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Dictionary of the History of Ideas

Studies of Selected Pivotal Ideas
  
  

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BIBLIOGRAPHY
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BIBLIOGRAPHY

Van Wyck Brooks, Fenollosa and his Circle (New York,
1962), 1-68. Frederic I. Carpenter, Emerson and Asia
(Cambridge, Mass., 1930). Paul Carus, Buddhism and Its
Christian Critics
(Chicago, 1897). K. R. Chandrasekharan,
“Emerson's Brahma: An Indian Interpretation,” New
England Quarterly,
33 (Dec. 1960), 506-12. Edward Tyrrel
Channing, “Lalla Rookh,” North American Review, 6 (Nov.
1817), 1-25. Lawrence W. Chisolm, Fenollosa: The Far East
and American Culture
(New Haven, 1963). Arthur Christy,
ed., The Asian Legacy and American Life (New York, 1942);
idem, The Orient in American Transcendentalism (New York,
1932). James F. Clarke, Ten Great Religions (Boston, 1871);
idem, Ten Great Religions, Part II (Boston, 1883). Ralph
Waldo Emerson, Complete Works, ed. E. W. Emerson, 12
vols. (Boston, 1903-04); idem, Indian Superstition, ed. K. W.
Cameron (Hanover, N.H., 1954); idem, Journals, ed. E. W.
Emerson and W. E. Forbes, 10 vols. (Boston, 1909-14);
idem, Letters, ed. R. W. Rusk, 6 vols. (New York, 1939).
Alexander Hill Everett, “Remusat's Chinese Grammar,”
North American Review, 17 (July 1823), 1-13; idem,
“Chinese Manners,” North American Review, 27 (Oct. 1828),
524-62. Edward Everett, “Hindu Drama,” North American
Review,
26 (Jan. 1828), 111-26. John Chipman Gray,
“Cochin China,” North American Review, 18 (Jan. 1824),
140-57. Lafcadio Hearn, Japan: An Attempt at Interpretation
(New York, 1904). Carl T. Jackson, “The Meeting of East
and West: The Case of Paul Carus,” Journal of the History
of Ideas,
29 (Jan.-March 1968), 73-92. Samuel Johnson,
Oriental Religions and their Relation to Universal Religion,
Vol. I: India (Boston, 1872); Vol. II: China (Boston, 1877);
Vol. III: Persia (Boston, 1884). Louis H. Jordan, Comparative
Religion
(Edinburgh, 1905). Kurt Leidecker, “Oriental Phi-
losophy in America,” American Philosophy, ed. Ralph Winn
(New York, 1955), pp. 211-20. Earl Miner, The Japanese
Tradition in British and American Literature
(Princeton,
1958). Winfield E. Nagley, “Thoreau on Attachment,
Detachment, and Non-Attachment,” Philosophy East and
West,
3 (Jan. 1954), 307-20. Theophilus Parsons, “Manners
and Customs of India,” North American Review, 9 (June
1819), 36-58. Dale Riepe, “Emerson and Indian Philoso-
phy,” Journal of the History of Ideas, 28 (Jan.-March 1967),
115-22. Sreekrishna Sarma, “A Short Study of the Oriental
Influence upon Henry David Thoreau with Special Refer-
ence to his Walden,Jahrbuch für Amerikastudien, 1 (1956),
76-92. William B. Stein, “Thoreau's First Book: A Spoon
of Yoga,” Emerson Society Quarterly, No. 41, Quarter IV
(1965), 4-25. Elizabeth Stevenson, Lafcadio Hearn (New
York, 1961). Henry David Thoreau, Journal, ed. Bradford
Torrey and F. H. Allen, 14 vols. bound as 2 vols. (New York,
1962); idem, Writings, ed. Bradford Torrey and F. B.
Sanborn, 20 vols. (Boston, 1906). William Tudor, “Theology
of the Hindoos,” North American Review, 6 (March 1818),
386-93. Brooks Wright, Interpreter of Buddhism to the West:
Sir Edwin Arnold
(New York, 1957). Beongcheon Yu, An
Ape of Gods: The Art and Thought of Lafcadio Hearn

(Detroit, 1964).

CARL T. JACKSON

[See also Buddhism; China; Christianity; Civil Disobedi-
ence;
Class; Dualism; Evolutionism; Gnosticism; God; Lan-
guage; Neo-Platonism; Peace; Positivism; Unity of Science.]

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