R. Keller Kimbrough
Research Interests
Keller Kimbrough's research interests include the literature and art of late-Heian, medieval, and early Edo-period Japan. Kimbrough has been particularly interested in medieval poetry and poetics, illustrated Buddhist fiction (棗喧棗眶勳堝莽堯勳), illustrated temple and shrine histories (jisha engi), eighteenth-century children's literature, and, more recently, fifteenth- and sixteenth-century 域滄硃域硃鳥硃勳 samurai tales, seventeenth-century 域硃紳硃堝莽堯勳 prose fiction, and the early seventeenth-century puppet theater.泭
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Publications
- Preachers, Poets, Women, and the Way: Izumi Shikibu and the Buddhist Literature of Medieval Japan (Ann Arbor: 勛圖厙 of Michigan Center for Japanese Studies, 2008)
- Wondrous Brutal Fictions: Eight Buddhist Tales from the Early Japanese Puppet Theater (New York: Columbia 勛圖厙 Press, 2013)
- Monsters, Animals, and Other Worlds: A Collection of Short Medieval Japanese Tales (New York: Columbia 勛圖厙 Press, 2018), co-edited with Haruo Shirane

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Hello, Kitty! 泭(My Close Encounter with a 喊域硃勳 in Japan)
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泭 泭 泭 泭 Yoshitsune in the Ashura Realm, from The Palace of the Tengu