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==References and Resources== | ==References and Resources== | ||
* Dàoān [[道安]] (1907-1977). ''Zhōngguó dàzàngjīng diāokè shǐhuà'' 中國大藏經雕刻史話 (Discourse on the History of Carving Woodblocks of the Chinese Buddhist Canon). Táiběi 台北: 中華大典編印會印行, 1978. Pp. 179-183. | * Dàoān [[道安]] (1907-1977). ''Zhōngguó dàzàngjīng diāokè shǐhuà'' 中國大藏經雕刻史話 (Discourse on the History of Carving Woodblocks of the Chinese Buddhist Canon). Táiběi 台北: 中華大典編印會印行, 1978. Pp. 179-183. | ||
- | * Ketelaar, James E. "The Non-Modern Confronts the Modern: Dating the Buddha in Japan". History and Theory, Vol. 45, no. 4 (Dec., 2006): 62-79. | + | * Ketelaar, James E. "The Non-Modern Confronts the Modern: Dating the Buddha in Japan". ''History and Theory'', Vol. 45, no. 4 (Dec., 2006): 62-79. |
* Stone, Jackie. "A Vast and Grave Task: Interwar Buddhist Studies as an Expression of Japan's Envisioned Global Role". In ''Culture and Identity: Japanese Intellectuals During the Interwar Years'', edited by J. Thomas Rimer, 217-233. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1990. | * Stone, Jackie. "A Vast and Grave Task: Interwar Buddhist Studies as an Expression of Japan's Envisioned Global Role". In ''Culture and Identity: Japanese Intellectuals During the Interwar Years'', edited by J. Thomas Rimer, 217-233. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1990. | ||
+ | * Silvio Vita. "Printings of the Buddhist 'Canon' in Modern Japan". In ''Buddhist Asia 1: Papers from the First Conference of Buddhist Studies Held in Naples in May 2001'', edited by Giovanni Verardi and Silivio Vita, 217-239. Kyoto: Italian School of East Asian Studies, 2003. The Taishō canon is discussed on pp. 231-239. | ||
[[Category:Bibliography]] | [[Category:Bibliography]] |
Taishō Shinshū Daizōkyō 大正新修大藏經
(The Taishō-era Revised Tripiṭaka; 1924-1934) |
大正新脩大蔵経; Dàzhèng xīnxiū dàzángjīng; Taishō Tripiṭaka; Taishō Canon Contributors:
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Published Editions: |
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The Taishō Shinshū Daizōkyō 大正新修大藏經 (1924-1934) or Taishō Canon is a published edition of the East Asian Buddhist canon (大藏經; Tripiṭaka) that began publication during the Taishō era 大正時代 (1912-1926) in Japan. It has since become the standard edition for scholarship on Buddhism; the single letter 'T' in a citation is understood to refer to it.
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