Chinese Religious Life
Edited by David A. Palmer, Glenn Shive, and Philip L. Wickeri
Author Information
Edited by David A. Palmer, Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology, Hong Kong University, Edited by Glenn Shive, Director, Hong Kong America Center, and Edited by Philip L. Wickeri, Flora Lamson Hewlett Professor, San Francisco Theological Seminary, Graduate Theological Union (UC Berkeley)
David A. Palmer is an assistant professor in the department of Sociology and fellow of the Centre for Anthropological Research at the University of Hong Kong. His most recent book (co-authored with V. Goossaert) is The Religious Question in Modern China (2011). Glenn Shive is the executive director of the Hong Kong America Center, a consortium of Hong Kong universities promoting academic exchange between the United States and Hong Kong and between the United States and China via universities in Hong Kong. His B.A. in religion and PhD in Chinese history are from Temple University in Philadelphia. Philip L. Wickeri is Advisor to Hong Kong's Anglican Archbishop on Theological and Historical Studies and Adjunct Professor of Interdisciplinary Studies at the Graduate Theological Union, Berkeley, California. His most recent book is Reconstructing Christianity in China: K. H. Ting and the Chinese Church (2007).
Contributors:
Adam Yuet Chau, Department of East Asian Studies, University of Cambridge.
Lizhu Fan, Department of Sociology, Fudan University.
Vincent Joseph Goossaert.
Huang Chien-Yu, Institute of Anthropology, National Tsing Hua University.
Andre LaLiberte, School of Political Studies, University of Ottawa.
Richard Paul Madsen, Department of Sociology, University of California, San Diego.
Charles Hammett Nolley.
David A. Palmer, Department of Sociology, University of Hong Kong.
Glenn Shive, The Chinese University of Hong Kong.
Elijah Siegler, Department of Religious Studies, College of Charleston.
Tam Yik Fai, Religious Studies Program, History Department, Then Pennsylvania State University.
Wai-lun Tam, Department of Cultural and Religious Studies, Chinese University of Hong Kong.
Francesca Tarocco, School of Arts, Histories and Cultures, The University of Manchester.
Elena Valussi, Department of Humanities, History, and Social Sciences, Columbia College.
Robert P. Weller, Department of Anthropology, Boston University.
James Douglas Whitehead.
Philip Lauri Wickeri, San Francisco Theological Seminary, Graduate Theological Union (UC Berkeley).
Yang Fenggang, Department of Sociology, Purdue University.