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Folklore: Structure, Typology, Semiotics

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King M.W. Ocean of Milk, Ocean of Blood. A Mongolian Monk in the Ruins of the Qing Empire. New York: Columbia University Press, 2019. XIV, 281 p.

https://doi.org/10.28995/2658-5294-2021-4-1-65-74

About the Author

Yu. V. Liakhova
University of Bern
Switzerland

Yuliya V. Liakhova

3012, bld. 6, Hochschulstrasse, Bern 



References

1. Certeau, M. de (1982), La fable mystique: XVIe – XVIIe siècle. Vol. 1. Bibliothèque des histoires, Gallimard, Paris, France.

2. King, M.W. (2012), “Finding the Buddha Hidden Below the Sand. Youth, identity and narrative in the revival of Mongolian Buddhism”, in Dierkes, J. (ed.), Change in democratic Mongolia. Social relations, health, mobile pastoralism, and mining, Brill, Leiden, Boston, pp. 17–29.

3. King, M.W. (2014), Writing true places in the twilight of Empire and the dawn of revolution. The Buddhist Historiography of the Mongol Zawa Damdin Luwsandamdin (1867–1937), Ph.D. Thesis, Department for the Study of Religion University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.

4. King, M.W. (2019), Ocean of milk, ocean of blood. A Mongolian Monk in the ruins of the Qing Empire, Columbia University Press, New York, NY.

5. Kollmar-Paulenz, K. (2020), “Negotiating the Buddhist Future. Rdo rje shugs ldan in Mongolia”, in Bischoff, J., Maurer, P. and Ramble, Ch. (eds.), On a day of a month of the Fire Bird Year. Festschrift for Peter Schwieger on the occasion of his 65th birthday, LIRI, Lumbini, Nepal, pp. 481–502.


Review

For citations:


Liakhova Yu.V. King M.W. Ocean of Milk, Ocean of Blood. A Mongolian Monk in the Ruins of the Qing Empire. New York: Columbia University Press, 2019. XIV, 281 p. Folklore: Structure, Typology, Semiotics. 2021;4(1):65-74. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.28995/2658-5294-2021-4-1-65-74

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