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         Chinese Mythology:     more books (101)
  1. Legends of Ten Chinese Traditional Festivals (Chinese/English edition) by He Wei, 2002-01-01
  2. The Dance of the Caterpillars (English, Chinese and English Edition) by Adele Marie Crouch, 2010-08-25
  3. One Quarter of Humanity: Malthusian Mythology and Chinese Realities, 1700-2000 by James Z. Lee, Feng Wang, 2001-12-21
  4. Chinese and Japanese Myths (Myths from Around the World) by Jen Green, 2010-01
  5. Tian Wen: A Chinese Book of Origins by Yuan Ch'u, 1986-10-01
  6. Ancient Chinese Fables by Yang Xianyi, 1996-01-01
  7. Kuan Yin: Myths and Revelations of the Chinese Goddess of Compassion (Chinese Classics) by Martin Palmer, 1995-01-25
  8. Mitologia China/ Chinese Mythology: Los Cuatro Dragones/ the Four Dragons (Historietas Juveniles: Mitologias/ Jr. Graphic Mythologies) (Spanish Edition) by Tom Daning, 2009-04-30
  9. Ancient Chinese Civilization (Ancient Civilizations and Their Myths and Legends) by Todd Van Pelt, Rupert Matthews, 2009-09
  10. Chinese Mythology Library of the Worldsc (Library of the world's myths & legends) (Spanish Edition) by Anthony Christie, 1998-11
  11. Ancient Chinese by Sonia Cheng, 2000-05-01
  12. The Temples of Anking and Their Cults: A Study of Modern Chinese Religion by John Knight Shryock, 1973-06
  13. Chinese Myths & Legends (Ardagh, Philip. World Book Myths & Legends Series.) by Philip Ardagh, 2001-08

41. HIS3302 Comparative Greek And Chinese Mythology
HIS3302 Comparative Greek and chinese mythology. Prof. Nov. 23 AncientGreek chinese mythology from a Comparative Perspective. Nov.
http://www.cuhk.edu.hk/his/0001course/his3302.htm
HIS3302 Comparative Greek and Chinese Mythology
Prof. Frederick Hokming CHEUNG, KHB109, Tel.:2609-7123 E-mail: fhmcheung@cuhk.edu.hk 2001-2002 First Term F6-7 (1:30 ¡V 3:15 pm) at ICS201 This course examines the historical background, characteristics, theories, and themes of ancient Greek and Chinese mythology from a comparative perspective. Sept. 7 Sept. 14 Sept. 21 Main Themes: (1) ¡§Creation of the Universe¡¨ Sept. 28 (2) ¡§Creation of Human Beings¡¨ Oct. 5 Oct. 12 (4) ¡§Goddess¡¨ Oct. 19 (5) ¡§Love¡¨ Oct. 26 Nov. 2 Nov. 9 (8) ¡§Fate¡¨ Nov. 16 Theories of Myth Interpretation Nov. 23 Nov. 30 Review Dec. (TO BE ARRANGED) FINAL EXAM. Assessment Method: Term Paper = 25% (to be submitted on or before Dec. 1, 2001 Saturday) Final Exam. = 50% Tutorial Topics: I. II. III. Comparison on ¡§Love¡¨ IV.

42. HIS3302 Comparative Greek And Chinese Mythology
HIS3302 Comparative Greek and chinese mythology. Prof. Apr. 4, AncientGreek chinese mythology from a Comparative Perspective. Apr.
http://www.cuhk.edu.hk/his/2002/chi/course/his3302.htm
HIS3302 Comparative Greek and Chinese Mythology
Prof. Frederick Hokming CHEUNG, KHB109, Tel.:2609-7123 E-mail: fhmcheung@cuhk.edu.hk 2002-2003 Second Term F1-2 (8:30 ¡V 10:15 am) at CKB UG05 This course examines the historical background, characteristics, theories, and themes of ancient Greek and Chinese mythology from a comparative perspective. Jan. 10, 03 Jan. 17 Jan. 24 Main Themes: (1) ¡§Creation of the Universe¡¨ Jan 31 HOLIDAY Feb. 7 (2) ¡§Creation of Human Beings¡¨ Feb. 14 Feb. 21 (4) ¡§Goddess¡¨ Feb. 28 (5) ¡§Love¡¨ Mar. 7 Mar. 14 Mar. 21 (8) ¡§Fate¡¨ Mar. 28 Theories of Myth Interpretation Apr. 4 Apr. 11 Review Apr. (TO BE ARRANGED) FINAL EXAM. Assessment Method: Tutorial = 25% (Oral Presentation) Term Paper = 25% (to be submitted on or before April 11, 2003) Final Exam. = 50% Tutorial Topics: I. II. III. IV.

43. °ËØÔ¡¤ The Eight Diagrams In Chinese Mythology
°ËØÔ¡¤ the Eight Diagrams in chinese mythology. 718101.png 718101.png,718102.png 718102.png, 718103.png 718103.png, 718104.png
http://pattern.myrice.com/bagua/page_01.htm
°ËØÔ¡¤ the Eight Diagrams in Chinese mythology
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p-073-a.png p-073-b.png p-074-b.png p-075-a.png

44. Ask Jeeves: Search Results For "Superstitions In Chinese Mythology"
All Web Sites for Superstitions In chinese mythology . Search Results1 10, Next . 1. Silly Superstitions What is the source of
http://webster.directhit.com/webster/search.aspx?qry=Superstitions In Chinese My

45. Ask Jeeves: Search Results For "Chinese Mythology"
Popular Web Sites for chinese mythology . Search Next . 1. ChineseMythology ) Image courtesy of Victoria and Albert Museum, London.
http://webster.directhit.com/webster/search.aspx?qry=Chinese Mythology

46. BrowserWise Search!
Results 1 through 8 of 8 for chinese mythology Buy chinese mythology ProductsWe link to merchants which offer chinese mythology products for sale.
http://www.browserwise.com/search/search.cgi?Terms=chinese mythology

47. Www.9c9c.com--History Of Chinese Mythology
History of chinese mythology 200111-08 175419 The writing of such stories beganin the Wei and Jin Dynasties (220-420), when various writers, influenced by
http://china.9c9c.com/Life/myths_stories/topic_1190.html
FAQ About Us Contact Us Sitemap ... Arts History of Chinese Mythology
The writing of such stories began in the Wei and Jin Dynasties (220-420), when various writers, influenced by the alchemist's ideas and Taoist and Buddhist superstitions, were interested in inventing stories about gods and ghosts. Some of them show their unusual imagination and mastery of the written language. This practice was continued in the next period, the period of Southern and Northern Dynasties.
But the dawn of fiction, in the true sense of the term, came much later, in the middle of the Tang Dynasty, when many well-known writers and poets went in for story-writing. Their stories have a wide range of subject matter and themes, reflecting various aspects of human nature, human relations and social life. In form they are not short notes or anecdotes like the tales produced before them, but well-structured stories with interesting plots and vivid characters, often several thousand words in length. Among them are many tales whose main characters are gods, ghosts, or foxes.
Mythical stories of the Song Dynasty show strong influence of Tang fiction, but hardly attain the Tang level. One achievement in the field of fiction worthy of special mention is the compilation of the great Taiping Guangji or Extensive Records Compiled in the Taiping Years (976-983), which is a collection of about seven thousand stories published before and in the first years of the Song Dynasty. The stories were selected from over three hundred books, many of which have long been lost to us. A large portion of the seven thousand stories are about gods, deities, fairies, and ghosts.

48. Chinese Myths
chinese mythology Chinese Myths and Fantasy 1 Chinese Myths and Fantasy 2 Dragons In Ancient China The Ten Chinese Suns The Celestial Dragon.
http://www.cdot.org/history/chinese_myths.htm
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49. Mythology: Chinese Myths
chinese mythology is as varied and multilevelled as the country from whichit springs. chinese mythology has been influenced by a fear of outsiders.
http://www.livingmyths.com/Chinese.htm
L I V I N G M Y T H S Chinese Myths
Chinese mythology is as varied and multi-levelled as the country from which it springs. China contains many different cultural groupings, who speak a number of different languages. However, it has had a literate cultural élite for thousands of years, and myths which were originally regional have spread by means of a pictographic script which transcended language barriers. Much Chinese mythology is based on animism, which sees the land itself as alive. It contains many therianthropic creatures, who are both animal and human, and demonstrates the playfulness of the gods.
Strands of Chinese belief
Chinese mythology has been influenced by a fear of outsiders. It has also been shaped, sometimes deliberately, by a number of religious faiths and philosophies. Some myths even demonstrate the conflict between them, as in the story of the Monkey King, which reflects the conflict between Taoists and Buddhists.
Taoism
A central quest within Taoist practices is the search for immortality - literal, physical immortality. The sense of an interplay between natural law and the abstract laws prevailing in the cosmos, is held in common by shamanism and Taoism. Taoism searched for balance within these forces and enshrined the concept that change cannot be forced, only experienced and assimilated.

50. Encyclopedia Mythica Chinese Mythology
The index file for the area on chinese mythology (frame version).
http://sino.studentenweb.org/project/encyclopedia/mythica.html

51. Chinese Mythology (Index A - M)
Index A M. A no entries B Ba Xian Ba Bixia Yuanjin. C Cai-shen CaoGuo-jiu Celestial kings Cheng-huang Chih Nu Chu Jiang. D Da-yu
http://sino.studentenweb.org/project/encyclopedia/a-m.html

52. CWNMythology
Fantasies; Chinese_Mythology; Ancient Chinese Mythologies; Eight Immortalsin chinese mythology; chinese mythology; chinese mythology Page;
http://www.hu.mtu.edu/~cwnelson/Mythology.html
The Charles W. Nelson Homepage Home Anglo-Saxon Arthur Beowulf ... Tolkien Mythology

53. Singapore - Strange Chinese Mythology At Tiger Balm Gardens
Mayang and Will's Travels / Singapore Strange ChineseMythology at Tiger Balm Gardens 23/08/2001.
http://www.mayang.com/singapore_thailand/pages/Singapore - Strange Chinese Mytho
Mayang and Will's Travels / Singapore - Strange Chinese Mythology at Tiger Balm Gardens

54. Chinese Mythology
chinese mythology, consist both the imagination of the ancient Chinesepeople and what they really saw. Now just go through this
http://www4.district125.k12.il.us/faculty/sedstrom/vc97/CHINA/INDEX.HTM
Far up in the sky, in the space, the ancient Chinese people believed that there were rabbits on the moon. Deep in the sea, they believe that there were large dragons which took control of the seas and the oceans. High on the mountains, they believed that there were evils which were very cruel and they had to obey them. Chinese mythology, consist both the imagination of the ancient Chinese people and what they really saw. Now just go through this page and you can find out how wonderful Chinese Mythology is! HTML: Albert Au Yeung
Text: Albert Au Yeung
Graphics:Albert Au Yeung, Cyman Suen, Thomas Tsoi, Aaron Chan, Matthew Wong

55. Chinese Mythology - Chinese New Year
Chinese New Year. Traditionally February. Chinese New Year is celebratedmost spectacularly by those Chinese people who live outside China.
http://www4.district125.k12.il.us/faculty/sedstrom/vc97/CHINA/NEWYEAR/INDEX.HTM
Chinese New Year
T raditionally, the Chinese have used a lunar calendar, and because of this, their New Year does not start on 1 January. The ancient Chinese fixed the date of their New Year according to the position of the sun. The first day of the traditional Chinese year varies from year to year and occurs sometime between 21 January and 20 February. C hinese New Year is celebrated most spectacularly by those Chinese people who live outside China. Some of the largest and best-known celebrations take place in Hong Kong, the USA and Britain. For people in these countries, Chinese New Year is both a family event and a public celebration. O ne week before the New Year begins, the family gathers for a ceremony in honor of the god of the kitchen, zhou-san. This god is believed to journey to the Emperor of Heaven and report on the family's thoughts and actions over the past year. A picture of zhou-san is burnt. This allows the god to leave the house, but first, the lips are smeared with honey so that only good things about the family will be told. Some families keep statues of the god, whose lips may also be smeared with honey. O n the evening before New Year, the kitchen-god is welcomed back into the home with a feast and fireworks. At New Year people eat only vegetarian meals. This is because each year is named after an animal. One special food is Jiaozi, damplings made with sweetened flour which have honey, gifts, or messages of good luck inside. Some of the food is set out for the spirits of dead ancestors to eat, so that they too will have a happy New Year. Children are given gifts of money, and people try to pay back any debts before the new year starts.

56. Chinese Mythology - Acapedia - Free Knowledge, For All
chinese mythology. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. chinese mythologyis legends (see mythology) which come from the Chinese civilization.
http://acapedia.org/aca/Chinese_mythology
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57. Aaron's Bookshelves ~ Lady White Snake (Chinese Opera, Mythology, Legends)
general. chinese mythology. chinese mythology An Encyclopedia ofMyth and Legend, by Derek Walters, HarperCollins, London, 1992.
http://www.aaronshep.com/bookshelves/WhiteSnake.html

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... China Books , at www.chinabooks.com.
Fabula, The White Snake: The Evolution of a Myth in China, by Pei-yi Wu, University Microfilms, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 1970. A dissertation. Includes a translation of the earliest surviving version. Best ordering may be from the publisher
West Lake: A Collection of Folktales, translated by Jan and Yvonne Walls, Joint Publishing Co., Hong Kong, and China Books, San Francisco, 1980.
Lady White, by Ren Shaozeng, Hei Feng Publishing Co., Hong Kong, 1983. A novel. The Legend of the White Serpent retold by A. Fullarton Prior, illustrated by Kwan Sang-mei, Tuttle, Rutland, Vermont, and Tokyo, 1960. For young people. Origins of Chinese Festivals compiled by Goh Pei Ki, translated by Koh Kok Kiang, illustrated by Fu Chunjiang, Asiapac, Singapore, 1997. A lovely comic-book version that introduced me to the story. Best ordering may be from China Books The Real Tripitaka, and Other Pieces

58. DRAGONS IN CHINESE MYTHOLOGY
DRAGONS IN chinese mythology Most people are more familiar with the classic westernconcept of the dragon, but most do not have a great knowledge into probably
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59. Asian Mythology
Essential chinese mythology Stories That Change the World by Martin Palmer, ZhaoXiaomin, Joanne O'Brien, James Palmer Tales from the ancient court of the
http://members.aol.com/luv2wok/b-myths.htm
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Essential Chinese Mythology: Stories That Change the World by Martin Palmer, Zhao Xiaomin, Joanne O'Brien, James Palmer
Tales from the ancient court of the Chinese Emperor and Chinese villages. by Brian P Katz
Illustrations and full-color photos. by Shawn Wong by Shujiang Li, Karl W Luckert by Tao Tao Liu Sanders, Illus. by Johny Pan
A collection of Chinese legends and folktales, great illustrations. Chinese Mythology: An Introduction by Anne M Birrell
An unprecedented guide to the study of some 300 Chinese myth narrations. by Alain Danielson by Heinrich Zimmer, Joseph Campbell Wokking Your Way to Low Fat Cooking, US$12.50. Click Here To Order
My Students' Favorite Chinese Recipes, updated edition, US$14.00. Click Here To Order COOKBOOKS make great gifts! Give a cookbook for Christmas, Birthday or any occasion. A unique gift that is inexpensive, valuable, and will last a life time. Home Growing and Using Chinese Vegetables Recipes Frequently Asked Questions ... Norma Chang's Bookstore - an Associate of Amazon.com

60. Chinese Mythology: An Introduction (Select Books)
all Categories, Culture People Culture, Customs, People chinese mythologyAn Introduction by Birrell, Anne. Price US$29.67 (S$51.92*)
http://www.selectbooks.com.sg/titles/29898.htm
Chinese Mythology: An Introduction
by Birrell, Anne Price: US$29.67 (S$51.92*) Region: China
Format: Paperback, 322 pages
Published: 1999, USA, 1st Edition
ISBN:
SB#:
About This Book
The author provides English translations of some 300 representative myth narratives selected from over 100 classical texts, many of which have never before been translated into any Western language. Organizing the narratives according to themes and motifs common to world mythology, Birrell addresses issues of source, dating, attribution, textural variants, multiforms, and context. Drawing on exhaustive work in comparative mythology, she surveys the development of Chinese myth studies, summarizes the contribution of Chinese and Japanese scholars to the study of Chinese myth since the 1920s, and examines special aspects of traditional approaches to Chinese myth. The result is an unprecedented guide to the study of Chinese myth for specialists and nonspecialists alike. Anne Birrell has taught Chinese literature at the City University of New York and the University of Cambridge. * Actual charges are made in Singapore Dollars (S$). S$1.00 = US$0.57

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