A bibliography on Daniil Andreev

Mikhail Belgorodskiy, the author-compiler

[XVIII–XXI]
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XVIII. The Islamic metaculture

XVIII.1. General part

XVIII.2. Islam, Koran

XVIII.3. Sufism

XVIII.4. Gurdjieff, Georges Ivanovitch (1872? èëè 1877 – 1949) [43210–43269]

Gurdjieff, G. All and Everything. – New York: E.P. Dutton & Co., 1964.

Gurdjieff, G. Beelzebub's Tales to his Grandson. – New York: E.P. Dutton & Co., 1964.

Gurdjieff, G. Views from the Real World. – New Yotrk, 1973.

XVIII.5. Literature

XIX. Buddhistic metacultures

XIX.1. A bibliography on Buddhistic states in general [45950–46009]

(3.2: 104).

XXI.1-1 Buddha (cê. 6th – 4th centuries BC) [46010–46209]

XXI.1-2. Mi-la-ras-pa (1040–1123) [46210–46239]

XIX.2. Buddhism

XIX.3. Zen Buddhism

XIX.4. The Himalayan metaculture

XIX.5. The Northern-Buddhistic metaculture

XIX.6. The Indo-Malaysian metaculture

XX. The Black metaculture

XX.1. Stowe, Harriet Beecher

(in Russian Ñòîó, Ãàððèåò Áè÷åð; 1811–1896).

A bibliography on H. Beecher Stowe

Stowe G.B. Uncle Tom's cabin / Ïðåäèñë. Â. Åðìîëàåâîé. – Ì.: For. lang. publ. house, I960. – 652 ð.

Gerson N. Â. Harriet Beecher Stowe: A biography. – New York: Praeger, 1976. – 218 p.

Wagenknecht Å. Ñ. Harriet Beecher Stowe: The known and the unknown. – New York: Oxford univ. press, 1965. – 267 p.

XXI. Metacultures whose development was arrested in Enrof

XXI.1. The Ancient Sudanese metaculture

XXI.2. The pre-Mongolian metaculture

XXI.3. The Dravidian metaculture

XXI.4. The ancient Germanic metaculture

XXI.5. The ancient Peruvian (pre-Inca) metaculture

XXI.6. The ancient Tibetan (pre-Buddhistic) metaculture (Bon)

XXI.7. The Mongolian metaculture

XXI.8. The ancient Australian metaculture

XXI.9. The Tolteko-Aztec metaculture

XXI.10. The Yucatan (Mayan) metaculture

XXI.11. The Incan metaculture

Inca is a Pre-Columbian culture of the Central Andean area of South America (c. 1000 – 1532), «whose collapse in Enrof, strange as it may seem, saved the world from great peril …» (2: 142). (2: 339-341). «Intil is the zatomis of the Incan metaculture. Its emblem is a red-clad figure, wearing a miter, with arms uplifted to the sun. Red here symbolizes majesty, and the miter, the high priesthood» (2: 142).

Graziano, G.; Margolies, L. Architecture of the Inca / Trans. P.J. Lyon. – Bloomington; London, 1986.

Hemming, J.; Ranney, E. Monuments of the Inca. – Boston, 1982.

Hyslop, J.H. Inca Settlement Planning. – Austin, 1990.

Jones, J. Art of Empire: The Inca of Peru. – New York, 1964.

Kendall, A. Everyday Life of Incas. – London, 1973.

S.a. Aspects of Inca Architecture: Description, Function and Chronology. 2 vols. / Brit. Archaeol. Rep., Int. Ser., CCXLII. – Oxford, 1985.

Rowe, J.H. Inca Culture at the Time of the Spanish Conquest // Hb. S. Amer. Ind., II; Bureau Amer. Ethnol. Bull., CXLIII. – 1946. – Pp. 183-330.

XXI.12. The metaculture of the Great Lakes Indians

XXI.13. The Polynesian metaculture

XXI.14. The Japanese metaculture

Further


©  M.N. Belgorodskiy 2004, All Rights Reserved.


























































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