References
- Anonymous (1939) Takarazuka Shōjo Kageki to Bei kōen yosan oyobi kessan hōkoku. Kageki, November, pp. 36–37.
- Anonymous (1949a) Gōka wo yosō sareru ‘Tōkyō-Nyūyōku’ no butai sōchi to shōmei no kushin. Kageki, August, pp. 30–31.
- Anonymous (1949b) Tōkyō-Nyūyōku. Takarazuka Kageki kyakuhonshū. September, pp. 13–18.
- Anonymous (1950) Gaikokumuki no shisakuhin ‘Takarazuka hana kurabe’ zadankai. Kageki, January, pp. 26–30.
- Anonymous (1951) Ōbeijin no mita ‘Hana no fudoki’ no inshō. Kageki, December, pp. 40–43.
- Anonymous (1956) Kankō Nihon haku. Kageki, March, pp. 86–87.
- Anonymous (1959a) Nihon minzoku haku. Kageki, March, pp. 82–83.
- Anonymous (1959b) Ōsaka kara Yokohama made, eikōe no tabidachi, Amerika kōen’gumi shuppatsu. Kageki, September, pp. 40–49.
- Anonymous (1959c) Hanayaka ni sashō ukeru. Kōbe shinbun [yūkan], 3 July.
- Anonymous (1962) Nippon wa kōshite ikiteiru. Kageki, April, pp. 54–60.
- Anonymous (1964) Manga utsukushiki Nihon haku. Kageki, April, pp. 56–59.
- Anonymous (1967) Hana furyū. Kageki, April, pp. 48–52.
- Anonymous (1969) Matsuri. Kageki, February, pp. 40–43.
- Anonymous (1972) Kagura. Kageki, April, pp. 52–59.
- Brandon, James R. (2006) Myth and reality: A story of kabuki during American censorship, 1945–1949. Asian Theatre Journal 23(1), pp. 1–110.
- Brandon, James R. (2009) Kabuki’s forgotten war: 1931–1945 (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press).
- de Grazia, Victoria (2005) Irresistible empire: America’s advance through twentieth-century Europe (Cambridge: Belknap Press).
- Gaikō Shiryōkan (1951–66) Engeki kankei kageki kankei Takarazuka Kagekidan kankei.
- Gaimushō (1957) Waga gaikō no kinkyō, Vol 1 (Tokyo: Gaimushō).
- Gaimushō Bunka Jigyōbu (1973) Kokusai bunka kōryū no genjō to tenbō (Tokyo: Ōkurashō Insatsukyoku).
- Gaimushō Jōhō Bunkakyoku (1957) Dai ikkai bunka gaikō kondankai gijiroku [Secret document], 15 April.
- Garon, Sheldon (2006) The transnational promotion of saving in Asia: “Asian values” or the “Japanese model”? in Sheldon Garon and Patricia L. Maclachlan (eds), The ambivalent consumer: Questioning consumption in East Asia and the West, pp. 163–87 (Ithaca: Cornell University Press).
- Gray, Maxine Cushing (1959) The Takarazuka girls. Christian Science Monitor, 19 September.
- Hayama Masakazu (1960) Nihon kyōdo geinō kenkyūkai no katsudō ni tsuite. Kageki, February, pp. 66–68.
- Heim, William (1946) Takarazuka no inshō. Kageki, June, p. 8.
- Henshūbu (1957) Kakkoku gaimushō no bunka jigyō tantō kikō to yosan ni tsuite. Kokusai bunka 43, p. 10.
- Hildebrand, Harold (1959) Japan dancers are a smash. Los Angeles Examiner, 3 September.
- Ivy, Marilyn (1993) Formations of mass culture, in Andrew Gordon (ed.), Postwar Japan as history, pp. 239–58 (Berkeley: University of California Press).
- Kawasaki Kenko (1999) Takarazuka: Shōhi shakai no supekutakuru (Tokyo: Kōdansha).
- KBS (1964) KBS 30 nen no ayumi (Tokyo: KBS).
- Keihanshin Kyūkō Dentetsu (1959) Keihanshin kyūkō dentetsu 50 nenshi (Osaka: Keihanshin Kyūkō Dentetsu Kabushiki Kaisha).
- Klein, Christina (2003) Cold War Orientalism: Asia in the middlebrow imagination, 1945–1961 (Berkeley: University of California Press).
- Kobayashi Ichizō (1946) Omoitsuki. Kageki, June, p. 7.
- Kure Tomofusa (1997) Gendai manga no zentaizō (Tokyo: Futabasha).
- Kusano Akira (1975) The Takarazuka yōroppa kōen purebyū. Kageki, October, pp. 54–59.
- Lacan, Jacques (1977) Écrits: A selection, trans. Alan Sheridan (New York: W.W. Norton & Co.).
- Lloyd, Margaret (1959) ‘Zukettes’ from Japan visit New York. Christian Science Monitor, 19 September.
- Loughner, Jack (1959) Takarazuka troupe: Vaudeville returns via Japan dancers. San Francisco News Call Bulletin, 10 November.
- Martin, John (1959) Dance: Japanese girls. New York Times, 17 September.
- Moriyama Masao (1962) ‘Meido in Nippon’ no kikaku wo yorokobimasu. Kageki, March, pp. 42–43.
- Nimiya Kazuko (2009) Takarazuka baka ichidai (Tokyo: Seikyūsha).
- Park, Sang Mi (2011) The Takarazuka Girls’ Revue in the West: Public-private relations in the cultural diplomacy of wartime Japan. International Journal of Cultural Policy 17(1), pp. 18–38.
- Rekishigaku Kenkyūkai (1990) 55-nen taisei to anpo tōsō (Tokyo: Aoki Shoten).
- Shibusawa, Naoko (2006) America’s geisha ally: Reimagining the Japanese enemy (Cambridge: Harvard University Press).
- Shōji Shigeki (1962) ‘Meido in Nippon’ wo mite. Kageki, May, pp. 44–46.
- Stickland, Leonie R. (2008) Gender gymnastics: Performing and consuming Japan’s Takarazuka Revue (Melbourne: Trans Pacific Press).
- Suzuki Tadakatsu (1962) Hyakugō hakkan wo mukaete. Kokusai bunka 100, p. 1.
- Takagi Shirō (1962) Meido in Nippon. Takarazuka Kageki kyakuhonshū, April, pp. 16–26.
- Takagi Shirō (1983) Rebyū no ōsama: Shirai Tetsuzō to Takarazuka (Tokyo: Kawade Shobō Shinsha).
- Takarazuka Kagekidan (1959) Shutsuensha, sutaffu no jinsen kimaru. Takarazuka Kageki Tsūshin 100, pp. 1–7.
- Takarazuka Kagekidan (1960) Takarazuka Kageki Kanada Amerika kōen arubamu (Takarazuka: Takarazuka Kagekidan).
- Takarazuka Kagekidan (1964) Takarazuka Kageki 50 nenshi (Takarazuka: Takarazuka Kagekidan).
- Terry, Walter (1959) Takarazuka Dance Theater. New York Herald Tribune, 17 September.
- Thornbury, Barbara E. (2008) America’s kabuki-Japan, 1952–1960: Image building, myth making, and cultural exchange. Asian Theatre Journal 25(2), pp. 193–230.
- Ueda Shinji (2002) Takarazuka hyakunen no yume (Tokyo: Bungei Shunjū).
- Watanabe Takeo (1958) Kyōdo no minyō buyō wo tazunete. Kageki, July, pp. 82–84.
- Watanabe Takeo (1960) Amerika techō. Kageki, February, pp. 60–62.
- Wetmore Jr., Kevin J. (2009) 1954: Selling kabuki to the West. Asian Theatre Journal 26(1), pp. 78–93.
- Yamanashi, Makiko (2012) A history of the Takarazuka Revue since 1914: Modernity, girls’ culture, Japan pop (Leiden: Global Oriental).
- Yoshimi Shunya (2006) Consuming America, producing Japan (trans. David Buist), in Sheldon Garon and Patricia L. Maclachlan (eds), The ambivalent consumer: Questioning consumption in East Asia and the West, pp. 63–84 (Ithaca: Cornell University Press).
- Yoshimi Shunya (2010) Posuto sengo shakai (Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten).