I don't normally come here anymore, nor do I have any intent on making this a regular thing. To address the "obscure" reasons I left and dropped off the face of the earth:
Between threats on my livelihood, and more for my part in cataloguing and publishing against mythicism, I have essentially decided that I will never enter the field of NT (and once the few articles left which have been accepted are published, I will be moving on to things I actually find enjoyment in).
I believe Giuseppe is referring to the book I wrote, not the list. I took it down, at the time, because I had found a publisher (I was working with Wipf&Stock). However, around November, in the midst of rather immature and insulting comments I made (several of which were directed toward Neil for which I do sincerely apologize and hope Neil can forgive me), with the bonus of real life threats (one of which required a police report; it was a fiasco) all tied to mythicism, I exited my contract and deleted my accounts starting in November. The book is, at this point, dead and I have no intentions on publishing or sharing it.
I do keep an updated list of mythicist material I stumble across for those curious.
For Chinese Mythicism, there are some easy starting points in English. Check out the Chinese Faces of Jesus Vol. 3b edited by Roman Malek. Wang Xiaochao's (one of the leading scholars of Christianity in China atm) article on Marxism and Jesus goes over the issue with some needed historical context. I would also suggest his article (as well as Choong Chee Pang's) in Christianity and Chinese Culture, edited Mikka Ruokanen and Paulos Huang. Both are in English and readily available. Unfortunately, Chinese mythicism is really hard to find anything about.
From what I can find, mythicism in China ceased to be the academic majority position around the mid-90's after the mixtures of the Open Door Policy and also the end of the New Culture Movement with the death of Chairman Mao Zedong and the publication of Document 19 after the Eleventh Congress of the CCP. This was a parallel situation to Russia, where the Khrushchev Thaw was the leading cause, since it opened up academic freedoms. The publication of Archibald Robertson's book after the Thaw sparked the debates there and essentially led to "Mythological School's" decline.