustration taken from Nihon emaki zenshu, Vol. 22.
2. https://factsanddetails.com/japan/cat16/sub106/entry-5613.html
4. https://digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/8dbc4699-7155-aca7-e040-e00a180662a9
5. https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20190814-the-tale-of-genji-the-worlds-first-novel