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|title='''Jué yǒuqíng 覺有情'''<br>''Bodhisattva'' | |title='''Jué yǒuqíng 覺有情'''<br>''Bodhisattva'' | ||
|other-names=Also called ''Jué yǒuqíng bànyuè kān'' 覺有情半月刊 | |other-names=Also called ''Jué yǒuqíng bànyuè kān'' 覺有情半月刊 | ||
- | |image= | + | |image=[[File:Jue_youqing.png|250px|center]] |
|print-run=October 1, [[1939]] - 1953,<ref>[[Holmes Welch]] claims this periodical ran until 1955. See his ''Buddhist Revival in China'', 281.</ref> (246 total issues) | |print-run=October 1, [[1939]] - 1953,<ref>[[Holmes Welch]] claims this periodical ran until 1955. See his ''Buddhist Revival in China'', 281.</ref> (246 total issues) | ||
|other-info= | |other-info= |
Jué yǒuqíng 覺有情
Bodhisattva |
Also called Jué yǒuqíng bànyuè kān 覺有情半月刊 |
Jué yǒuqíng 覺有情 (Bodhisattva)[2] was a Chinese Buddhist periodical that was published monthly from January 1948.
Averaged roughly 15 pages per issue. In the first period, the focus of this magazine was on various writings and short discourses. It continued running during the Second Sino-Japanese War. It also provides information on more revolutionary attitudes among Buddhists following the establishment of the PRC in 1949, by which point it had become one of the major Buddhist periodicals in China.