Bibliography for Daoist Studies

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    Bibliography for Daoist StudiesFrom the forthcoming The Routledge Companion to Scholarship in Religious Studies

    Louis Komjathy/Kang Siqi, Ph.D.Center for Daoist Studies

    The reader will note the inclusiveness of this bibliography, for what qualifies as scholarship in thefield of Daoist Studies. This stands in contrast to conventional Sinological presentations. I alsoemphasize publications that are especially relevant for comparative religious studies anduniversity education. The following divisions are employed: (1) Primary Sources; (2) Dictionaries,Encyclopedias, and Reference Works; (3) Concordances and Indexes; (4) Bibliographies; (5)Electronic Resources; and (6) Secondary Studies.

    PRIMARY SOURCES

    Daojia jinshi lue(Collection of Daoist Epigraphy). 1 vol. Compiled by Chen Yuan(d. 1971) and edited by Chen Zhichaoand Zeng Qingying. Dat. 1988. Abbr.JSL. Includes sequential numbering.

    Daoshu jicheng. 60 vols. Compiled by Tang Yijie. Dat. 1999. Abbr. JC. Noindex to date.

    Daozang jiyao (Collected Essentials of the Daoist Canon). 10 vols; 315 texts.Compiled by Jiang Yupu (1755-1819), Yan Yonghe (fl. 1900), and others. Dat.1906. Abbr. JY. Indexed by Chen (1987); Komjathy (2002).

    Daozang jinghua (Essential Blossoms of the Daoist Canon). 102 vols. Compiled byXiao Tianshi (1909-1986) and others. Dat. 1963-present. Abbr. JH. Indexed by Chen(1984) and Komjathy (2002).

    Daozang jinghua lu (Record of Essential Blossoms of the Daoist Canon). 2 vols.;100 texts. Compiled by Ding Fubao (1874-1952). Dat. 1922. Abbr. JHL. Indexed byKomjathy (2002).

    Daozang xubian (Supplementary Collection of the Daoist Canon). 23 texts. Compiledby Min Yide(1758-1836). Dat. 1834. Abbr. XB. Indexed by Komjathy (2002).

    Sandong yishi (Lost Works of the Three Caverns). 20 vols. Compiled by Wang Ka(b. 1956). Dat. 2007. Abbr. YS. No index to date.

    Zangwai daoshu(Daoist Texts Outside the Canon). 36 vols.; 991 texts. Compiled byHu Daojing , Lin Wanqing , and Chen Yaoting (1939-). Dat. 1992; 1995.Abbr. ZW. Indexed by Komjathy (2002).

    *Zhengtong daozang(Daoist Canon of the Zhengtong Reign Period) and Xu daozang (Supplement to the Daoist Canon). 60 vols.; 36 vols.; 1487 texts. Compiled by ZhangYuchu(1361-1410), Zhang Yuqing(d. 1426), Zhang Guoxiang(d. 1611),and others. Dat. 1445 and 1607. Abbr. DZ. Indexed by Weng (1935); Schipper (1975); Shi

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    (Schipper) and Chen (1996), among others. Descriptive catalogues by Ren and Zhong 1991;Schipper and Verellen 2004. Online edition by Miller and Komjathy (in progress).

    Zhonghua daozang (Chinese Daoist Canon). 48 vols + index (vol. 49). Complied byChinese Daoist Association. Edited by Zhang Jiyu (1962-), Wang Ka(1956-), andothers.Dat. 2003. Abbr. ZH. No numbered index to date.

    Zhonghua xu daozang . (Supplemental Chinese Daoist Canon). 20 vols. Edited byGong Pengchengand Chen Liaoan. Dat. 1999. Abbr. ZHX. No index to date.

    Zhuang-Lin xu daozang (Zhuang[chen] and Lin Family Supplement to the DaoistCanon). 25 vols. Collected by Michael Saso (1930-). Dat. 1975. Abbr. ZL. No index to date.

    DICTIONARIES, ENCYCLOPEDIAS AND REFERENCE WORKS

    Chen Guofu . 1963 (1949). Daozang yuanliu kao. 2 vols. 2nd ed. Beijing:

    Zhonghua.

    _____. 1983.Daozang yuanliu xukao. Taibei: Mingwen.

    _____. 2004.Daozang yanjiu lunwen ji. Shanghai: Shanghai guji chubanshe.

    Dai Yuanchang. 1970 [1962].Xianxue cidian. Taipei: Zhenshanmei.

    _____. 1971.Daoxue cidian. Taipei: Zhenshanmei.

    Hu Fuchen, ed. 1995.Zhonghua daojiao da cidian. Beijing: Zhongguoshehui kexue chubanshe.

    Kohn, Livia, ed. 2000.Daoism Handbook. Leiden: Brill.

    _____. 2001. Research Guide to Daoist Studies. .Accessed July 1, 2007.

    Lagerwey, John. 1981a. Wu-shang pi-yao: Somme taoste du VIe sicle.Paris: Ecole FranaisedExtrme-Orient.

    Li Gang , and Huang Haide , eds. 1991. Jianming daojiao cidianChengdu: Sichuan daxue.

    Li Yuanguo . 1991. Zhongguo daojiao qigong yangsheng daquan. Chengdu: Sichuan cishu.

    Loon, Piet van der. 1984. Taoist Books in the Libraries of the Sung Period: A Critical Study andIndex. London: Ithaca Press.

    Matthews, Robert Henry (R.H.). 1943.Mathews Chinese-English Dictionary. Cambridge, Mass.:Harvard University Press.

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    McMullen, D.L 1975. Concordances and Indexes to Chinese Texts. San Francisco: ChineseMaterials Center.

    Min Zhiting , and Li Yangzheng , eds. 1994. Daojiao da cidian .Beijing: Huaxia chubanshe.

    Nienhauser, William H., Jr., ed. 1986 and 1998. The Indiana Companion to Traditional ChineseLiterature. 2 vols. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.

    Noguchi Tetsur, Sakade Yoshinobu , Fukui Fumimasa , andYamada Toshiaki, eds. 1994.Dkyjiten. Tokyo: Hirakawa.

    Pas, Julian, with Man Kam Leung. 1998. Historical Dictionary of Taoism. Lanham, MD: TheScarecrow Press, Inc.

    Pregadio, Fabrizio. 1997. The Taoist Canon: A Guide to Studies and Reference Works.

    . Accessed July 1, 2007._____. 2004. Digital Resources in Daoist Studies.. Accessed July1, 2007.

    _____, ed. 2008.Encyclopedia of Taoism. 2 vols. London and New York: RoutledgeCurzon.

    Qing Xitai , ed. 1996 (1988-1995).Zhongguo daojiao shi. 4 vols. Chengdu:Sichuan renmin chubanshe.

    Ren Jiyu, ed. 2001.Zhongguo daojiao shi. 2 vols. Beijing: Zhongguo shehui

    kexue chubanshe.

    Sakade Yoshinobu , ed. 1994. Dkyno daijiten . Tokyo: Shin jimbutsuraisha.

    Schipper, Kristofer, and Franciscus Verellen, eds. 2004 (2005). The Taoist Canon: A HistoricalGuide. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

    Soothill, William Edward, and Lewis Hodous. 1995 (1937). A Dictionary of Chinese BuddhistTerms. London: Curzon Press.

    Wilkinson, Endymion. 2000 (1998). Chinese History: A Manual. 2nd ed. Cambridge, Mass.:

    Harvard University Asia Center.

    Wong Shiu Hon . 1989.Daozang danyao yiming suoyin /Chinese Al-chemical Terms: Guide-book to the Daozang Pseudonyms. Taipei: Xuebsheng.

    Wu Feng , and Song Yifu , eds. 1994. Zhonghua daoxue tongdian .Shanghai: Nanhai.

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    Zhang Zhizhe. 1994.Daojiao wenhua cidian. Jiangsu: Guji.

    CONCORDANCES AND INDEXES

    Chen, William Y. 1984.A Guide to the Tao Tsang Ching Hua. Taipei: Chinese Materials Center.

    _____. 1987. A Guide to the Tao-Tsang Chi Yao. Stony Brook, NY: Institute for AdvancedStudies of World Religions.

    ______. 1989.A Guide to Cheng-tung Tao-tsang. Taipei: Chinese Materials Center.

    Harvard-Yenching Institute, ed. 1947.Zhuangzi yinde/A Concordance to Chuang Tzu.HYSIS Suppl, no. 20. Beijing: Harvard-Yenching Institute.

    Komjathy, Louis. 2002. Title Index to Daoist Collections. Cambridge, Mass.: Three Pines Press.

    Lau, D.C. (Dim Cheuk) and F.C. (Fong Ching) Chen , eds. 1992a. Huainanzizhuzi suoyin/A Concordance to the Huainanzi. Hong Kong: Commercial Press.

    _____, eds. 1992b. Wenzi zhuzi suoyin/A Concordance to the Wenzi. Hong Kong:Commercial Press.

    _____, eds. 1994. Lshi chunqiu zhuzi suoyin /A Concordance to the Lshichunqiu. Concordance Series, Philosophical Works, no. 12. Hong Kong: Commercial Press.

    _____, eds. 1995.Zhouyi zhuzi suoyin/A Concordance to the Yijing. ConcordanceSeries, Classical Works, no. 8. Hong Kong: Commercial Press.

    _____, eds. 1996a.Laozi zhuzi suoyin /A Concordance to the Laozi. ConcordanceSeries, Philosophical Works, no. 24. Hong Kong: Commercial Press.

    _____, eds. 1996b.Liezi zhuzi suoyin /A Concordance to the Liezi. ConcordanceSeries, Philosophical Works, no. 25. Hong Kong: Commercial Press.

    _____, eds. 2000a. Zhuangzi zhuzi suoyin/A Concordance to the Zhuangzi.Concordance Series, Philosophical Works, no. 43. Hong Kong: Commercial Press.

    _____, eds. 2000b. Taiping jing zhuzi suoyin /A Concordance to the Taipingjing. 2 vols. Concordance Series, Philosophical Works, no. 44. Hong Kong: Commercial Press.

    _____, eds. 2001. Guanzi zhuzi suoyin/A Concordance to the Guanzi. Concor-dance Series, Philosophical Works, no. 37. Hong Kong: Commercial Press.

    Pregadio, Fabrizio. 1985.An Index to Shih yao erh ya, A Chinese Lexicon Alchhemiae of A.D.806. Rome: Mimeograph edition.

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    _____. 2001. Index to the Daozang (Taoist Canon).. Accessed July 1, 2007.

    Ren Jiyu, and Zhong Zhaopeng, eds. 1991. Daozang tiyao. . Beijing:Zhongguo shehui kexue chubanshe.

    Saso, Michael. 1979. A Guide to the Chuang Lin Hsu Tao-tsang.Journal of the China Society16-17: 9-28.

    Schipper, Kristofer, ed. 1965.Baopuzi neipian tongjian/Concordance du Pao-pou-tseu nei-pien. Paris: Institut des Hautes Etudes Chinoises de lUniversit de Paris.

    _____, ed. 1970. Baopuzi waipian tongjian /Concordance du Pao-pou-tseuwai-pien. Paris: Institut des Hautes Etudes Chinoises de lUniversit de Paris.

    _____, ed. 1975a. Concordance du Tao-tsang: Titres des ouvrages. Paris: Ecole FranaisedExtrme-Orient.

    _____, ed. 1975b. Concordance du Houang-ting King: Nei-king et Wai-king. Paris: EcoleFranaise dExtrme-Orient.

    _____, ed. 1981.Index du Yunji qiqian. 2 vols. Paris: Ecole Franaise dExtrme-Orient.

    Weng Dujian . 1935. Daozang zimu yinde/Combined Indexes to theAuthors and Titles of Books in Two Collections of Taoist Literature. HYSIS, no. 25. Beijing:Yenching University.

    BIBLIOGRAPHIES

    Au, Donna, and Sharon Rowe. 1977. Bibliography of Taoist Studies. In Buddhist and TaoistStudies, edited by Michael Saso and David W. Chappell, 123-48. Honolulu: University of HawaiiPress.

    Cohen, Alvin P. 1989. Western Language Publications on Chinese Religions, 1981-1987. InThe Turning of the Tide: Religion in China Today, edited by Julian F. Pas, 313-45. Hong Kong:Royal Asiatic Society.

    Dragan, Raymond A. 1989. Ways to the Way: A Review of Bibliographies on Taoism. TaoistResources 1.2: 21-27.

    Kardos, Michael A. 1998. Western Language Publications on Religions in China, 1990-1994.Journal of Chinese Religions 26: 67-134.

    Komjathy, Louis. 2003a. Daoist Texts in Translation: An Annotated Bibliography.. Accessed July 1, 2007.

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    Leung Man Kam . 1989. 1977-1987 nian zhongguo chuban youguan zhongguo zongjiaozhi shuji ji lunwen suoyin 1977-1987 . In TheTurning of the Tide: Religion in China Today, edited by Julian F. Pas, 346-73. Hong Kong: RoyalAsiatic Society.

    _____. 1991. The Study of Religious Taoism in the Peoples Republic of China (1949-1990): ABibliographical Survey.Journal of Chinese Religions 19: 113-26.

    Pas, Julian F. 1997 [1988].A Select Bibliography of Taoism. Saskatoon: China Pavilion.

    _____. 1998.Historical Dictionary of Taoism. Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press

    Pregadio, Fabrizio. 1996. Chinese Alchemy: An Annotated Bibliography of Works in WesternLanguages.Monumenta Serica 44: 439-76.

    _____. 2004 Digital Resources in Daoist Studies.. Accessed July1, 2007.

    Se Deer (Seidel). 2000.Xifang daojiao yanjiu shi. Translated by Jiang Jianyuan and LiuLing. Shanghai: Shanghai guji chubanshe.

    Seidel, Anna. 1989-90. Chronicle of Taoist Studies in the West 1950-1990. Cahiers dExtrme-Asie 5: 223-347. Translated by Jiang and Liu 2000; L and Chen 2002.

    Soymi, Michel, and F. Litsch. 1967. Bibliographie du taosme: Etudes dans les languesoccidentales.Dkykenky3: 247-313.

    _____. 1971. Bibliographie du taosme: Etudes dans les langues occidentales.Dkykenky4:225-87.

    Strickmann, Michel. 1977a. Bibliographic Notes on Chinese Religious Studies. Newsletter ofthe Society for the Study of Chinese Religions 3: 11-17.

    _____. 1977b. Bibliographic Notes on Chinese Religious Studies, II. Newsletter of the Societyfor the Study of Chinese Religions 4: 10-19.

    Suo An (Seidel) . Xifang daojiao yanjiu biannian shi . Translated byL Pengzhi and Chen Pingdeng. Beijing: Zhonghua shuju.

    Thompson, Laurence G. 1985a. Chinese Religion in Western Languages: A Comprehensive andClassified Bibliography of Publications in English, French, and German through 1980. Tucson:University of Arizona Press.

    _____. 1993a. Chinese Religion: Publications in Western Languages 1981 through 1990. Editedby Gary Seaman. Los Angeles: Ethnographic Press.

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    _____. 1998. Chinese Religion: Publications in Western Languages Volume 3: 1991-1995.Edited by Gary Seaman. Association for Asian Studies Monographs, no. 58. Ann Arbor:Association for Asian Studies.Verellen, Franciscus. 1995. [Chinese ReligionsThe State of the Field:] Taoism. Journal ofAsian Studies 54.2: 322-46.

    Walf, Knut. 1997. Westliche Taoismus-Bibliographie/Western Bibliography of Taoism. Essen:Verlag Die Blaue Eule.

    ELECTRONIC RESOURCES

    Center for Daoist Studies: www.daoistcenter.org. Established in 2003. Under the direction of Dr.Louis Komjathy (Pacific Lutheran University) and Kate Townsend. Includes critical discussionsof Daoism and Daoist Studies, links to articles and original research, as well as an annotated listof relevant websites with links. Important articles address Daoist texts in translation as well asDaoist teachers and organizations in North America. Especially helpful for undergraduateclassroom use and general audience education.

    Chinese Religions Initiative: www.stanford.edu/group/scbs/ARC/china/projects/index.html.Established in 1999. Under the direction of Dr. Fabrizio Pregadio (Stanford University). Part ofStanford Universitys Asian Religions and Cultures Initiative (ARC). ARC/CRI has three projects:Daozang Database, Jindan Database, and Digital Resources in Daoist Studies. The latter is aSinological account of relevant resources.

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    Daoist Studies Group of the American Academy of Religion: www.daoiststudies.org/aar.Established in 2005. Under the direction of Dr. James Miller (Queens University), Dr. LouisKomjathy (Pacific Lutheran University), and the DSG leadership group. Includes information onthis groups annual activity within the American Academy of Religion.

    Daoist Studies Website: www.daoiststudies.org. Established in 2000. Under the direction of Dr.James Miller (Queens University). Includes important notifications on conferences, research onDaoism, and recent publications in Daoist Studies. It also maintains a list of scholars andpractitioners interested in Daoism. The most inclusive and preeminent website for the field.

    The Golden Elixir website: http://www.stanford.edu/~pregadio. Established in 2004, this is thehomepage of Dr. Fabrizio Pregadio and combines Pregadios previous online projects, includingThe Golden Elixir and Taoist Studies in the Worldwide Web websites, with new material as well.

    Open Directory Project: www.dmoz.org. Established in 1998, this is the largest, human-editeddirectory of the internet. Helpful for locating Daoist teachers and organizations in North Americaand for understanding the ways in which Daoism is constructed and presented in the West.

    These web-links may be found under the following categories and subcategories:Society/Religion and Spirituality/Taoism(www.dmoz.org/Society/Religion_and_Spirituality/Taoism).

    Pluralism Project: www.pluralism.org. Established in 1997. Under the direction of Dr. DianaEck (Harvard University). Contains a directory of information on self-identified Daoistorganizations in North America (www.pluralism.org/directory/index). Helpful but notcomprehensive and somewhat dated.

    Russell Kirklands Homepage: http://kirkland.myweb.uga.edu. This is Dr. Russell Kirklands(University of Georgia) homepage and includes links to Kirklands university syllabi and many ofhis publications. The latter include difficult-to-obtain publications as well as unpublished

    presentations.

    Taoist Culture and Information Centre: www.eng.taoism.org.hk. Established and maintainedby the Fung Ying Seen Koon Daoist Centre of Hong Kong. Although primarily aimed atpracticing Daoists, this website contains generally accurate discussions of Daoism as a Chinesereligious tradition. It also includes information on contemporary Chinese Daoism as well as thehistory of Daoist Studies.

    Taoist Restoration Society: www.taorestore.org. Defunct as of the writing of this article.

    SECONDARY STUDIES

    Alberts, Eli. 2007.A History of Taoism and the Yao People of South China. Youngstown, NY:Cambria Press.

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    Allan, Sarah, and Crispin Williams, eds. 2000. The Guodian Laozi: Proceedings of theInternational Conference, Dartmouth College, May 1998. Berkeley:.: The Society for the Studyof Early China.

    Ames, Roger, ed. 1998. Wandering at Ease in the Zhuangzi. Albany: State University of NewYork Press.

    Andersen, Poul. 1980. The Method of Holding the Three Ones: A Taoist Manual of the FourthCentury A.D. London: Curzon.

    ______. 1990. A Visit to Hua-shan. Cahiers dExtrme-Asie5: 349-54.

    ______. 1991. The Study of the Tao-tsang. Studies in Central and East Asian Religions3: 81-94.

    Andersen, Poul, and Florian Reiter, eds. 2005. Scriptures, Schools and. Forms of Practice inDaoism: A Berlin Symposium. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag.

    Anderson, Gerald. 1999. Biographical Dictionary of Christian Missions. Grand Rapids, Mich.:Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company.

    Anderson, Gerald et al. 1995.Mission Legacies: Biographical Studies of Leaders of the ModernMissionary Movement. Maryknoll, NY:Orbis Books.

    Andresen, Jensine, and Robert K.C. Forman, eds. 2000. Cognitive Models, Spiritual Maps.Bowling Green, Ohio: Imprint Academic.

    Arendrup, Birhte. 1974. The First Chapter of Guo Xiangs Commentary to the Zhuanzi. ActaOrientalia 36: 311-416.

    Baldrian-Hussein, Farzeen. 1984.Procds secrets du Joyau magiqueTrait dalchimie taostedu XI sicle. Paris: Les Deux Ocans.

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    _____. 1987. Taoism: An Overview. In Encyclopedia of Religion, edited by Mircea Eliade,volume 14: 288-306. New York and London: MacMillan.

    Barrett, T.H. 1981. Introduction. In Taoism and Chinese Religionby Henri Maspero, vii-xxiii.Translated by Frank Kierman. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1981.

    _____. 1987. Taoism: History of the Study. In Encyclopedia of Religion, edited by MirceaEliade, volume 14, 329-32. New York and London: MacMillan.

    _____. 1994a. The Taoist Canon in Japan: Some Implications of the Research of Ho PengYoke. Taoist Resources 5.2: 71-77.

    _____. 1994b. The Emergence of the Taoist Papacy in the Tang Dynasty.Asia Major7: 89-106.

    _____. 1996. Taoism under the Tang. London: Wellsweep Press.

    _____. 2000. Daoism: A Historical Narrative. In Daoism Handbook, edited by Livia Kohn,xviii-xxvii. Leiden: Brill.

    _____. 2005. Daoism: History of the Study. In Encyclopedia of Religion, edited by LindsayJones, volume 4, 2212-16. 2nded. New York and London: MacMillan.

    Baryosher-Chemouny, Muriel. 1996. La quete de limmortalit en Chine: Alchimie et payasageintrieur sous les Song. Paris: Editions Dervy.

    Baxter, William. 1998. Situating the Language of theLao-tzu: The Probably Date of the Tao-te-ching. In Livia Kohn and Michael LaFargue (eds.), Lao-tzu and the Tao-te-ching, 231-53.Albany: State University of New York Press.

    Belamide, Paulino. 2000. Taoism and Healing in North America: The Healing Tao of MantakChia.International Review of Chinese Religion and Philosophy5: 245-89.

    Bell, Catherine. 1993. In Search of the Tao in Taoism: New Questions of Unity andMultiplicity.History of Religions33.2: 185-201.

    Berkowitz, Alan. 2000. Patterns of Disengagement: The Practice and Portrayal of Reclusion inEarly Medieval China. Stanford: Stanford University Press.

    Bokenkamp, Stephen R. 1991. In Memoriam: Edward H. Schafer (1913-1991). TaoistResources 3.1: 97-99.

    _____. 1983. Sources of the Ling-pao Scriptures. In Tantric and Taoist Studies, volume 2, 434-86. Bruxelles: Institute Belge des Hautes Etudes Chinoises.

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    _____. 1986. Taoist Literature. Part I: Through the Tang Dynasty. In The Indiana Companionto Traditional Chinese Literature, edited by William H. Nienhauser, 138-52. Bloomington:Indiana University Press.

    _____. 1997.Early Daoist Scriptures. Berkeley: University of California Press.

    _____. 2001. Review of Michael Saso, The Gold Pavilion. Journal of Chinese Religions29:358-59.

    _____. 2004. The Silkworm and the Bodhi Tree: The Lingbao Attempt to Replace Buddhism inChina and Our Attempt to Place Lingbao Taoism. In John Lagerwey (ed.),Religion and ChineseSociety, vol. 1, 317-39. Hong Kong: Chinese University of Hong Kong.

    _____. 2005. Daoism: An Overview. In Encyclopedia of Religion, edited by Lindsay Jones,volume 14, 2176-2192. New York and London: MacMillan.

    Boltz, Judith M. 1986a. Tao-tsang. In The Indiana Companion to Traditional Chinese

    Literature, edited by William H. Nienhauser, 763-66. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.

    _____. 1986b. Taoist Literature. Part II: Five Dynasties to the Ming. In The IndianaCompanion to Traditional Chinese Literature, edited by William H. Nienhauser, 152-174.Bloomington: Indiana University Press.

    _____. 1987a. A Survey of Taoist Literature: Tenth to Seventeenth Centuries. Berkeley:University of California, Institute of East Asian Studies.

    ______. 1987b. Taoist Literature. In Encyclopedia of Religion, edited by Mircea Eliade,volume 14, 317-29. New York and London: MacMillan.

    _____. 1993. Notes on Modern Editions of the Taoist Canon.Bulletin of the School of Orientaland African Studies 56: 87-95.

    _____. 1994. Notes on theDaozang tiyao. China Review International 1: 1-33.

    ______. 2005. Taoist Literature. InEncyclopedia of Religion, edited by Lindsay Jones, volume4, 2202-2212. New York and London: MacMillan.

    Bradbury, Steve. 1992. The American Conquest of Philosophical Taoism. In Cornelia Mooreand Lucy Lower (eds.), Translation East and West: A Cross-cultural Approach, 29-41. Honolulu:East-West Center.

    Braun, Willi, and Russell McCutcheon, eds. 2000. Guide to the Study of Religion. London andNew York: Continuum.

    Bumbacher, Stephan Peter. 2000. Fragments of the Daoxue zhuan. Frankfurt am Main: PeterLand.

    Cabezn, Jos, and Sheila Greeve Davaney, eds. 2004.Identity and the Politics of Scholarship inthe Study of Religion. London and New York: Routledge.

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    Cadonna, Alfredo. 2001. Quali parole VI aspettate che aggiunga? Il commentario alDaodejing di Bai Yuchan, maestro taoista del XIII secolo. Orientalia Venetiana no. 9. Florence:Leo S. Olschki.

    Cahill, Suzanne. 1993. Transcendence and Divine Passion: The Queen Mother of the West inMedieval China. Stanford: Stanford University Press.

    _____. 2006.Divine Traces of the Daoist Sisterhood: Records of the Assembled Transcendents ofthe Fortified Walled City. Cambridge, Mass.: Three Pines Press.

    Campany, Robert Ford. 2002. To Live as Long as Heaven and Earth: A Translation and Study ofGe Hongs Traditions of Divine Transcendents. Berkeley: University of California Press.

    _____. 2003. On the Very Idea of Religions (In the Modern West and in Early MedievalChina).History of Religions 42: 287-319.

    Capps, Walter, ed. 1995. Religious Studies: The Making of a Discipline. Minneapolis, MN:Augsburg Fortress Publishers.

    Carrette, J., and Richard King. 2004. Selling Spirituality: The Silent Takeover of Religion.London and New York: Routledge.

    Cedzich, Ursula-Angelika. 2001. Corpse Deliverance, Substitute Bodies, Name Change, andFeigned Death: Aspects of Metamorphosis and Immortality in Early Medieval China.Journal ofChinese Religions29: 1-68.

    Chan, Alan K.L. 1991. Two Visions of the Way: A Study of the Wang Pi and the Ho-shang KungCommentaries on the Lao-Tzu. Albany: State University of New York Press.

    _____. 2000. TheDaode jing and Its Tradition. In Livia Kohn (ed.), Daoism Handbook, 1-29.

    Leiden: Brill.

    Chan, Kim-kwong et al. 2005. Religious Freedom in China: Policy, Administration andRegulation. Santa Barbara: Institute for the Study of American Religion.

    Chan, Wing-tsit. 1963. A Source Book in Chinese Philosophy. Princeton: Princeton UniversityPress.

    Chavannes, Eduoard. 1905. Le Tao t king grav sur pierre. Toung Pao 6: 229-36.

    _____. 1910. Le Tai-chanEssai de monographie dun culte chinois. Paris: Annales du MuseGuiment 28: 415-24.

    _____. 1919. Le jet des Dragons.Mmoires concernant lAsie Orientale 3: 51-220.

    Chavannes, Eduoard, and Paul Pelliot. 1913. Un trait manichen retrouv en Chine. JournalAsiatique 99-199, 261-394.

    Chen Yinque (1890-1969). 2001. Jin-Ming guan conggao chubian .Beijing: Sanlian shudian.

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    Chinese Daoist Association. 2002. Taoism. Beijing: Foreign Languages Press.

    Ching, Julia. 2002. East Asian Religions. In Willard Oxtoby (ed.), World Religions: EasternTraditions, 316-429.

    Clarke, J.J. 1997. Oriental Enlightenment: The Encounter between Asian and Western Thought.

    London: Routledge.

    _____. 2000. The Tao of the West: Western Transformations of Taoist Thought. London and NewYork: Routledge.

    Cohen, Alvin P. 1990. In Memoriam: Wolfram Eberhard, 1909-1989. Asian Folklore Studies49: 125-133.

    Cook, Scott, ed. 2003. Hiding the World in the World: Uneven Discourses on the Zhuangzi.Albany: State University of New York Press.

    Creel, Herrlee G. 1956. What is Taoism?Journal of the American Oriental Society 76: 139-52.

    _____. 1970. What is Taoism? and Other Studies in Chinese Cultural History. Chicago:University of Chicago Press.

    Csikszentmihalyi, Mark. 2000. Han Cosmology and Mantic Practices. In Livia Kohn (ed.),Daoism Handbook, 53-73. Leiden: Brill.

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