Dr Tomoko Aoyama
Honorary Associate Professor.
Honorary Associate Professor
School of Languages and Cultures

Featured projects | Duration |
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BORDERS | 2023 |
Publications
Books
Tsurumi, Shunsuke (Original author), Aoyama, Tomoko (Translator) and Bailey, Penny (Translator) (2023). The stripper goddess of Japan: the life and afterlives of Ame no Uzume. Tokyo, Japan: Trans Pacific Press.
Kanai, Mieko, Aoyama, Tomoko and McCarthy, Paul (2018). Oh, Tama! A Mejiro novel. Berkeley, California: Stone Bridge Press.
Aoyama, Tomoko and Fraser, Lucy (2017). Anime Japanese : course reader for JAPN3130. rev. ed. ed. Brisbane: University of Queensland. School of Languages and Cultures.
Aoyama, Tomoko (2016). Bunkobon de nihongo [文庫本で日本語]. Rev. ed. ed. St Lucia, Brisbane: School of Languages and Cultures, The University of Queensland.
Kanai, Mieko, Aoyama, Tomoko (translator) and McCarthy, Paul (translator) (2013). Oh, Tama!. Fukuoka, Japan: Kurodahan Press.
Kanai, Mieko, Aoyama, Tomoko (Trans) and Hartley, Barbara (Trans) (2012). Indian summer. Ithaca, NY, United States: Cornell University.
Aoyama, Tomoko (2008). Reading food in modern Japanese literature. Honolulu, HI, United States: University of Hawai'i Press.
Book Chapters
Aoyama, Tomoko (2024). Border-crossing food and humour in Itō Hiromi's prose and poetry. Border-crossing Japanese literature: reading multiplicity. (pp. 123-140) edited by Akiko Uchiyama and Barbara Hartley. Abingdon, Oxon, United Kingdom: Routledge. doi: 10.4324/9781003143178-9
Aoyama, Tomoko and Bailey, Penny (2023). Translators' introduction. The stripper goddess of Japan: the life and afterlives of Ame no Uzume. (pp. 1-11) edited by Tomoko Aoyama (Translator) and Penny Bailey (Translator). Tokyo, Japan: Trans Pacific Press.
Aoyama, Tomoko (2022). Humor and Aging: Ogino Anna, Itō Hiromi, and Kanai Mieko. Handbook of modern and contemporary Japanese women writers. (pp. 256-271) edited by Rebecca Copeland. Tokyo, Japan: Japan Documents.
Aoyama, Tomoko (2020). Youthful first impressions: Tsurumi Kazuko and Shunsuke in Australia, 1937. Japan in Australia: culture, context and connections. (pp. 25-43) edited by David Chapman and Carol Hayes. London, United Kingdom: Routledge. doi: 10.4324/9780429196485-3
Aoyama, Tomoko, Kawasaki, Kenko and Fraser, Lucy (2020). From Fukushima to Hiroshima: Teaching Social Engagement through Manga. Manga!: Visual Pop-Culture in ARTS Education. (pp. 149-157) edited by Masami Toku and Hiromi Tsuchiya Dollase. Viseu, Portugal: InSEA Publications. doi: 10.24981/2020-3
Aoyama, Tomoko (2019). Sweet bean paste and excrement : food, humor, and gender in Osaki Midori's writings. Gastro-modernism: food, literature, culture. (pp. 21-34) edited by Derek Gladwin. Clemson, SC, United States: Clemson University Press.
Aoyama, Tomoko (2018). The girl, the flower, and the Constitution in 1945 (and 2015). Civil society and postwar pacific basin reconciliation: wounds, scars and healing. (pp. 26-40) edited by Yasuko Claremont. New York, NY, United States: Routledge.
Aoyama, Tomoko (2018). Ame no Uzume crosses boundaries. Diva nation: female icons from Japanese cultural history. (pp. 34-50) edited by Laura Miller and Rebecca Copeland. Oakland, CA United States: University of California Press.
Aoyama, Tomoko (2018). Food, humor, and gender in Ishigaki Rin’s poetry. Food and literature. (pp. 303-318) edited by Gitanjali G. Shahani. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press. doi: 10.1017/9781108661492.017
Aoyama, Tomoko (2017). The wor(l)dmaking of centenarian poets: Mado Michio and Shibata Toyo. Worldmaking: literature, language, culture. (pp. 55-65) edited by Tom Clark, Emily Finlay and Philippa Kelly. Amsterdam / Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company. doi: 10.1075/fillm.5.04aoy
Aoyama, Tomoko (2017). From 'national' literature to multicultural literature in 'Japanese' language?. Rethinking Japanese studies: Eurocentrism and the Asia-Pacific region. (pp. 53-72) edited by Kaori Okano and Yoshio Sugimoto. Abbingdon, Oxon, United Kingdom: Routledge. doi: 10.4324/9781315157894
Aoyama, Tomoko and Kennett, Belinda (2016). Nodame's language lessons. Manga vision: cultural and communicative perspectives. (pp. 146-160) edited by Sarah Pasfield Neofitou and Cathy Sell. Clayton, VIC, Australia: Monash University Publishing.
Aoyama, Tomoko (2015). Translating humour in Kanai Mieko's texts. Translation transnationalism world literature. (pp. 23-43) edited by Francesca Benocci and Marco Sonzogni. Novi Ligure, AL, Italy: Edizioni Joker.
Aoyama, Tomoko (2015). Yoshiko & Yuriko: love, texts and camaraderie. Red love across the pacific. (pp. 123-139) edited by Ruth Barraclough, Heather Bowen-Struyk and Paula Rabinowitz. New York, NY, United States: Palgrave Macmillan. doi: 10.1057/9781137507037_7
Aoyama, Tomoko (2015). Narratives of mother-daughter reconciliation: new possibilities in ageing Japan. Mothers at the Margins: Stories of Challenge, Resistance and Love. (pp. 245-260) edited by Lisa Raith, Jenny Jones and Marie Porter. Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
Aoyama, Tomoko (2015). The girl-grandmother relation in Japanese children's literature. Configurations of family in contemporary Japan. (pp. 49-64) edited by Tomoko Aoyama, Laura Dales and Romit Dasgupta. Abington, Oxon, United Kingdom: Routledge.
Aoyama, Tomoko (2015). Queering the cooking man: food and gender in Yoshinaga Fumi's (BL) manga. Boys Love Manga and Beyond: History, Culture, and Community in Japan. (pp. 233-252) edited by Mark McLelland, Kazumi Nagaike, Katsuhiko Suganuma and James Walker. Jackson, MS, United States: University Press of Mississippi.
Nagaike, Kazumi and Aoyama, Tomoko (2015). What is Japanese "BL Studies?" A historical and analytical overview. Boys Love Manga and Beyond: History, Culture, and Community in Japan. (pp. 119-140) edited by Mark McLelland, Kazumi Nagaike, Katsuhiko Suganuma and James Walker. Jackson, MS, USA: University Press of Mississippi.
Aoyama, Tomoko, Dales, Laura and Dasgupta, Romit (2015). Introduction. Configurations of family in contemporary Japan. (pp. 1-5) edited by Tomoko Aoyama, Laura Dales and Romit Dasgupta. Abington, Oxon, United Kingdom: Routledge.
Aoyama, Tomoko (2013). Revisiting "Izumiya Dyers": Subaru, the father and the high treason incident. Japan and the high treason incident. (pp. 117-128) edited by Masako Gavin and Ben Middleton. New York, NY, United States: Routledge. doi: 10.4324/9780203495940
Aoyama, Tomoko (2012). Introduction. Indian summer. (pp. ix-xiv) Ithaca, NY, United States: Cornell University. doi: 10.1007/978-3-030-45062-5_1
Aoyama, Tomoko (2012). 『のだめカンタービレ』における笑いの要素. <少女マンガ>ワンダーランド. (pp. 83-90) edited by 菅聡子 Satoko Kan, ドラージ土屋浩美 Hiromi Tsuchiya Dollase and 武内佳代 Kayo Takeuchi. Tokyo, Japan: Meiji Shoin.
Aoyama, Tomoko and Wakabayashi, Judy (2010). Identity and relationships in translated Japanese literature. Literature in translation : Teaching issues and reading practices. (pp. 101-116) edited by Carol Maier and Françoise Massardier-Kenney. Kent, Ohio: The Kent State University Press.
Honda, Masuko, Aoyama, Tomoko (Trans.) and Hartley, Barbara (Trans.) (2010). The genealogy of hirahira: liminality and the girl. Girl reading girl in Japan. (pp. 19-37) edited by Tomoko Aoyama and Barbara Hartley. New York, U.S.A.: Routledge. doi: 10.4324/9780203869062
Kawasaki, Kenko, Aoyama, Tomoko (Trans.) and Hartley, Barbara (Trans.) (2010). The climate of the girl in Yoshimoto Banana. Girl reading girl in Japan. (pp. 50-63) edited by Tomoko Aoyama and Barbara Hartley. New York, USA: Routledge. doi: 10.4324/9780203869062
Aoyama, Tomoko (2010). The genealogy of the "girl" critic reading girl. Girl reading girl in Japan. (pp. 38-49) edited by Tomoko Aoyama and Barbara Hartley. London and New York: Routledge (Taylor & Francis). doi: 10.4324/9780203869062
Aoyama, Tomoko and Hartley, Barbara (2010). Introduction. Girl Reading Girl in Japan. (pp. 1-14) edited by Aoyama, Tomoko and Hartley, Barbara. Abingdon, Oxon., U.K. ; New York, U.S.A.: Routledge.
Aoyama, T. (2007). Father-Daughter relationship. International encyclopedia of men and masculinities. (pp. 189-190) edited by M. Flood, J. K. Gardiner, B. Pease and K. Pringle. London, United Kingdom: Routledge.
Hartley, B. T. and Aoyama, T. (2006). "For more than forty days" by Mizuno. Translated by Barbara Hartley and Tomoko Aoyama. The Modern Murasaki: Writing by women of Meiji Japan. (pp. 311-318) edited by R. Copeland and M. Ortabasi. New York: Columbia University Press.
Aoyama, T. and Hartley, B. T. (2006). The narcissistic woman writer. Woman Critiqued: Translated essays on Japanese women's writing. (pp. 76-82) edited by R. L. Copeland. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press.
Aoyama, T. and Hartley, B. T. (2006). "The consciousness of the girl: freedom and arrogance" by Takahara Eiri. Translated by Tomoko Aoyama and Barbara Hartley. Woman Critiqued: Translated essays on Japanese women's writing. (pp. 185-193) edited by R. L. Copeland. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press.
Aoyama, Tomoko (2006). Eating disorders. Encyclopedia of Contemporary Japanese Culture. (pp. 115-116) edited by Sandra Buckley. London, United Kingdom: Taylor and Francis.
Aoyama, Tomoko (2006). Inoue Hisashi. Encyclopedia of Contemporary Japanese Culture. (pp. 215-216) edited by Sandra Buckley. London, United Kingdom: Taylor and Francis.
Aoyama, Tomoko (2006). Tomioka Taeko. Encyclopedia of Contemporary Japanese Culture. (pp. *-*) edited by Sandra Buckley. London, United Kingdom: Taylor and Francis.
Aoyama, Tomoko (2006). Tawara Machi. Encyclopedia of Contemporary Japanese Culture. (pp. 504-505) edited by Sandra Buckley. London, United Kingdom: Taylor and Francis.
Aoyama, T. (2005). Transgendering shojo shosetsu: Girls' inter-text/sex-uality. Genders, Transgenders and Sexualities in Japan. (pp. 49-64) edited by M. McLelland and R. Dasgupta. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge. doi: 10.4324/9780203346839
Aoyama, T. (2003). The cooking man in modern Japanese literature. Asian Masculinities: the Meaning and Practice of Manhood in China and Japan. (pp. 155-176) edited by K. Louie and M. Low. London: Routledge Curzon. doi: 10.4324/9780203987933
Aoyama, T. (2001). A Room Sweet as Honey: Father-Daughter Love in Mori Mari. The Father-Daughter Plot: Japanese Literary Women and the Law of the Father. (pp. 167-193) edited by R.L. Copeland and E. Ramirez-Christensen. Honolulu, HI United States: University of Hawaii Press.
Aoyama, T. (2000). The divided appetite: 'Eating' in the literature of the 1920s. Being Modern in Japan: Culture and Society from the 1910s to the 1930s. (pp. 154-167) edited by E. Tipton and J. Clark. Honolulu: Uni. of Hawa'ii Press.
Aoyama, T. (1999). Japanese literary responses to the Russo-Japanese war. The Russo-Japanese War in Cultural Perspective, 1904-05. (pp. 60-85) edited by D. Wells and S. Wilson. London: MacMillan.
Aoyama, Tomoko (1988). Male homosexuality as treated by Japanese women writers. The Japanese trajectory: modernization and beyond. (pp. 186-204) edited by Gavan McCormack and Yoshio Sugimoto. Cambridge, U.K.; New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
Journal Articles
Aoyama, Tomoko (2022). From tears to laughter: gender, humour and democracy in Ishii Momoko's Non-chan kumo ni noru. Japanese Studies, 42 (3), 259-275. doi: 10.1080/10371397.2022.2134097
Aoyama, Tomoko (2022). よしながふみの描く食とジェンダーの多様性 ―『きのう何食べた?』と『大奥』. Vesta, 127, 6-9.
Aoyama, Tomoko and Hartley, Barbara (2022). Introduction to special issue on youth and democracy in post-war Japanese culture. Japanese Studies, 42 (3), 219-226. doi: 10.1080/10371397.2022.2138299
Aoyama, Tomoko (2021). A girls' literary and cultural studies' best friend. Intersections: gender and sexuality in Asia and the Pacific, 2021 (46).
Itō, Hiromi (original author), Aoyama, Tomoko (co-translator) and Kishi-Debski, Mariko (co-translator) (2020). Four essays on food from itō Hiromi’s Delicious!. Exchanges: Journal of Literary Translation (October 2020).
Aoyama, Tomoko (2020). Japanese Literary Studies and Education in Australia :From the Post-3.11 Period to the Age of COVID-19. Border Crossings: The Journal of Japanese-Language Literature Studies, 10 (1), 4-7. doi: 10.22628/bcjjl.2020.10.1.4
Aoyama, Tomoko (2018). Review of Charles Exley, Sato Haruo and Modern Japanese Literature. Journal of Japanese Studies, 44 (2), 450-453. doi: 10.1353/jjs.2018.0059
Aoyama, Tomoko (2015). The aging Ame no Uzume: gender and humor in Sano Yōko's writing. Proceedings of the Association for Japanese Literary Studies, 13. doi: 10.26812/pajls.v13i.1480
Aoyama, Tomoko (2013). Nomizo Naoko and women's art against violence. Japan Forum, 25 (3), 331-345. doi: 10.1080/09555803.2013.804107
Aoyama, Tomoko (2012). BL (boys' love) literacy: subversion, resuscitation, and transformation of the (father's) text. U.S. - Japan Women's Journal, 43 (1), 63-84. doi: 10.1353/jwj.2013.0001
Aoyama, Tomoko (2012). Girls in Shinseinen, Shinseinen for Girls: The early comic novels of Hisao Juran. Japanese Studies, 32 (1), 39-60. doi: 10.1080/10371397.2012.670102
Aoyama, Tomoko (2011). ’Ibunka’ to shite no Nodame. Tokyo Zaidan Meru Magajin, 274
Honda, Masuko, Fraser, Lucy (translator) and Aoyama, Tomoko (translator) (2010). The invalidation of gender in girls' Manga today, with a special focus on Nodame Cantabile. US Japan Women's Journal, 38, 12-24.
青山 友子 (Aoyama, Tomoko) (2010). Yoshinaga Fumi no manga ni miru "shoku" to jendaa [Food and gender in the manga of Yoshinaga Fumi]. 比較日本学教育研究センター研究年報 [Center for Comparative Japanese Studies Annual Bulletin], 6, 153-161.
Aoyama, Tomoko (2010). Nodame as "Another Culture". U.S.- Japan Women's Journal, 38, 25-42.
Aoyama, Tomoko (2010). MIEKO KANAI. The Word Book, trans. Paul McCarthy.. Asian Studies Review, 34 (4), 528-530. doi: 10.1080/10357823.2010.528181
Aoyama, Tomoko (2010). The Word Book. Asian Studies Review, 34 (4), 528-530.
Aoyama, Tomoko (2009). Girls taking over the Humanities in Japan?. AUMLA - Journal of the Australasian Universities Language and Literature Association, Special Edition (Refereed Proceedings of the 2009 AULLA Conference: The Human and The Humanities in Literature, Language and Culture), 65-77.
Aoyama, Tomoko (2009). Eureka Discovers Culture Girls, Fujoshi, and BL: Essay Review of Three Issues of the Japanese Literary Magazine, Yuriika (Eureka). Intersections: Gender, History and Culture in Asia and the Pacific (20), 1-8.
Aoyama, Tomoko (2009). Writing along with and against the smugness of writing: Kanai Mieko's A Study of the Comfortable Life. PAJLS: Proceedings of the Association for Japanese Literary Studies, 10 (Summer), 244-261. doi: 10.26812/pajls.v10i.1485
Aoyama, T. (2008). Jane Austen and Kanai Mieko: Comic sisterhood. Hecate: An interdisciplinary journal of women's liberation, 34 (2), 4-16.
Aoyama, Tomoko (2008). Dismembered but not disembodied: The girl's body in Yumeno Kyusaku's stories. Asian Studies Review, 32 (3), 307-322. doi: 10.1080/10357820802294115
Kawasaki, Kenko, Fraser, Lucy (Trans.) and Aoyama, Tomoko (Trans.) (2008). Osaki Midori and the role of the girl in Showa modernism. Asian Studies Review, 32 (3), 293-306. doi: 10.1080/10357820802299684
Aoyama, Tomoko (2008). 久生十蘭の旅する少女たち : Girls on the Road in Hisao Jūran’s Fiction. Proceedings of the Association for Japanese Literary Studies, 8. doi: 10.26812/pajls.v8i.1210
Aoyama, T. (2008). Performing father-daughter love: Inoue Hisashi's Face of Jizo. Intersections: Gender, History and Culture in Asia and the Pacific, 16, 1-11.
Aoyama, T. (2008). The Girl, the Body, and the Nation in Japan and the Pacific Rim: Introduction. Asian Studies Review, 32 (3), 285-292. doi: 10.1080/10357820802294149
Aoyama, T. (2008). Hisao Juran no tabi suru shojo-tachi: Girls on the road in Hisao Juran's fiction. PAJLS: Proceedings of the Association for Japanese Literary Studies, 8, 354-364.
Aoyama, Tomoko (2006). Nomizo Naoko: The "Eternal Girl" crosses boundaries. Asian Studies Review, 30 (2), 109-122. doi: 10.1080/10357820600714215
Aoyama, Tomoko (2006). Appropriating bush tucker: Food in Inoue Hisashi's Yellow Rats. Journal of Australian Studies, 30 (87), 129-140. doi: 10.1080/14443050609388056
Aoyama, Tomoko (2006). Embroidering girls' texts: Fashion and feminism in the fiction of Kanai Mieko. U.S. - Japan Women's Journal, 29, 99-117.
Aoyama, Tomoko and Roberts, Rosemary (2006). Introduction. Asian Studies Review, 30 (2), 105-108. doi: 10.1080/10357820600714207
Aoyama, T. (2005). Review of The Art of Rice: Spirit and sustenance in Asia by R. W. Hamilton. Los Angeles: University of California Fowler Museum of Cultural History, 2003.. Asian Studies Review, 29 (3), 323-323.
Aoyama, T (2003). Childhood Reimagined: The Memoirs of Ogai's Children. Monumenta Nipponica, 58 (4), 495-529.
Aoyama, T. (2003). Romancing food: The gastronomic quest in early twentieth-century Japanese literature. Japanese Studies, 23 (3), 251-264. doi: 10.1080/1037139032000156333
Aoyama, Tomoko (2003). Guest editor's note. Japanese Studies, 23 (3), 227-228. doi: 10.1080/1037139032000156306
Aoyama, T. (2001). Review of Seeds in the Heart: Japanese Literature from Earliest Times to the Late Sixteenth Century by Donald Keene. Asian Studies Review, 25 (4), 555-555.
Aoyama, T. (2001). Review of Woodblock Kucki-e Prints: Reflections of Meiji Culture by H. Merritt & N. Yamadai. Japanese Studies, 21 (3), 312-313.
Aoyama Tomoko (2000). Literary daughters' recipes: Food and female subjectivity in the writings of Mori Mari and Koda Aya. Japanstudien, 12, 91-116.
Aoyama, T. (2000). Review of Mirror: The Fiction and Essays of Koda Aya by A. Sherif. Japanese Studies, 20 (3), 205-208.
Aoyama, T. (2000). Review of Studies in the Comic Spirit in Modern Japanese by J. Cohen. Asian Studies Review, 24 (2), 283-287.
Aoyama, T. (1999). Parody in contemporary Japan. Tokyo University of Foreign Studies Department of Japanese Studies Annual Report, 3, 1-20.
Aoyama, T. and Wakabayashi, J. F. (1999). Where parody meets translation. Japan Forum, 11 (2), 217-230. doi: 10.1080/09555809908721633
Aoyama, T. (1999). What can Japaness literature do?. Japanese Studies, 17 (2-3), 14-21.
Aoyama, T. (1999). Food and gender in contemporary Japanese women's literature. U. S.-Japan Women's Journal (17), 111-136.
Aoyama, Tomoko (1997). Parodii no aru nihongo kyôiku. Sekai no nihongo kyôiku, 1-15.
Aoyama, Tomoko (1995). Moon over Battlefield: Two Diaries of the Russo-Japanese War. New Zealand Journal of East Asian Studies, 3 (1), 3-22.
Aoyama, Tomoko (1994). The Love That Poisons: Japanese Parody and the New Literacy. Japan Forum, 6 (1), 35-46. doi: 10.1080/09555809408721499
Aoyama, Tomoko (1994). Seinen: Ogai's portrait of a young man as an artist. Japanese Studies Bulletin, 14 (3), 66-77. doi: 10.1080/10371399408727589
Aoyama, Tomoko (1993). Kinoshita Mokutaro: the price of refusal. New Zealand Journal of East Asian Studies, 1 (1), 130-149.
Conference Papers
Aoyama, Tomoko (2012). The aging ame no uzume: gender and humor in Sano Yoko's writing. Association for Japanese Literary Studies Annual Meeting, Medford, MA, United States, 12-14 October 2012. West Lafayette, IN, United States: Association for Japanese Literary Studies.
Aoyama, Tomoko (2012). Mad old Japanese woman writes back from an attic of her own. Congress of the Australasian Universities Language and Literature Association (36th, AULLA, 2011), Auckland, N.Z., 7-9 February 2011. University of Queensland, QLD, Australia: Australasian Universities Language and Literature Association.
Aoyama, Tomoko (2011). Revisiting 'Izumiya Dyers': Subaru, the father and the High Treason incident. A Centennial Commemoration of the High Treason Incident - Looking Backward from Australia, Gold Coast, Australia, 20-22 August 2010. Gold Coast, Australia: Bond University.
Aoyama, Tomoko (2007). Two or three things I know about Kanai Mieko's transtextuality. The 2007 Aulla Conference: Cultural Interactions in the Old and New Worlds, Sydney, Australia, February, 2007. University of Southern Queensland, Toowoomba: Australasian Universities Language and Literature Association.
Aoyama, T. (2004). The Peach Girl views: Appropriating the gaze. Asia Examined, Canberra, 29 June - 2 July 2004. Canberra: ASAA Asian Studies Association of Australia.
Aoyama, T. (2002). The food diary in 20th century Japanese literature. After Sovereignty: Nation and Place (Asian Studies Associatioe, Hobart, 30th June - 3rd July 2002. Hobart: Asian Studies Association of Australia.
Aoyama, T. (2000). Cannibalism, gastronomy and anorexia: A short history of eating in modern Japanese literature. Tenth Biennial Conference of Japanese Studies Assoc Australia, Monash University, July 1997. Monash: Monash Asia Institute, Monash Univ.
Aoyama, T. (1999). Honorifics defamiliarised. Japanese Grammar Workshop: Are you Afraid of Teaching Grammar?, Brisbane, Australia, 24-25 September, 1999. St Lucia, Qld., Australia: Asian Studies Centre, University of Queensland.
Aoyama, Tomoko (1993). “Direttanto-kô: Kinoshita Mokutarô no baai o chûshin ni” (“A Case Study of a ‘Dilettante’ Kinoshita Mokutarô”). Kokusai nihon bungaku kenkyu shukai, Dai 17 kai, The National Institute of Japanese Literature, Tokyo, November 1993. Tokyo, Japan: Kokubungaku Kenkyuu Shiryôkan (The National Institute of Japanese Literature).
Working Paper
Aoyama, Tomoko (2020). Kimono, tanka, odori: 1937-nen no Tsurumi Kazuko. 32-40.
Newspaper Article
Hausler, Rebecca and Aoyama, Tomoko (2018, 07 23). Guide to the classics: The Tale of Genji, a 1,000-year-old Japanese masterpiece The Conversation
Research Report
Aoyama, T. (2002). Japan and Korea: Maximizing Australia's Asia knowledge. Victoria (Australia): Asian Studies Association of Australia.
Thesis
Aoyama, Tomoko (1992). The antinaturalist movement in Japan circa 1910. PhD Thesis, School of Languages and Comparative Cultural Studies, The University of Queensland. doi: 10.14264/d53b59b
Creative Works
Aitken, Adam (original author) and Aoyama, Tomoko (Translator) (2021). Class portrait. Sydney, NSW, Australia: Untitled Showa.
Reference Entries
Aoyama, T. (2002). Inoue Hisashi.
Aoyama, T. (2002). Eating disorders.
Aoyama, T. (2002). Tomioka Taeko.
Aoyama, T. (2002). Dietary patterns.
Aoyama, Tomoko (2002). Tawara Machi.