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Bibliography

​研究書目

English documents: 

Religion in Chongqing 

  1. Le Mentec, K. (2006). The Three Gorges Dam Project—Religious Practices and Heritage Conservation. A study of cultural remains and local popular religion in the xian of Yunyang (municipality of Chongqing). China Perspectives, 2006(65). 

  2. Li, D. (2004). Popular culture in the making of anti-imperialist and nationalist sentiments in Sichuan. Modern China, 30(4), 470-505. 

  3. Cui, Z. (2011). Partial intimations of the coming whole: The Chongqing experiment in light of the theories of Henry George, James Meade, and Antonio Gramsci. Modern China, 37(6), 646-660. 

 

Popular religion 

  1. Teiser, S. F. (1995). Popular religion. The Journal of Asian Studies, 54(2), 378. 

  2. Feuchtwang, Stephan. (2003). Popular Religion in China: The Imperial Metaphor (New ed.). ed.). Routledge. (e-version available on HKUL link) 

 

Religion policy in China 

  1. Guo, C., & Zhang, F. (2015). Religion and social stability: China’s religious policies in the Age of Reform. Third World Quarterly, 36(11), 2183-2195. 

  2. Tong, J. W. (2010). The new religious policy in China: Catching up with systemic reforms. Asian Survey, 50(5), 859-887. 

  3. Leung, B. (2005). China's religious freedom policy: The art of managing religious activity. The China Quarterly, 184, 894-913. 

  4. Cheng-tian, K. (2011). Chinese religious reform. Asian Survey, 51(6), 1042-1064. 

  5. Potter, P. B. (2003). Belief in control: Regulation of religion in China. The China Quarterly, 174, 317-337. 

  6. van der Veer, P. (2015). " Smash temples, build schools": comparing secularism in India and China. In Religious rights (pp. 181-211). Ashgate. 

  7. Svensson, M., & Maags, C. (2018). Mapping the Chinese Heritage Regime: Ruptures, Governmentality, and Agency. Asian Heritages. 

  8. Tong, J. (2014). The devil is in the local: provincial religious legislation in China, 2005–2012. Religion, State & Society, 42(1), 66-88. 

  9. Madsen, R. (2000). Local religious policy in China, 1980-1997 - Editor's introduction. Chinese Law And Government, 33(3), 5-11. 

  10. Nedostup, R. A. (2002). Religion, superstition and governing society in nationalist China. 

 

Religion, modernity, and urban planning 

  1. Poon, S. W. (2008). Religion, modernity, and urban space: the city god temple in Republican Guangzhou. Modern China, 34(2), 247-275. 

  2. Gaubatz, P. (1998). Mosques and markets: Traditional urban form on China's northwestern frontiers. Traditional Dwellings and Settlements Review, 7-21. 

  3. Siu, H. F. (2000). The grounding of cosmopolitans: merchants and local cultures in Guangdong. Becoming Chinese: Passages to Modernity and Beyond, 191-227. 

  4. Lin, C. Y., & Hsing, W. C. (2009). Culture-led urban regeneration and community mobilisation: The case of the Taipei Bao-an temple area, Taiwan. Urban Studies, 46(7), 1317-1342. 

  5. Cao, N. (2008). Boss Christians: the business of religion in the" Wenzhou model" of Christian revival. The China Journal, (59), 63-87. 

  6. Fisher, G. (2008). The spiritual land rush: merit and morality in new Chinese Buddhist temple construction. The Journal of Asian Studies, 67(1), 143-170. 

  7. Yang, M. M. H. (2004). Spatial struggles: postcolonial complex, state disenchantment, and popular reappropriation of space in rural southeast China. The Journal of Asian Studies, 63(3), 719-755. 

  8. Tam, L. 10 The Revitalization of Zhizhu Temple. Chinese Heritage in the Making, 245. 

  9. Flower, J. M. (2004). A road is made: roads, temples, and historical memory in Ya'an county, Sichuan. Journal of Asian Studies, 649-685. 

  10. Flower, J. M. (1998). Portraits of belief: Constructions of Chinese cultural identity in the two worlds of city and countryside in modern Sichuan Province. Ph.D. diss., University of Virginia, 1997. 

  11. Murray, D. (2018). The City God Returns: Organised and Contagious Networks at the Xiamen City God Temple. The Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology, 19(4), 281-297. 

 

Religion and state, politics 

  1. Turner, B. S. (2011). Religion in liberal and authoritarian states. Religion and the State: A Comparative Sociology, 25-41. 

  2. Cao, N. (2007). Christian entrepreneurs and the post-Mao state: An ethnographic account of church-state relations in China's economic transition. Sociology of Religion, 68(1), 45-66. 

  3. Ashiwa, Y., & Wank, D. L. (2006). The politics of a reviving Buddhist temple: State, association, and religion in southeast China. The Journal of Asian Studies, 65(2), 337-359. 

  4. Wang, X. (2015). The dilemma of implementation: the state and religion in the People’s Republic of China, 1949–1990. Maoism at the Grassroots: Everyday Life in China’s Era of High Socialism, 259-278. 

  5. Changing Church and State Relations in Contemporary China: The Case of Mindong Diocese, Fujian Province 

  6. Lagerwey, J. (2007). State and Local Society in Late Imperiai China. T'oung Pao, 93(Fasc. 4/5), 459-479. 

  7. Barbalet, J. (2011). Chinese religion, market society and the state. Religion and the State: A Comparative Sociology, 185-206. 

  8. Yihua, X. 'Patriotic' Protestants: The Making of an Official Church. God and Caesar in China: Policy Implications of Church-State Tensions, 107-121. 

  9. Hong, Z. (2015). Protestant House Churches: From Legal Exclusion to Religious Repression. In The Price of China's Economic Development: Power, Capital, and the Poverty of Rights (pp. 159-192). University Press of Kentucky.  

 

Local religious ritual in China 

  1. Dean, K. (2003). Local communal religion in contemporary south-east China. The China Quarterly, 174, 338-358. 

  2. Sun, A. (2013). Confucianism as a world religion: Contested histories and contemporary realities. Princeton University Press. 

  3. Fisher, G. (2012). religion as repertoire: resourcing the Past in a Beijing Buddhist temple. Modern China, 38(3), 346-376. 

  4. Wooldridge, W., & Naquin, Susan. (2007). Transformations of Ritual and State in Nineteenth-century Nanjing, ProQuest Dissertations and Theses. 

 

Folk religion in China 

  1. Yang, F., & Hu, A. (2012). Mapping Chinese folk religion in mainland China and Taiwan. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 51(3), 505-521. 

  2. Lang, G., Chan, S., & Ragvald, L. (2005). Folk Temples and the Chinese Religious Economy. Interdisciplinary Journal of Research on Religion, 1, Interdisciplinary Journal of Research on Religion, 2005, Vol.1. 

 

Religion in China 

  1. Starr, C. (2016). The Church and the People’s Republic of China. In Chinese Theology: Text and Context (pp. 154-184). New Haven; London: Yale University Press. 

  2. Starr, C. (2016). State Regulation, Church Growth, and Textual Profusion. In Chinese Theology: Text and Context (pp. 213-239). New Haven; London: Yale University Press. 

  3. Overmyer, D. L. (2003). Religion in China today: introduction. The China Quarterly, 174, 307-316. 

  4. Goossaert, V. (2006). 1898: The beginning of the end for Chinese religion? The Journal of Asian Studies, 65(2), 1-29. 

  5. Stark, R., & Liu, E. Y. (2011). The religious awakening in China. Review of Religious Research, 282-289. 

  6. Yang, F. (2006). The red, black, and gray markets of religion in China. The Sociological Quarterly, 47(1), 93-122. 

  7. Fan, L., Whitehead, E., & Whitehead, J. (2005). The Spiritual Search in Shenzhen Adopting and Adapting China's Common Spiritual Heritage. Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions, 9(2), 50-61.  

  8. Duara, P. (1991). Knowledge and power in the discourse of modernity: the campaigns against popular religion in early twentieth-century China. The Journal of Asian Studies, 50(1), 67-83. 

  9. Burden, R., & Duara, Prasenjit. (2006). Reborn Chinese: Persistence, Transformation, and Religious Experience in North China, 1860–1937, ProQuest Dissertations and Theses. 

 

Popular faiths in China 

  1. Duara, Prasenjit. (1988). Superscribing Symbols: The Myth of Guandi, Chinese God of War. Journal of Asian Studies, 47(4), 778-95. 

 

Religion buildings in China 

  1. Chan, S. C. (2005). Temple-building and heritage in China. Ethnology, 65-79. 

 

Religious competition 

  1. Kang, X. (2009). Two temples, three religions, and a tourist attraction: contesting sacred space on China's ethnic frontier. Modern China, 35(3), 227-255. 

  2. Inouye, M. (2016). A religious rhetoric of competing modernities: Christian print culture in late Qing China. Reshaping the boundaries: The Christian intersection of China and the West in the modern era. 

  3. Nield, R. (2008). Ritual Competition and the Modernizing Nation-State. In Chinese Religiosities: Afflictions of Modernity and State Formation (p. 87). BERKELEY; LOS ANGELES; LONDON: University of California Press. 

 

Christianity in China 

  1. Bays, D. H. (2003). Chinese Protestant Christianity Today. The China Quarterly, 174, 488-504. 

  2. Liu, W. T., & Leung, B. (2002). Organizational revivalism: explaining metamorphosis of China’s Catholic Church. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 41(1), 121-138. 

  3. Cao, N. (2007). Christian entrepreneurs and the post-Mao state: An ethnographic account of church-state relations in China's economic transition. Sociology of Religion, 68(1), 45-66. 

  4. Yang, F. (2005). Lost in the market, saved at McDonald's: Conversion to Christianity in urban China. Journal for the scientific study of religion, 44(4), 423-441. 

  5. Lambert, T. (2003). Counting Christians in China: A cautionary report. International Bulletin of Missionary Research, 27(1), 6-10. 

  6. Lee, J. T. H., & Chow, C. C. S. (2014). Guanxi and gospel: Mapping Christian networks in south China. Encountering modernity: Christianity in East Asia and Asian America, 71-94. 

  7. Dunch, R. (2001). Protestant Christianity in China today: Fragile, fragmented, flourishing. China and Christianity: Burdened past, hopeful future, 195-216. 

  8. Bays, D. (1996). Christianity in China from the eighteenth century to the present. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press. 

  9. Xi, L. (2004). The search for Chinese Christianity in the Republican period (1912–1949). Modern Asian Studies, 38(4), 851-898. 

  10. Xi, L. (2008). A messianic deliverance for post-dynastic China: The launch of the true Jesus church in the early twentieth century. Modern China, 34(4), 407-441. 

  11. Madsen, R. (2003). Catholic revival during the reform era. The China Quarterly, 174, 468-487. 

  12. Dunch, R. (2008). Christianity and ‘adaptation to socialism’. Chinese religiosities: afflictions of modernity and state formation, 155-178. 

 

Religion in urbanizing China 

  1. Huang, J. (2014). Being Christians in urbanizing China: the epistemological tensions of the rural churches in the city. Current Anthropology, 55(S10), S238-S247. 

  2. Yao, X. (2007). Religious Belief and Practice in Urban China 1995–2005. Journal of Contemporary Religion, 22(2), 169-185. 

 

Buddhism 

  1. Yü, C. (2016). Buddhist Activism, Urban Space, and Ambivalent Modernity in 1920s Shanghai. In JESSUP J. & KIELY J. (Eds.), Recovering Buddhism in Modern China (pp. 37-78). Columbia University Press. 

  2. YU, X. (2016). Buddhist Efforts for the Reconciliation of Buddhism and Marxism in the Early Years of the People’s Republic of China. In Yü C. (Author) & KIELY J. & JESSUP J. (Eds.), Recovering Buddhism in Modern China (pp. 177-215). Columbia University Press. 

  3. Yü, C. (2016). The Communist Dismantling of Temple and Monastic Buddhism in Suzhou. In KIELY J. & JESSUP J. (Eds.), Recovering Buddhism in Modern China (pp. 216-254). Columbia University Press. 

  4. Ji, Z. (2012). Chinese Buddhism as a social force: Reality and potential of thirty years of revival. Chinese Sociological Review, 45(2), 8-26. 

  5. Jones, A., & Whyte, Martin K. (2010). A Modern Religion? The State, the People, and the Remaking of Buddhism in Urban China Today, ProQuest Dissertations and Theses. 

  6. Xue, Y., & University of Iowa. (2004). Buddhism, war, and nationalism: Chinese monks in the struggle against Japan, 1931--1945. 

 

Daoism in China 

  1. Chi-Tim, L. (2003). Daoism in China Today, 1980-2002. The China Quarterly, (174), 413-427. 

  2. Hsieh, S. (2017). Daoism and Nationalism in Modern and Contemporary China. In Kuo C. (Ed.), Religion and Nationalism in Chinese Societies (pp. 253-278). Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.  

  3. Ashiwa, Y., & Wank, D. (2006). The Politics of a Reviving Buddhist Temple: State, Association, and Religion in Southeast China. The Journal of Asian Studies, 65(2), 337-359. 

 

Urban planning in China 

  1. Cao, G. Y., Chen, G., Pang, L. H., Zheng, X. Y., & Nilsson, S. (2012). Urban growth in China: past, prospect, and its impacts. Population and Environment, 33(2-3), 137-160. 

  2. Abramson, D. B. (2006). Urban Planning in China: Continuity and Change: What the future holds may surprise you. Journal of the American Planning Association, 72(2), 197-215. 

 

CBD in China 

  1. Zacharias, J., & Yang, W. (2016). A short history of the Chinese Central Business District. Planning Perspectives, 31(4), 611-633. 

  2. Gaubatz, P. (2005). Globalization and the development of new central business districts in Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou. Restructuring the Chinese city: Changing society, economy and space, 98-121. 

 

Chongqing 

  1. Han, S. S., & Wang, Y. (2001). Chongqing. Cities, 18(2), 115-125. 

  2. Li, L. (2015). State rescaling and national new area development in China: the case of Chongqing Liangjiang. Habitat International, 50, 80-89. 

  3. Hong, L. (2004). Chongqing: Opportunities and Risks. The China Quarterly, 178(178), 448-466. 

  4. McIsaac, L. (1900). The city as nation: creating a wartime capital in Chongqing. Remaking the Chinese city: Modernity and national identity, 1950, 174-91. 

  5. Nield, R. (2015). Chungking. In China’s Foreign Places: The Foreign Presence in China in the Treaty Port Era, 1840–1943 (pp. 75-80). Hong Kong University Press.  

  6. Spencer, J. (1939). Changing Chungking: The Rebuilding of an Old Chinese City. Geographical Review, 29(1), 46-60. 

  7. Stein, G. (1942). Chungking Considers the Future. Far Eastern Survey, 11(18), 190-193. 

 

Religion and modernity 

  1. Duara, Prasenjit. (1991). Knowledge and Power in the Discourse of Modernity: The Campaigns Against Popular Religion in Early Twentieth-Century China. Journal of Asian Studies, 50(1), 67-83. 

 

Modernity in China 

  1. Shi, Y. (2006). Reconstructing Modernism: The Shifting Narratives of Chinese Modernist Architecture. Modern Chinese Literature and Culture, 18(1), 30-84. 

  2. Farris, J. (2016). Xin Guangzhou: Architecture, Foreigners, and Modernity in the Early Twentieth Century. In Enclave to Urbanity: Canton, Foreigners, and Architecture from the Late Eighteenth to the Early Twentieth Centuries (pp. 190-225). Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press. 

 

 

 

 

中文文献 

 

重庆市内宗教建筑、宗教资源 

  1. 褚冬竹, & 戴志中. (2010). 风格限制下的理性创新——重庆江北城中央公园基督教堂设计. 新建筑, 3, 015. 

  2. 郭选昌, & 胡彩云. (2015). 现代都市中的天主教建筑外环境保护——以重庆若瑟堂为例. 工业设计, (2), 113-115. 

  3. 黄瑶. (2003). 重庆近代天主教堂建筑研究 (Doctoral dissertation, 重庆: 重庆大学). 

  4. 权小芹. (2006). 重庆地区的天主教及其建筑文化. 沧桑, (2), 19-20. 

  5. 李克武. (1997). 宗教信仰自由的人权保护── 重庆市宗教信仰自由状况的考察报告. 重庆师院学报 (哲学社会科学版), 4, 008. 

  6. 何静, & 钟汝贤. (2006). 开发宗教文化资源 促进重庆旅游新发展——以重庆市南岸区宗教资源为例. 重庆教育学院学报, 19(3), 80-84. 

  7. 罗惠玉. (2002). 深入开发利用重庆宗教文物资源. 重庆社会主义学院学报, (1), 18-20. 

  8. 温泉, & 杨奇. (2014). 重庆江北城历史遗产保护开发模式探索. 新建筑, 2, 023. 

  9. 陈振. (2002). 当前重庆宗教工作中的有关问题及对策. 重庆社会主义学院学报, (2), 17-19. 

  10. 胡良春. (2016). 百年老堂展新姿——记重庆市江北区天主教德肋撒堂. 中国天主教, (3), 47-51. 

  11. 三峡地区传统寺庙景观研究——以重庆地区为例 

 

江北城CPD 

  1. 蔡震, 邓东, & 王宏杰. (2004). 重庆市江北城 CBD 规划设计评介. 城市规划, 28(8), 89-92. 

  2. 蔡震, 邓东, & 王宏杰. (2004). 重庆市江北城 (CBD) 规划设计方案简介. 城市规划通讯, (14), 14-15. 

  3. 张宗果, & 周波. (2010). 浅议我国城市复合型中央商务区的建设——以重庆江北城规划为例. 四川建筑科学研究, (1), 209-211. 

  4. 邓蜀阳, & 熊唱. (2006). 城市空间文化特性的观演―以重庆江北 CBD 滨水区城市设计为例. 華中建築, 24(12), 57-61. 

  5. 张宗果, & 周波. (2010). 浅议我国城市复合型中央商务区的建设——以重庆江北城规划为例. 四川建筑科学研究, (1), 209-211. 

 

中国宗教情况 

  1. 叶小文.中國宗教信仰自由的特點 

  2. 陈炜. (2014). 西南地区汉传佛教文化遗产资源调查研究六. 宗教学研究, (4). 

 

长江沿岸、西南历史 

  1. 刘旭辉. (2010). 清末长江三峡地区重庆府属州, 厅, 县界线复原研究 (Master's thesis, 西南大学). 

  2. 田永秀. (1999). 近代四川沿江中小城市研究 (Doctoral dissertation, 四川大学). 

 

重庆历史 

  1. 张涛. (2013). 抗战时期陪都重庆建筑法规的制定和发展. 建筑与文化, (11), 67-69. 

  2. 罗玲. (2004). 略论重庆城市文化特色的多重属性. 重庆工业高等专科学校学报, 19(1), 101-104. 

  3. 陈黎. (2007). 清代成都重庆城市发展比较研究 (Master's thesis, 四川大学). 

  4. 李彩. (2012). 重庆近代城市规划与建设的历史研究 (1876-1949)[D] (Doctoral dissertation). 

  5. 近代重庆经济与社会发展: 1876-1949. 四川大学出版社, 1987. 

 

基督教与本土宗教 

  1. 石杨柳, & 孙邦金. (2016). 晚清温州基督教与本土文化的冲突与调适——以《晚清温州纪事》 为中心的考察. 温州职业技术学院学报, (2016 年 03), 20- 

  2. 范正义. (2005). 20 世纪 80 年代以来基督教与民间信仰关系研究述评. 福建师范大学学报: 哲学社会科学版, (6), 112-117. 

  3. 赵翠翠, & 李向平. (2014). “土神” 与 “洋教”: 当代中国民间信仰与基督教的交往关系研究. 社会科学, (11), 79-89. 

  4. 梅莉. (2014). 移民· 社区· 宗教——以近代汉口宝庆码头为中心. 湖北大学学报: 哲学社会科学版, 41(3), 1-8. 

 

重复出现的中文文献: 

  1. 范麗珠. (2003). 當代中國人宗教信仰的變遷 : 深圳特區研究報告 (Occasional paper (Chinese University of Hong Kong. Chung Chi College. Centre for the Study of Religion and Chinese Society); no. 12). 香港: 香港中文大學崇基學院宗敎與中國社會研究中心. 

  2. Li Shiyu 李世瑜. 现代华北秘密宗教. Shanghai: Shanghai Wenyi chubanshe, 1990 

  3. 蓝勇,《重庆古旧地图研究》(主编),西南师范大学出版社,2013年 

  4. ——,《巴渝历史沿革》(合作),重庆出版社,2003 

  5. ——,《西南政区教化名称分布变迁研究》,《中国边疆史地研究》,2004,4 

  6. ——,《清代四川土著与移民分布的地理特征》,《中国历史地理论丛》,1995,2 

  7. ——,《明清时期西南城镇分布的地理特征》,《中国历史地理论丛》,1995,1 

  8. 《古代重庆城市地图与重庆社会经济文化发展研究》,《2000年国际历史地理学术讨论会论文集》,齐鲁书社,2001 

  9. 刘豫川,杨铭,林文碧,《重庆旧影》,北京:人民美术出版社,1998 

  10. 梁勇,重庆教案与八省客长:一个区域史的视角,社会科学研究,2007 

  11. 孟国祥,日本利用宗教侵华之剖析,民国档案,1(1996):99-107 

  12. 邵雍,《近代会党与民间信仰研究》,台北市:秀威资讯科技股份有限公司 

  13. 沃尔夫冈·卡佛,《重庆往事:一个犹太人的晚年回忆》,1940-1951,西安:陕西人民出版社,2014 

  14. 王希,《中国与世界历史中的重庆》,重庆大学出版社,2013 

  15. 吴济生,《重庆见闻录》,台北市:新文丰出版社,民国69(1980) 

  16. 谢丹,近代重庆城市史研究:一个文献综述,近代史研究,1991 

  17. 隗瀛涛,近代重庆城市史. 四川大学出版社, 1991. 

  18. ——,重庆城市研究,四川大学出版社,1989 

  19. ——,中国近代不同类别城市综合研究,四川大学出版社,1998 

  20. 郑涛,唐宋四川佛教地理研究,西南大学,2013 

  21. 张洪祥,近代中国通商口岸与租界,天津人民出版社,1993 

  22. 张瑾,卢作孚“北培模式”与20世纪二三十年代重庆城市变迁,中国社会历史评论,2005 

  23. ——,重庆:中国新的发展热点—西方媒体对重庆直辖的有关报道初步分析,探索,1998 

  24. ——,二十世纪二三十年代“上海模式”对重庆的冲击,史学月刊,2000 

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