Bibliography Publishing Portal

From DMCB Wiki
(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
m
Line 91: Line 91:
Several articles, series and monographs had a lasting impact on the state of Buddhism in modern China. Some of them are listed here:
Several articles, series and monographs had a lasting impact on the state of Buddhism in modern China. Some of them are listed here:
-
* See the [[DMCB Wiki:Periodical Portal|Periodical Portal]] for information on Buddhist periodicals
+
* See the [[Periodical Portal]] for information on Buddhist periodicals
* ''Awakening of Faith in the Mahayana'' [[大乘起信論]], [[1885]] (Reprint)
* ''Awakening of Faith in the Mahayana'' [[大乘起信論]], [[1885]] (Reprint)
* Yáng Wénhuì [[楊文會]]. ''Primer of Buddhism for the Beginning Student (with Commentary)'' 佛教初學課本/註, with commentary by Wàn Shūháo 萬叔豪. Nánjīng: Jetavana Hermitage [[祇洹精舍]], written [[1906]]; published [[1907]] - [[1909]].
* Yáng Wénhuì [[楊文會]]. ''Primer of Buddhism for the Beginning Student (with Commentary)'' 佛教初學課本/註, with commentary by Wàn Shūháo 萬叔豪. Nánjīng: Jetavana Hermitage [[祇洹精舍]], written [[1906]]; published [[1907]] - [[1909]].

Revision as of 09:43, 2 March 2011

Publications such as Essential Buddhist Texts for Laypeople were an important means of communicating religious teachings and new ideas to Buddhists throughout the Chinese-reading world.

Bibliography and Publishing are two important topics in the history of Modern Chinese Buddhism. New material and social technologies allowed Buddhists to produce texts in much greater numbers than before. The content of the texts was also geared to the modern age, with introductory textbooks, commentaries, and treaties on Buddhism produced on a massive scale.

Consult the Print bibliography for research resources on Modern Chinese Buddhism.

Gregory Adam Scott is the section editor for bibliographical articles.

Contents

Scriptural Presses

The Scriptural Press 刻經處 was a type of publishing institution dedicated to the production of Buddhist scriptures. Several were established during the late Qīng and Republican periods, many by lay people.[1]

This section is incomplete and more content needs to be added. You can help by contributing text, images, or suggestions.

Sūtra Distributors

These were centers for publishing and distributing copies of Buddhist scriptures

This section is incomplete and more content needs to be added. You can help by contributing text, images, or suggestions.

Publishers, Editors, and Authors

Includes major names only - virtually all prominent figures have at least some texts attributed to them, but these were especially influential or prolific.

  • Yáng Wénhuì 楊文會 (1837-1911); founder of the Jinling Scriptural Press 金陵刻經處
  • Jiǎng Wéiqiáo 蔣維喬 (1873-1958); worked as chief editor of the textbooks division of the Commercial Press 商務印書館; translated and edited A History of Chinese Buddhism 中國佛教史, 1929
  • Dí Chǔqīng 狄楚青 (c. 1873-1941); co-founder of the newspaper Shíbào 時報 and of Yǒuzhèng Press 有正書局; helped to publish the Qìshā Canon 磧砂藏
  • Dīng Fúbǎo 丁福保 (1874-1952); established the Medical Press 醫學書局 in Shànghǎi in 1908; published The Great Dictionary of Buddhism 佛學大辭典 in 1922
  • Xú Wèirú 徐蔚如 (1878-1937); co-founded the Bějīing Scriptural Press 北京刻經處 in 1918; founded Tiānjīn Scriptural Press 天津刻經處 the next year; ran them both for many years
  • Méi Guāngxī 梅光羲 (1880-1947); major supporter of the Jinling Scriptural Press 金陵刻經處
  • Fàn Gǔnóng 范古農 (1881-1951); general editor for Shànghǎi Buddhist Books 上海佛學書局 from 1929
  • Lǚ Bìchéng 呂碧城 (1883-1943); wrote several Chinese and bilingual Chinese-English works for Shànghǎi Buddhist Books

Publishing Houses

Includes publishers that did not specialize in Buddhist books but who published a large number of works related to Buddhism.[3]

Publishing Technologies

Those used in printing Buddhist publications are included here

Xylography 調版印刷

Also known as woodblock 木板 or woodcut printing. Flat wooden blocks are carved with the text or images in reverse relief, the block is inked, paper pressed to its surface and the back of the page rubbed to make the imprint. About 15,000 copies could be printed from one set of blocks before it needed to be repaired, after which another 10,000 copies were possible. Up to 30,000 copies could be possible off of one block if the printing was a low quality.[4] Use of woodblock printing dates back to the 8th century, with the earliest dated printed book being the Diamond Sutra scroll from Dunhuang in the British Library, which dates to 868 CE.

Lithography 平版印刷

  • Stone-based 石印
  • Stone-based or zinc-plate 照相石印
  • Chromolithography 彩色石印
  • Offset lithography 橡皮版; 膠版

Uses a plate, ink and a hydrophobic (water-repelling) medium. Can reproduce calligraphy and painted images.

Letterpress 凸版印刷

  • Lead-type 鉛印
  • Movable type 字模; 活字
  • Typeset in lead type 鉛字排印

Individual characters are cast as pieces of type and arranged into a forme. The type is inked and paper is pressed against it to print. Produces a very even and standard layout, but there are restrictions regarding the variety of fonts, rare or alternate characters, and textual layout.

This section is incomplete and more content needs to be added. You can help by contributing text, images, or suggestions.

Important Publications

Several articles, series and monographs had a lasting impact on the state of Buddhism in modern China. Some of them are listed here:

Bibliographies and Guides for Modern Chinese Buddhist Studies

Lists of titles and guides to important sources for the study of Modern Chinese Buddhism.

Notes

  1. See Shì Dōngchū 釋東初. Zhōngguó Fójiào jìndài shǐ 中國佛教近代史 (A History of Early Contemporary Chinese Buddhism), in Dōngchū lǎorén quánjí 東初老人全集 (Complete Collection of Old Man Dongchu), vols. 1-2. Taipei: Dongchu, 1974 Pp. 1.249-251 for more information.
  2. A catalogue for this press can be found in MFQ 3:145-148
  3. Some of this list is taken from 孟令兵, 老上海文化奇葩-上海佛學書局 (上海: 上海人民出版社, 2003).
  4. Christopher A. Reed, Gutenberg in Shanghai: Chinese Print Capitalism, 1876 - 1937 (Vancouver: UBC Press, 2004), 110.
Personal tools