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Shawn Arthur

职称:Assistant Professor

所属学校:Wake Forest University

所属院系:Department for the Study of Religions

所属专业:Religion/Religious Studies

联系方式:758-2496

简介

Shawn Arthur joins Wake Forest from Appalachian State University where he taught for eight years and achieved the rank of Associate Professor. Shawn teaches courses mainly on Chinese religions – Daoism, Confucianism, Buddhism, contemporary and folk religions, and Chinese medicine. He also teaches about religion and the body, nature-oriented religions, and theory and method, including ethnographic study and interdisciplinary analysis of religion. Shawn’s first book, Early Daoist Dietary Practices: Examining Ways to Health and Longevity (Lexington Books 2013), focuses on a 5th century Daoist text that contains recipes for achieving immortality. In addition to looking at the religious content and issues present in the text, he also uses a range of nutritional, medical, and parasitological scientific studies to analyze the text’s physical regimens and their likely outcomes. He holds an M.A. in Religious Studies from The University of Tennessee at Knoxville (2001) and a Ph.D. in Chinese Religion and Society from Boston University (2007).

职业经历

Shawn Arthur joins Wake Forest from Appalachian State University where he taught for eight years and achieved the rank of Associate Professor. Shawn teaches courses mainly on Chinese religions – Daoism, Confucianism, Buddhism, contemporary and folk religions, and Chinese medicine. He also teaches about religion and the body, nature-oriented religions, and theory and method, including ethnographic study and interdisciplinary analysis of religion. Shawn’s first book, Early Daoist Dietary Practices: Examining Ways to Health and Longevity (Lexington Books 2013), focuses on a 5th century Daoist text that contains recipes for achieving immortality. In addition to looking at the religious content and issues present in the text, he also uses a range of nutritional, medical, and parasitological scientific studies to analyze the text’s physical regimens and their likely outcomes. He holds an M.A. in Religious Studies from The University of Tennessee at Knoxville (2001) and a Ph.D. in Chinese Religion and Society from Boston University (2007).

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