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Collette Caillat and Ravi Kumar, The Jain Cosmology (1981), provides reproductions of remarkable Jain paintings of the universe and its structure according traditional teachings. Kendall W. Folkert, Scripture and Community: Collected Essays on the Jains, ed. by John E. Court (1993), is an important discussion of problems relating to the study of Jain history and scripture from a Shvetambara perspective. Hemacandra, The Lives of the Jain Elders, trans. by R.C.C. Fynes (1998), is a traditional history of the early Jain teachers. Asim Kumar Chatterjee, A Comprehensive History of Jainism, 2 vol. (1978–84), contains much useful general information about the historical context of Jainism. P.B. Desai, Jainism in South India and Some Jaina Epigraphs (1957), deals with Digambara Jainism. Uttam Kamal Jain, Jain Sects and Schools (1975), is a useful reference source. Chhogmal Choprha, A Short History of the Terapanthi Sect of the Swetamber Jains and Its Tenets, 4th ed. (1950), provides an accessible treatment of the background to one of the Shvetambara non-image-worshiping sects. John E. Cort (ed.), Open Boundaries: Jain Communities and Cultures in Indian History (1998), discusses Jainism’s location in the broader Indian cultural world. Chhotelal Jain, Chhotelal Jain’s Jaina Bibliography, 2nd ed. rev. by Satya Ranjan Banerjee, 2 vol. (1982), lists many Indian publications. Special Studies

W.J. Johnson, Harmless Souls: Karmic Bondage and Religious Change in Early Jainism with Special Reference to Umasvati and Kundakunda (1995), is a detailed study and critique of early Jain teaching. A.L. Basham, History and Doctrine of the Ājīvikas (1951, reprinted 1981), discusses the Ajivika influence on early Jainism. Nathmal Tatia, Studies in Jaina Philosophy (1951, reprinted 1980), remains the best overall study of Jain philosophy; it can be supplemented by N.N. Bhattacharyya, Jain Philosophy: Historical Outline, 2nd rev. ed. (1999). Jogendra Chandra Sikdar, Concept of Matter in Jaina Philosophy (1987), is a valuable survey. Helmuth von Glasenapp, The Doctrine of Karman in Jain Philosophy, ed. by Hiralal Rasikdas Kapadia (1942, reprinted 1991; originally published in German, 1919), is unrivaled for clarity. Ramjee Singh, The Jaina Concept of Omniscience (1974), analyzes the nature of enlightenment in Jainism. Bimal Krishna Matilal, The Central Philosophy of Jainism (Anekānta-Vāda) (1981), is a clear account of Jainism’s system of philosophical relativism. Dayanand Bhargava, Jaina Ethics (1968); and Kamal Chand Sogani, Ethical Doctrines in Jainism (1967), both remain valuable.

Shantaram Bhalchandra Deo, History of Jaina Monachism from Inscriptions and Literature (1956), summarizes the data provided by ancient and medieval sources. Colette Caillat, Atonements in the Ancient Ritual of the Jaina Monks (1975; originally published in French, 1965), describes the evolution of monastic practice. Two studies by S. Settar, Inviting Death: Historical Experiments on Sepulchral Hill (1986), and Pursuing Death: Philosophy and Practice of Voluntary Termination of Life (1990), deal with the monastic and lay ritual of religious suicide from a Digambara standpoint. N. Shanta, The Unknown Pilgrims: The Voice of the Sadhvis: The History, Spirituality, and Life of the Jaina Women Ascetics (1997; originally published in French, 1985), is a unique study of Jainism from a female perspective; it can be read in conjunction with Padmanabh S. Jaini, Gender and Salvation: Jaina Debates on the Spiritual Liberation of Women (1991). R. Williams, Jaina Yoga (1963, reprinted 1991), is a masterly analysis of monastic legislation concerning the laity, with critical notes on authors of different sourcebooks. Literature

M. Winternitz, Buddhist Literature and Jaina Literature, 3rd ed. (1991; originally published in German, 1913–20), vol. 2 of History of Indian Literature, remains a basic source. Hiralal Rasikdas Kapadia, A History of the Canonical Literature of the Jainas (1941), although technical, has not been surpassed as a description of the Jain canon. A. Chakravarti, Jaina Literature in Tamil, rev. ed. (1974), is a survey of Jain works in this South Indian language and Jain influence on Tamil literature. Jagdishchandra Jain, Prakrit Narrative Literature: Origin and Growth (1981), is a reliable account. Chandrabhal Tripathi, Catalogue of the Jaina Manuscripts at Strasbourg (1975), is a mine of information about Jain writers and manuscripts. V.M. Kulkarni, The Story of Rama in Jaina Literature (1990), shows how the Jains adapted a central Hindu legend. Of the very few accessible translations of Jain literature, Hemacandra, Triṣasṭiśa lākāpuruṣacarita, trans. by Helen M. Johnson, 6 vol. (1931–62), is a classic treatment of “the lives of 63 illustrious persons.” Phyllis Granoff (ed.), The Clever Adulteress & Other Stories: A Treasury of Jain Literature (1990); and Phyllis Granoff (compiler and trans.), The Forest of Thieves and the Magic Garden: An Anthology of Medieval Jain Stories (1998), are both first-class resources. Art and Iconography

Umakant P. Shah, Jaina-Rūpa-Maṇḍana (1987), is indispensable for the development of Jain iconography and supplements the same author’s Studies in Jaina Art (1955, reprinted 1998), a review of Jain art in North India, with a discussion of various symbols in Jain worship. B.C. Bhattacharya, The Jaina Iconography, 2nd rev. ed. (1974), offers a brief outline of the subject. Jyotindra Jain and Eberhard Fischer, Jaina Iconography, 2 vol., (1978), contains a wide range of photographs of both Jain art and practice. Pratapaditya Pal et al., The Peaceful Liberators: Jain Art from India (1994), is a rich catalog of an important exhibition. C. Sivaramamurti, Panorama of Jain Art (1983), is an illustrated survey of Digambara art and architecture in South India. For Jain temples, see A. Ghosh (ed.), Jaina Art and Architecture, 3 vol. (1974–75); Harihar Singh, Jain Temples of Western India (1982); and Saryu Doshi and Thomas Dix, Dharna Vihara, Ranakpur (1995). For the art and architecture of one famous holy site, see Saryu Doshi (ed.), Homage to Shravana Belgola (1981). For Jain painting, see W. Norman Brown, The Story of Kālaka (1933), a well-known work on Kalakacarya and Jain miniature paintings; Umakant P. Shah (ed.), Treasures of Jaina Bhaṇḍāras (1978); and Saryu Doshi, Masterpieces of Jain Painting (1985). Ethnographic Studies

Competent studies of Jainism from an anthropological and sociological perspective have started to appear only recently. Michael Carrithers and Caroline Humphrey (eds.), The Assembly of Listeners: Jains in Society (1991), contains a variety of essays on the Jain laity as a community. James Laidlaw,