It is part of the Center for Japanese Studies at the University of California at Berkeley.
[2] The development of JHTI involved negotiations with the University of Tokyo Press and the National Institute of Japanese Literature.
[4] There are seven categories of writings,[2] including These works were compiled by officials of the Imperial Court at the command of the emperors.
[2] These records, Fudoki, were compiled by provincial officials according to imperial edicts during the first half of the 8th century.
[2] These historical tales (monogatari) were about what was said and done by the prominent historical figures in aristocratic and military clans in feudal Japan[2] These three histories were written in ways that mirror the religious and political interests of their authors.