A Selected List Resources for Research
Religion 337 - Religious Daoism & Popular Religion
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I. General Reference Sources
Encyclopedia of Religion. 10 vols.Ref. BL31 .E46 2005
Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 9 vols. Ref. B51 .R68 1998
Encyclopedia of Women and World Religion. 3 vols. Ref. BL458 .E53 1999
II. Library Catalogs
- Wittenberg's online catalog
- Combined catalog of nearly 80 Ohio academic libraries
- Worldwide bibliographic utility
Interlibrary Loan form for booksthat neither Wittenberg nor OhioLINK libraries ownLinks to Other Library Catalogs
Ohio State University: orIII. Databases for Finding Journal Articles and more . . .
- - Index to articles on religion. No full text.
- - Index to articles and books in philosophy. No full text.
- - Index, abstracts, and full text of articles in religion and philosophy.
- - full text database of journal back files.
- - Covers 1971 to date. No full text. Paper editions, kept on the index shelves, go back to 1941.
- - Covers world history excluding the United States and Canada.
- - This is probably our best source for articles on current events. Covers 1986 to date. Some full text.
- - Gives access to articles about language and literature.
- - Index to Disseration Abstracts, with some abstracts, and some preview pages - 1861 to present. Caution: Dissertations may be difficult to obtain via interlibrary loan.
or: Go to the complete list of databases to which Wittenberg subscribes.
IV. Locating Journals
At Wittenberg: Journals the Library Has -
At other Ohio academic libraries and beyond: use Interlibrary Loan.
Note: Locating journals can be tricky, difficult, and generally exasperating. If you run into trouble, a reference librarian will be glad to assist you.
VIII. Internet Search Engines
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Provides references to scholarly articles. Finding the actual article may be difficult and costly. Also, journal coverage is incomplete and not current.Subscription databases are almost always better.Web Sites on Taoism:- from University of Florida
This is a directory of annotated links to Web resources on Taoism, including translations of the I Ching , the Sun-Tzu Art of War , and the Tao Te Ching . Other sections provide links to resources on acupuncture, feng shui, martial arts (specifically tai chi), and Chinese philosophy.From the Chicago Art Institute:
Over 25 works of Chinese art "from the Warring States period to the Qing dynasty [that] demonstrate the development of Taoism and Taoist art." Accompanying text explores themes of tradition (Laozi, cosmology), church (priests, rituals), and renaissance (goddesses, Zhenwu, Inner Alchemy, landscape). Includes diagrams of the Chinese zodiac, Taji, and Trigrams; a map of China; a timeline; classroom lesson plans; a glossary; a list of related books; and links.- The Daoist Studies website contains scholarly information about Daoism, including books on Daoism, conferences, scholars, a bibliography and general resources for learning about Daoism. Although primarily intended for academic students of Daoism, the Daoist Studies website recognizes and welcomes the involvement of Daoist practitioners throughout the world.
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IX. Citing Your Sources:
(Turabian)
X. People Resources:
For help by e-mail, contact Gina Entorf, who is library liaison with the East Asian Studies program. You could also phone her at 327-7533 with a quick question or to set up an appointment for an individual consultation. Or, stop by the library, phone the reference desk at 327-7511, or send e-mail to the reference desk.
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Compiled by Regina Entorf, 六合彩网上投注app
Last updated 6-18-07/RPE2007 六合彩网上投注app