1. Bitō Masahide 尾藤正英. 1972. “Kaidai: Dazai Shundai no hito to shisō,” NST 37. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten.
2. Boot, W.J. 1983. The Adoption and Adaptation of Neo-Confucianism in Japan: The Role of Fujiwara Seika and Hayashi Razan, PhD dissertation, Leiden. (See the homepage of the Netherlands Association for Japanese Studies – Specialist).
3. Boot, W.J. 1996. Review of Samuel Hideo Yamashita, Master Sorai’s Responsals: An Annotated Translation of Sorai-sensei Tōmonsho, Hawai’i, 1994. Journal of Japanese Studies 22.2: 430–435.
4. Boot, W.J. 2006. “Minagawa Kien: Kien tōyō to Meichū no kankei ni tsuite,” Dai-29-kai tokushū. Kaigai kara mita Nihon bungaku no kenkyū: uchi to soto o nori-koete. Kokusai Nihon Bungaku Kenkyū Shūkai Kaigiroku. Tokyo: Kokubungaku Shiryōkan Shuppan.
5. Boot, W.J. 2014. “Chinese Scholarship and Teaching in Eighteenth-Century Kyoto.” In M. Hayek and A. Horiuchi, eds. Listen, Copy, Read. Popular Learning in Early Modern Japan. 226–250. Leiden: Brill.