Skip to main content

The Lady of Linshui Pacifies Demons: BIBLIOGRAPHY

The Lady of Linshui Pacifies Demons
BIBLIOGRAPHY
    • Notifications
    • Privacy
  • Project HomeThe Lady of Linshui Pacifies Demons
  • Projects
  • Learn more about Manifold

Notes

Show the following:

  • Annotations
  • Resources
Search within:

Adjust appearance:

  • font
    Font style
  • color scheme
  • Margins
table of contents
  1. Title Page
  2. Copyright
  3. Contents
  4. Translator’s Note and Acknowledgments
  5. Introduction by Mark Edward Lewis and Brigitte Baptandier
  6. Chapter 1. Wang Yanbin Builds Luoyang Bridge / Duanming Scholar Cai Completes the Work and Returns to the West
  7. Chapter 2. Chen Jinggu Studies Magic at Mount Lü / The Ravine Demon Takes on Illusory Forms at Xue Mountain
  8. Chapter 3. Jiang Shanyu Renounces Her Selfhood to Obtain the Way / Chen Jinggu Cuts Out a Piece of Her Flesh to Save Her Parents
  9. Chapter 4. Cinnabar Cloud Is Captured and Converts to Buddhism to Earn Good Karma / Madame Shen Is Rescued by Being Given a Soul Taken from a Dead Person
  10. Chapter 5. At Lingxiao Pan the Rock Press Women Are Captured / At Guojie Mountain We Meet Jiang Hupo
  11. Chapter 6. The Spider Fiend Is Captured and Dies / The Ravine Demon Uses a Stratagem to Seek Refuge
  12. Chapter 7. Bringing an End to the Auspicious Period, Jinggu Eliminates the Fiend / Meeting Misfortune, Liu Encounters a Demon
  13. Chapter 8. The Snake Monster Having Been Expelled, Future Calamity Is Left Behind / The Husband Having Been Saved, Their Prior Karma Is Assisted
  14. Chapter 9. In the Old Temple the Fiend Monk Works His Evil Magic / The Lian River Clam Monster Creates a Spectral Tower
  15. Chapter 10. As the Old Ruler Is on His Deathbed, the People Grieve / The New Lord Inherits the Throne, and the Common People Encounter Misfortune
  16. Chapter 11. Wang Yanbing Is Routed at Fuzhou City / Chen Shouyuan Proposes to Build the Baohuang Palace
  17. Chapter 12. [Yanbin] Ascends to the Emperorship, and All the Officials Offer Congratulations / [Chen Jinggu] Kills the White Snake and Receives Her First Honorary Title
  18. Chapter 13. Madame Chen Retires to Linshui / Yuan Guangzhi Leaves Mount Mao for the First Time
  19. Chapter 14. Xue Wenjie Spreads Rumors in the Palace / Wang Jitu’s Army Surrounds Fuzhou City
  20. Chapter 15. Yuan Guangzhi’s Army Suffers Defeat / Madame Chen Receives a Second Title
  21. Chapter 16. Praying for Rain, the People Feel Grateful / Perfecting the True Way, a Third Title Is Granted
  22. Chapter 17. Avenging Deep Hatred by Capturing the Ravine Demon / Weeping Tears of Blood and Gathering Again at the Bridge of One Hundred Flowers
  23. Dramatis Personae
  24. Glossary of Chinese Characters
  25. Notes
  26. Bibliography

BIBLIOGRAPHY

  • Andersen, Poul. 1989–90. “The Practice of Bugang.” Cahiers d’Extrême-Asie 5: 15–53.
  • Baptandier, Brigitte. 1996. “Le rituel d’Ouverture des Passes: Un concept de l’enfance.” L’homme 137 (January–March 1996): 119–42.
  • ________, ed. 2001. De la Malemort: En quelques pays d’Asie. Paris: Karthala.
  • ________. 2002. “Lüshan Puppet Theatre in Fujian.” In Ethnography in China Today: A Critical Assessment of Methods and Results, edited by Daniel L. Overmyer and Shin-Yi Chao, 243–56. Taipei: Yuan-Liou.
  • ________. 2008a. The Lady of Linshui: A Chinese Female Cult. Translated by Kristin Ingrid Fryklund. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
  • ________. 2008b. “La biographie de la Mère: La tablette à écriture.” In Du corps au texte: Approches comparatives, edited by Brigitte Baptandier and Giordana Charuty, 111–49. Nanterre: Société d’Ethnologie.
  • ________. 2016. “On the Effectiveness of Symbols: Women’s Bodies as Mandala.” In Transforming the Void: Embryological Discourse and Reproductive Imagery in East Asian Religions, edited by Anna Andreeva and Dominic Steavu, 212–49. Leiden: Brill.
  • Berezkin, Rostislav, and Vincent Goossaert. 2012. “The Three Mao Lords in Modern Jiangnan: Cult and Pilgrimage Between Daoism and Baojuan Recitation.” Bulletin de l’École française d’Extrême-Orient 99 (2012): 295–326.
  • Boltz, Judith. 1987. A Survey of Taoist Literature: Tenth to Seventeenth Centuries. Berkeley: Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California Press.
  • ________. 1993. “Not by the Seal of Office Alone: New Weapons in Battles with the Supernatural.” In Religion and Society in T’ang and Sung China, edited by Patricia Buckley Ebrey and Peter N. Gregory, 241–305. Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press.
  • Cahill, Suzanne E. 2006. Divine Traces of the Daoist Sisterhood: “Records of the Assembled Transcendents of the Fortified City Wall” by Du Guangting (850–933). Translated and annotated with an introduction by Suzanne E. Cahill. Magdalena, NM: Three Pines Press.
  • Cass, Victoria. 1999. Dangerous Women: Warriors, Grannies, and Geishas of the Ming. Boston: Rowman and Littlefield.
  • Chen, Li Fanping 陳李凡平. 2017. Journey of a Goddess: Chen Jinggu Subdues the Snake Demon. Albany: SUNY Press.
  • Davis, Edward L. 2001. Society and the Supernatural in Song China. Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press.
  • Demiéville, Paul. (1965) 1989. “Momies d’Extrême-Orient.” Journal des savants 1: 144–70.
  • Despeux, Catherine. 1990. Immortelles de la Chine ancienne. Paris: Pardès.
  • ________. 2012. Taoïsme et connaissance de soi: La carte de la culture de la perfection (Xiuzhentu). Paris: Guy Trédaniel.
  • Despeux, Catherine, and Livia Kohn. 2003. Women in Taoism. Dunedin, FL: Three Pines Press.
  • Faure, Bernard. 1991. The Rhetoric of Immediacy: A Cultural Critique of Chan/Zen Buddhism. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
  • Feng Menglong. 1994. Le Serpent Blanc: Tales from the Jin Shi Tong Yan, a Classical Anthology Compiled by Feng Menglong. Beijing: Foreign Languages Press.
  • Gherchanoc, Liliane, et al., eds. (2002) 2006. Invention du féminin. Paris: Éditions Campagne Première.
  • Hu Fuchen 胡孚琛. 1985. Zhonghua daojiao da cidian 中華道教大辭典. Beijing: Zhongguo Shehui Kexue Chubanshe.
  • Huang Qiquan 黃啟權. 1993. “Cong difangzhi jizai tan Chen Jinggu” 從地方志記載談陳靖姑. In Chen Jinggu wenhua yanjiu 陳靖姑文化研究 (論文集), 90–96. Fuzhou: Minxinchu.
  • Huntington, Rania. 2003. Alien Kind: Foxes and Late Imperial Narrative. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
  • Idema, Wilt L. 2009. The White Snake and Her Son: A Translation of “The Precious Scroll of Thunder Peak,” with Related Texts. Indianapolis: Hackett.
  • Lemoine, Jacques, and Dominique Lemaire. 2016. Le triptyque taoïste des San Diu du Vietnam: Naissance, ordination, mort. Bangkok: Oi Publishing.
  • Levi, Jean. 1984. “Le renard, la morte et la courtisane dans la Chine classique.” Études mongoles et sibériennes 15 (1984): 111–39.
  • Li Xiangliu 李鄉瀏. 1998. “Lüshan zai hechu?” 閭山在何處. In Fuzhou Lüshan wenhua 福州閭山文化, edited by Lin Xiangcai 林祥彩, 121–23. Fuzhou: Minxinchu.
  • Lin Guoping 林國平 and Peng Wenning 彭文寧. 1993. Fujian minjian xinyang 福建民間信仰. Fuzhou: Fujian Renmin Chubanshe.
  • Linshui pingyao 臨水平妖. Taizhong: Ruicheng shuju, n.d.; Xiamen: Xiamenhui wentang. Reprint, Taizhong: Wujitian daojian xinsuo ed., 1992
  • Meulenbeld, Mark R. E. 2015. Demonic Warfare: Daoism, Territorial Networks, and the History of a Ming Novel. Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press.
  • ________. 2018. “The Dark Emperor’s Law: A Daoist Temple and Its Codification of Rituals in Hunan.” Studies in Chinese Religions 4, no. 1: 66–111.
  • Ouyang Xiu. 2004. Historical Records of the Five Dynasties. Translated by Richard L. Davis. New York: Columbia University Press.
  • Pimpaneau, Jacques. 1965. “La légende du Serpent Blanc dans le Ts’ing P’ing Chan T’ang Houa Pen.” Journal asiatique 253: 251–77.
  • Quanzhou fuzhi 泉州府志 (Gazetteer of Quanzhou Prefecture). 1967. Reprint, Taipei: Ch’engwen.
  • Robinet, Isabelle. (1979) 1995. Méditation taoïste. Paris: Albin Michel.
  • Saso, Michael. (1978) 1990. The Teachings of Taoist Master Chuang. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
  • Schafer, Edward H. 1954. The Empire of Min. Tokyo: Rutland.
  • Schipper, Kristopher M. 1978. “The Taoist Body.” History of Religions 17, nos. 3–4 (February–March 1978): 355–86.
  • ________. 1985 “Taoist Ritual and Local Cults of the Tang Dynasty.” In Tantric and Taoist Studies in Honor of Rolf A. Stein, edited by Michel Strickmann, 3:812–24. Brussels: Institut Belge des Hautes Études Chinoises.
  • Schneider, Monique. 1979. De l’exorcisme à la psychanalyse: Le féminin expurgé. Paris: Éditions Retz.
  • Shi Hongbao 施鴻保. 1985. Min zaji 閩雜記. Fuzhou: Fujian Renmin Chubanshe.
  • Strickmann, Michel. 1975. “The Thunder Rites of the Sung: Notes on the Shen-hsiao Sect of the Southern School of Taoism.” Toho shukyo 46: 15–28.
  • ________. 1996. Mantras et mandarins: Le bouddhisme tantrique en Chine. Paris: Gallimard.
  • Topley, Marjorie. 1954. “Chinese Women’s Vegetarian Houses in Singapore.” Journal of the Malayan Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society 27: 51–67.
  • ________. 1974. “Cosmic Antagonism: A Mother-Child Syndrome.” In Religion and Ritual in Chinese Society, edited by Arthur P. Wolf, 233–51. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
  • ________. 1975. “Marriage Resistance in Rural Kwangtung.” In Women and Society in China, edited by Margery Wolf and Roxanne Whitke, 67–89. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
  • Wang Ch’iu-Kuei 王秋桂, ed. 1993. Zhongguo nuoxi nuo wenhua guoji yantaohui lunwenji 中國儺戲儺文化國際研討會論文集. Taipei: Minsu Quyi Congshu.
  • Wang Ch’iu-Kuei 王秋桂 and Li Fengmao 李豐楙, eds. 1989. Sanjiao yuanliu shengdi fozu soushen daquan 三教源流聖帝佛祖搜神大全, in Zhongguo minjian xinyang ziliao huibian 中國民間信仰資料彙編. Taipei: Xuesheng Shuju.
  • Wugenzi 無根子. 2000. Haiyou ji 海遊記. Edited by Ye Mingsheng 葉明生. Taipei: Shi Hezheng Minsu Wenhua Jijinhui.
  • Xie Qiquan 謝其銓 and Zhang Yongming 張永明, eds. 1999. Shunyi furen: Chen Jinggu yu xiadu 順義夫人:陳靖姑與下渡. Changle: Yantajing Xianjun Si.
  • Xu Xiaowang 徐暁望. 1993. Fujian minjian xinyang yuanliu 福建民間信仰源流. Fuzhou: Fujian Jiaoyu Chubanshe.
  • Ye Mingsheng 葉明生. 1994. “Fujian daojiao Lüshan pai xingtai ji yuanliu chu tan” 福建道教閭山派形態及源流初探. In Fuzhou daojiao wenhua yanjiu 福州道教文化研究, edited by Zhang Zhuanxing 張傳興, 127–52. Fuzhou: Minxinchu.
  • ________. 1995. Minxi Shanghang gaoqiang kuilei yu Furen xi 閩西上杭高腔傀儡與夫人戲, edited by Wang Chiu-Kuei 王秋桂. Taipei: Minsu Quyi Congshu.
  • ________. 1996. Fujian Shanghang luandan kuileixi Furen zhuan 福建上杭亂彈傀儡戲夫人傳, edited by Wang Chiu-Kuei 王秋桂. Taipei: Minsu Quyi Congshu.
  • Ye Mingsheng 葉明生 and John Lagerwey 勞格文, eds. 2007. Fujiansheng Jianyangshi Lüshanpai keyiben 福建省建陽市閭山派科儀本. Taipei: Xinwenfeng Chuban Gongsi.
  • Ye Mingsheng 葉明生 and Wu Naiyu 吳乃宇. 1997. Fujian shouning siping kuileixi Nainiang zhuan 福建壽寧四平傀儡戲奶娘傳, edited by Wang Ch’iu-Kuei 王秋桂. Taipei: Minsu Quyi Congshu.
  • Ye Mingsheng 葉明生 and Zheng An’en 鄭安恩. 2010. Gutian Linshui gong zhi 古田臨水宮志. Hong Kong: Tianma Chubanshe.
  • Ye Zhongming 葉中鳴, ed. 1983. Chen shisi qizhuan 陳十四奇傳. Zhejiang: Wenyi Chubanshe.
  • Yü Chun-fang. 2001. Kuan-yin: The Chinese Transformation of Avalokitesvara. New York: Columbia University Press.
  • Yulin shunyi dutuochan ruozhenjing 毓麟順懿度脫產若真經. n.d. Manuscript, Linshui Gong, Gutian.
  • Zeng Changsen 曾昌森, Chen Xuesong 陳學松, and She Xianfeng 佘險峰, eds. 1987. Mindu bieji 閩都別記. 3 vols. Fuzhou: Fujian Renmin Chubanshe.
  • Zhang Taoyuan 張陶淵 and Yan Liang 閻良. 1993. Lishan laomu 驪山老母. Shanxi: Lintong Xian Wenxie Bianyin.
  • Zhu Meitian 注梅田, Zhang Zhuanxing 張傳興, and Weng Huiwen 翁惠文, eds. 1993. Chen Jinggu wenhua yanjiu 陳靖姑文化研究. Fuzhou: Minxinchu.
  • Zhuang Kongshan 庄孔韶. (1989) 1993. “Fujian Chen Jinggu chuanqi ji qi xinyang de tianye yanjiu” 福建陳靖姑傳奇及其信仰的田野研究. In Chen Jinggu wenhua yanjiu, edited by Zhu Meitian 注梅田, Zhang Zhuanxing 張傳興, and Weng Huiwen 翁惠文, 4–26. Fuzhou: Minxinchu.

Annotate

Previous
All rights reserved
Powered by Manifold Scholarship. Learn more at
Opens in new tab or windowmanifoldapp.org