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India in the Chinese imagination: Myth, Religion, and thought
John Kieschnick,
Meir Shahar
Department of East Asian Studies
Stanford University
Research output
:
Book/Report
›
Book
›
peer-review
12
Scopus citations
Overview
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Dive into the research topics of 'India in the Chinese imagination: Myth, Religion, and thought'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
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Arts and Humanities
Religion
100%
India
100%
China
42%
Scholars
14%
Conception
14%
Pre-modern
14%
era
14%
Language differences
14%
Storytelling
14%
Intermediaries
14%
Mythology
14%
Indian Buddhism
14%
thinkers
14%
Works of Art
14%
subtleties
14%
John R
14%
Chinese Buddhism
14%
Chinese Literature
14%
Asian Studies
14%
Indian history
14%
Indian Culture
14%
Daoism
14%
Keyphrases
India
100%
China
42%
Storytelling
14%
1st Millennium BC
14%
Geographic Barriers
14%
Religious Life
14%
Premodern
14%
Cultural Life
14%
Lieu
14%
Language Differences
14%
Stephen
14%
Spatial Language
14%
Indian Buddhism
14%
First Person
14%
Asian Continent
14%
Silk Route
14%
Chinese Buddhism
14%
Indian Culture
14%
Taoism
14%
Artistic Life
14%
Chinese Authors
14%
Yamabe
14%
Material Life
14%
Asian Studies
14%
Indian History
14%
Chinese Literature
14%