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The Daode Jing, a highly enigmatic work rooted in ancient Chinese
cosmology, ontology, metaphysics, and moral thinking, is regularly
offered to college and high-school students in religion,
philosophy, history, literature, Asian studies, and humanities
courses. As a result, an ever-expanding group of faculty with very
different backgrounds and training routinely confront the question:
"How should I teach the Daode Jing?"
Written for non-specialists who may not have a background in
ancient Chinese culture, the essays collected in this volume
provide up-to-date information on contemporary scholarship and
classroom strategies that have been successful in a variety of
teaching environments.
A classic text like the Daode Jing generates debate among scholars
and teachers who ask questions like: Should we capitalize on
popular interest in the Daode Jing in our classrooms? Which of the
many translations and scholarly approaches ought we to use? Is it
appropriate to think of the Daode Jing as a religious text at all?
These and other controversies are addressed in this volume.
Contributors are well-known scholars of Daoism, including Livia
Kohn, Norman Girardot, Robert Henricks, Russell Kirkland,
Hans-Georg Moeller, Hall Roth, and Michael LaFargue. In addition,
there are essays by Eva Wong (Daoist practitioner), David Hall
(philosophy), Gary DeAngelis (mysticism), and a jointly written
essay on pedagogical strategies by Judith Berling, Geoffrey Foy,
and John Thompson (Chinese religion).
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