Table of Contents
- JOURNAL> Journal of Chinese Literature and
Culture, Volume 5, Issue 2 (November 2018)
- Journal TOC> Journal of Religion in Japan 7.3
(2018) on religions and the Meiji Restoration
- PASSING> Seishi Karashima
JOURNAL>
Journal of Chinese Literature and Culture, Volume 5, Issue 2 (November 2018)
by A. Charles Muller
The new issue of the Journal of
Chinese Literature and Culture, 5.2 (November 2018) is now available in
print and online. All articles are ready to be downloaded via Duke University Press Journals Online (subscription
needed) or Project MUSE (subscription
needed).
Journal of
Chinese Literature and Culture Volume 5 Issue
2 November 2018
Special Issue Digital Methods and Traditional
Chinese Literary Studies
Table of Contents
Introduction
THOMAS MAZANEC, JEFFREY THARSEN, JING CHEN
Digital Approaches to Text Reuse in the Early
Chinese Corpus
DONALD STURGEON
Drawing out the Essentials: Historiographic
Annotation as a Textual Network
EVAN NICOLL-JOHNSON
Describing Objects in Tang Dynasty Poetic
Language: a Study Based on Word Embeddings
MARIANA ZORKINA
Exploring Chinese Poetry with Digital
Assistance: Examples from Linguistic, Literary, and Historical Viewpoints
CHAO-LIN LIU, THOMAS MAZANEC, JEFFREY THARSEN
Networks of Exchange Poetry in Late Medieval
China: Notes Toward a Dynamic History of Tang Literature
THOMAS MAZANEC
Geographic Distribution and Change in Tang
Poetry: Data Analysis from the “Chronological Map of Tang-Song Literature”
WANG ZHAOPENG, QIAO JUNJUN
THOMAS MAZANEC, translator
Visualizing Alternative Literary Canons in
Ming Dynasty China (1368-1644): A Preliminary Case Study
TIMOTHY ROBERT CLIFFORD
New Frontiers of Electronic Textual Research
in the Humanities: Investigating Classical Allusions in Chinese Poetry through
Digital Methods
YI-LONG HUANG, BINGYU ZHENG
Journal
TOC> Journal of Religion in Japan 7.3 (2018) on religions and the Meiji
Restoration
by Elisabetta Porcu
Dear Colleagues,
Our apologies for cross-posting.
We are pleased to announce that the
special issue of the Journal of Religion in Japan (JRJ)
7.3 on Japanese Religions and the Meiji Restoration: A
Reconsideration is available at https://brill.com/abstract/journals/jrj/7/3/jrj.7.issue-3.xml.
With our best regards,
The Editors
Elisabetta Porcu and James Mark Shields
*****
Journal of Religion in
Japan 7.3 (2018-2019)
Special Issue: Japanese Religions and
the Meiji Restoration: A Reconsideration
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
JAMES MARK SHIELDS AND TAKASHI MIURA
Japanese Religions and the Meiji Restoration:
A Reconsideration
ARTICLES
TAKASHI MIURA
The Ee ja nai ka and
the Meiji Restoration: A View from Nagoya through Hosono Yōsai’s Kankyō
manpitsu
ADAM LYONS
Meiji Prison Religion: Benevolent Punishments
and the National Creed
MELISSA ANNE-MARIE CURLEY
Kiyozawa Manshi and the Spirit of the Meiji
NAMIKI EIKO
Honda Chikaatsu’s Spiritual Learning as a
Means of Bringing Blessings and Guiding the Nation
BOOK REVIEWS
Kumamoto Masaki, Ryōjutsu kara
shūkyō e: Sekai kyūseikyō no kyōdan soshikironteki kenkyū (From magic
to religion: A study of the typology of Sekai kyūseikyō as a
religious group), by FRANZISKA STEFFEN
Murakami Aki, Fusha no iru
nichijō: Tsugaru no kamisama kara toshin no supirichuaru serapisuto made (Shamans
in Daily Life: From Tsugaru’s Kamisama to the Urban Spiritual Therapists), by
MARIANNA ZANETTA
Mark Teeuwen and John Breen, A
Social History of the Ise Shrines: Divine Capital, by TZE M. LOO
-------
Dr. Elisabetta Porcu
Senior Lecturer in Asian Religions
University of Cape Town, Department of
Religious Studies
Email: elisabetta.porcu@uct.ac.za
Director, Center for the Study of Asian
Religions (CSAR)
Founding Editor, Journal of Religion
in Japan (Brill) http://www.brill.com/jrj
PASSING>
Seishi Karashima
by Jonathan Silk
Dear Friends,
I take the
opportunity to share with you my grief at the sudden and entirely unexpected
passing of an outstanding scholar and dear friend, Seishi Karashima, who died
in his sleep yesterday. He was only 62. I am certain that his work is known to
one and all, and thus there is no need to detail it here. I am certain that
appreciations and so forth will appear in due course.
In grief,
Jonathan Silk