A FEMINIST TAOIST VOICE PART 1: MY DIALOGUE WITH ELISA FON, ACUPUNCTURIST, TAOIST, FEMINIST AND FRIEND by Sara Frykenberg
Originally published on the Feminism and Religion project
“So it all kind of depends… even in men compared to men, and women compared to women, you would have to have a... more
“So it all kind of depends… even in men compared to men, and women compared to women, you would have to have a counterpart to judge something as yin or yang—you are never statically just yin or just yang…”
Elisa Fon is a student of acupuncture, graduating this semester from Yo San University in Santa Monica, CA. She also studies reiki, energy healing, meditation and yoga. Elisa and I have known each other for most of our lives as friends, as one another’s support and as chosen family. Over the last few years, however, we have more consciously fostered an intentional aspect of our intimacy: a challenge to each other to live more authentically, to walk counter-abusively and to live towards physical, spiritual and emotional empowerment. One privilege of this relationship has been the opportunity to create a language together in order to speak across our differences and share our respective passions: feminist theo/alogies (mine) and Chinese medicine/ healing arts (Elisa’s).
Die Vergoetterung Maos: Bilder und Praktiken in der Kulturrevolution und darueber hinaus
In Helmut Opletal (Ed.) (2011). Die Kultur der Kulturrevolution - Personenkult und politisches Design im China von Mao Zedong (Gent: Snoeck Publishers), 93-103
Deification of Mao: Religious Imagery and Practices During the Cultural Revolution and Beyond
in Woei Lien Chong (ed.), China's Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution: Master Narratives and Post-Mao Counternarratives (Boulder, CO: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2002), 139-184
Mao as the Kitchen God
Originally published in China Information, special issue Perspectives on Mao and the Cultural Revolution, Vol. xi, Nos. 2/3 (Autumn/Winter 1996-1997), 196-211
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Seen by:Taming Tigers in Medieval Chinese Buddhism (in Chinese)
by Huaiyu Chen
Taipei: Institute of Chinese Literature and Philosophy, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan, 2012.
Seminario Popolare sul Pensiero dell'Estremo Oriente (4 Ed.). Perché guardare a Oriente?
by Pietro Piro
Programma delle giornate di studi: Perché guardare a Oriente? Termini Imerese 5-6 Maggio 2012.
Nella giornata di studi Perchè guardare a Oriente? I ricercatori coinvolti, a partire dalle proprie... more Nella giornata di studi Perchè guardare a Oriente? I ricercatori coinvolti, a partire dalle proprie competenze e dai propri interessi, cercheranno di chiarire, in modo semplice e “popolare” perché è necessario conoscere e approfondire un tema legato ad un aspetto del pensiero Orientale (musica, arte, filosofia, religione, cinema..etc). In questo modo, si cercherà di trovare ragioni vitali, e non esclusivamente accademiche o commerciali, per accostarsi all’Oriente. Il tentativo è quello di avvicinare quante più persone possibili ad una cultura che rimane, nonostante l’accelerazione dei ritmi globalizzanti, relegata in secondo piano e ristretta o al cerchio ristretto degli specialisti o esposta alla banalizzazione del pensiero unico. Si cercherà dunque, di offrire delle risposte che possano essere un vero punto d’inizio per chi, spesso carico di pregiudizi, si accosta per la prima volta ad un mondo così complesso e affascinante. La sfida non è semplice. Si cercherà di non esporre una teoria preconfezionata, quanto di cercare di aprirsi al dialogo interrogante e stabilire insieme ragioni superiori e condivise.
Mani en Chine au 6e siècle
« Mani en Chine au VIe siècle », Journal Asiatique, 293-1, 2005, p. 357-378.
A 6th c. Sogdian tomb in Chang'an displays some Manichaean features and iconography, so that the arrival of... more A 6th c. Sogdian tomb in Chang'an displays some Manichaean features and iconography, so that the arrival of Manichaeism in China should be pushed backward by 150 years
encyclopedia article on the term "Taoismus"
by Thomas Jülch
in: Enzyklopädie der Neuzeit, vol. 12. Stuttgart: Metzler, 2011. pp. 269-274
(in collaboration with Prof. Achim Mittag)
The Buddhist re-interpretation of the legends surrounding King Mu of Zhou
by Thomas Jülch
Journal of the American Oriental Society, vol. 130(4), 2011. pp. 625-627.
Seminario Il Simbolismo: la Grammatica del Sacro.
by Pietro Piro
Seminario Prospettive Sacre d'Oriente e d'Occidente
4° Seminario
Il Simbolismo: la Grammatica del Sacro.
Palermo, 2-4 marzo 2012
Officina di Studi Medievali
via del Parlamento n.3.
The Officina di Studi Medievali (OSM) for almost thirty years has been active in Palermo (Italy), with intense... more
The Officina di Studi Medievali (OSM) for almost thirty years has been active in Palermo (Italy), with intense national and international projection. Founded in 1980 by a group of researchers and lovers of medieval studies largely from the University of Palermo, OSM is a no-profit cultural association working on various lines of research in medieval studies, with a programmatic multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary approach. It is housed in the thirteenth-century monumental complex of the San Francesco d’Assisi Basilica, in the heart of the historic area of Palermo, managed by the Province of Sicily of the Lesser Conventual Monks (OFMConv) with which, since its foundation, OSM has established intense and active collaboration. There is a precious patrimony in the Franciscan Library directed by Father Diego Ciccarelli, which possesses over 45,000 volumes, manuscripts, incunabula and numerous old books of rare merit and value, a patrimony that, though in full and mutual autonomy, is integrated with the OSM Library, with common projects for training and for diffusion of a “book culture”. OSM is run by a Ufficio di Presidenza (staff elected by the Assembly of Members): the Chairman is Alessandro Musco and the other members are Armando Bisanti, Diego Ciccarelli, Carolina Miceli and Patrizia Spallino.
It is coordinated by an Comitato scientifico, made up of: Filippo Burgarella, Antonino Buttitta, Paolo Emilio Carapezza, Federico Doglio, Fernando Domínguez Reboiras, Salvatore Fodale, Claudio Leonardi, Andrea Romano, Pasquale Smiriglia, Salvatore Tramontana, Pere Villalba Varneda, Oleg Voskoboynikov and Agostino Ziino. The Committee also draws on the consultation and collaboration of numerous Italian and overseas researchers. OSM is animated by a big group of members, as stable collaborators of the cultural, training and academic promotion activities, of the management of the Library, of the publishing initiatives, of administrative services and logistics. The research area of interest of OSM, which has always operated in close synergy with the University of Palermo and particularly with the Facoltà di Lettere e Filosofia, is constituted by the Middle Ages in the broadest and most inclusive sense, with projections on its roots in ancient cultures and on its legacies for modern culture. The main research areas that OSM has cultivated and progressively enriched over the years are the metaphysical tradition, the history of medieval ideas and knowledge in the plurality of their ramifications, the intersection of cultural traditions in the medieval epoch, especially in the Mediterranean area (Arab and Islamic, Jewish, Latin and Christian, Greek and Byzantine worlds, etc.), the history of Middle Latin literature, palaeographic, diplomatic and historical studies. Currently the academic work of OSM is organized through various workshops that have the purpose of coordinating, through thematic areas of homogeneous interest, members and all collaborators. The operational workshops, for which we will also indicate the coordinators, are:
* Byzantina
which deals with Byzantine Civilization in a broad sense (Filippo Burgarella, Univ. of Calabria) and the Christian East (Rosanna Gambino, Univ. of Palermo);
* Federiciana
(Oleg Voskoboynikov, Univ. of Moscow) engaged in studying the Mediterranean historical and cultural context that from the Norman-Swabian period goes all through the 14th century;
* Franciscana
(Luca Parisoli, Univ. of Calabria and Paris-Nanterre) which deals with Franciscan studies in a broad spectrum;
* OSMIL-Itinera Lulliana
organized by a research group on the work and thought of Raymond Lull and on the traditions of “Lullism” (Jordi Gaya Esberiich, Univ. of Palm de Majorca, Marta Romano, Univ. of Palermo);
* OSMOR-Orientalistica
involving the researchers of the oriental studies area (Judaism, Luciana Pepi, Univ. of Palermo; Arabic and Islamic Culture, Giuseppe Roccaro and Patrizia Spallino, Univ. of Palermo; Indology, Maria Lucilla Vassallo, Univ. of Palermo), which also runs annual courses on Arabic and Jewish language and culture, both at the basic and the superior levels;
* Traditio
centring on the tradition of medieval knowledge, with particular attention to the Latin area, expressed in literature, poetry, theatre, philosophy, theology, music, etc. (Armando Bisanti and Pietro Palmari, Univ. of Palermo);
* Vivarium
devoted to studies on Palaeography, Diploma Studies, Book Culture, Library Management, Restoration of paper and books (Carolina Miceli, Univ. of Palermo).
Each workshop promotes and uses national and international collaborations with universities, departments, associations, foundations, single scholars and researchers thanks also to formal agreements, conventions, research contracts, projects (Erasmus, Socrates), programmes of the European Union and yet others.
These workshops, though with their autonomy and sectorial specificity, are not conceived of as separate compartments, but instead as operational moments animated by a common strategy of mutual interaction and synergic research.
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Seen by: and 9 moreSchmid, Neil - Tun-huang Literature
“Tun-huang Literature,” In The Columbia History of Chinese Literature. Victor Mair, ed., New York: Columbia University Press, 2002, pp.964-988.
http://cup.columbia.edu/book/978-0-231-10984-0/the-columbia-history-of
This chapter from the Columbia History of Chinese Literature provides a detailed survey of Chinese literature found... more This chapter from the Columbia History of Chinese Literature provides a detailed survey of Chinese literature found among the medieval manuscripts discovered in the Library Cave at the Mogao Grottos (Dunhuang) in the northwest of China.
21 views
Seen by:„Creatio ex gigante – a kínai Pangu-mítosz forrásai.”
by Gábor Kósa
Vallástudományi Szemle 2007/2: 142–174.
In Search of the Spirits. Shamanism in China before the Tang dynasty. Part I.
by Gábor Kósa
Shaman (Journal of the International Society for Shamanistic Research) 8.2. (2000) 131–179.
Open Wide, Oh, Heaven's Door! Shamanism in China before the Tang dynasty. Part II.
by Gábor Kósa
Shaman (Journal of the International Society for Shamanistic Research) 9.2. (2001) 169–197.
