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Faculty Publications

We are proud to host this database of works published by Touro faculty. To submit your work for inclusion, please click here.

Total number of publications: 2,352

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  • Abramson, H. (1991). Jewish representation in the independent Ukrainian governments of 1917-1920. Slavic Review, 50(3), 542-550. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/2499851.

  • Abramson, H. (1991). Metropolitan Sheptyts'kyi's hebrew correspondence, 1903. Harvard Ukrainian Studies, 15(1/2), 172-176. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/41036411

  • Abramson, H. (1994). Collective memory and collective identity: Jews, Rusyns, during the Holocaust. Carpatho-Rusyn American, 17(3), 8-12.

  • Abramson, H. (1994). Life imitates art imitates life: The Famine, the Holocaust, and Australia's Darville/Demidenko affair. The Ukrainian Quarterly, 50(4), 353-365.

  • Abramson, H. (1994). The scattering of Amalek: A model for understanding the Ukrainian-Jewish conflict. East European Jewish Affairs, 24(1) 39-47. doi:10.1080/13501679408577763 

  • Abramson, H. (1996). A ready hatred: Depictions of the Jewish woman in medieval antisemitic art and caricature. Proceedings of the American Academy for Jewish Research, 62, 1-18. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/3622591

  • Abramson, H. (1996).  Foreword to the Turei Zahav of Rabbi David ben Shmuel Ha Levi (Volodymyr 1586-Lviv 1667). Journal of Ukrainian Studies, 21(1-2), 97-108.

  • Abramson, H. (1999). A prayer for the government: Ukrainians and Jews in revolutionary times, 1917-1920. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute.

  • Abramson, H. (1999). The prince in captivity. Reading hasidic discourses from the Warsaw Ghetto as sources for social and intellectual history. Journal of Genocide Research, 1(2), 213-225. doi:10.1080/14623529908413951

  • Abramson, H. (2000). The Esh kodesh of Rabbi Kalonimus Kalmish Shapiro: A hasidic treatise on communal trauma from the Holocaust. Transcultural Psychiatry, 37(3), 321-335. doi:10.1177/136346150003700303

  • Abramson, H. (2001). Just different: The last Jewish family of Ansonville, Ontario. Canadian Jewish Studies, 9, 155-169. Retrieved from http://pi.library.yorku.ca/ojs/index.php/cjs/article/viewFile/19930/18634

  • Abramson, H. (2001). Studying the Talmud: 400 repetitions and the divine voice. Thought and Action, 17(1), 9-18. Retrieved from http://www.nea.org/assets/img/PubThoughtAndAction/TAA_01Sum_02.pdf

  • Abramson, H. (2003). Metaphysical nationality in the Warsaw ghetto: Non-Jews in the wartime writings of Rabbi Kalonimus Kalmish Shapiro. In J. D. Zimmerman (Ed.), Contested memories: Poles and Jews during the Holocaust and its aftermath (pp. 158-172). New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. 

  • Abramson, H. (2003). Shouldering the burdens of history: Ukrainian-Jewish encounter since independence. In W. Isajiw (Ed.), Society in transition: Social change in Ukraine in western perspectives (pp. 203-212). Toronto, Canada: Canadian Scholars Press.

  • Abramson, H. (2003). The end of intimate insularity: New narratives of Jewish history in the post-Soviet era. In T. Hakkaido (Ed.), The construction and deconstruction of national histories in Slavic Eurasia (pp. 97-102). Sapporo, Japan: Hokkaido University. Retrieved from http://src-h.slav.hokudai.ac.jp/sympo/02summer/pdf2/abramson_large.pdf

  • Abramson, H. (2003). "This is the way it was!" Textual and iconographic images of Jews in the Nazi-sponsored Ukrainian press of Distrikt Galizien. In R. M. Shapiro (Ed.), Why didn’t the press shout?: American and international journalism during the Holocaust (pp. 537-556). Jersey City, NJ: KTAV Publishing House. 

  • Abramson, H. (2005). A double occlusion: Sephardim and the Holocaust. In Z. Zohar (Ed.), Sephardic and Mizrahi Jewry: From the golden age of Spain to modern times (pp. 285-299). New York, NY: New York University Press. 

  • Abramson, H. (2005). Deciphering the ancestral paradigm: A Hasidic court in the Warsaw Ghetto. In Ghettos 1939-1945: New research and perspectives on definition, daily life, and survival (pp. 129-146). Washington, DC: Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies. Retrieved from http://www.ushmm.org/research/center/publications/occasional/2005-08/paper.pdf.

  • Abramson, H. (2007). Two Jews, three opinions: Politics in the Shtetl at the turn of the twentieth century. In S. T. Katz (Ed.), The Shtetl: New evaluations (pp. 85-101). New York, NY: New York University Press. 

  • Abramson, H. (2010). Holodomor and Holocaust. Holodomor Studies, 2(1), 131-136.

  • Abramson, H. (2011). Conclusion: Ukrainians, Jews and the Holocaust. Nationalities Papers, 39(3), 391-392. doi:10.1080/00905992.2011.570502

  • Aleksiun, N. (2004). Polish Jewish historians before 1918: Configuring the liberal east European Jewish intelligentsia. East European Jewish Affairs, 34(2), 41-54. doi: 10.1080/1350167052000340848 This material can be found here.

  • Aleksiun, N. (2007). The central Jewish historical commission in Poland, 1944-1947. In G. N. Finder, N. Aleksiun, A. Polonsky, & J. Schwarz (Eds.), POLIN (vol. 20). Oxford, England: Littman Library of Jewish Civilization.

  • Aleksiun, N. (2010). In search of Jewish past in Poland: Guide to the monuments of the Second Polish Republic. In A. Markowski, & A. Grabski (Eds.), Nations and politics: Studies dedicated to professor Jerzy Tomaszewski (pp. 201-213). Warsaw, Poland: Polish Historical Institute.

  • Aleksiun, N. (2011). Christian corpses for Christians! Dissecting the Anti-Semitism behind the cadaver affair of the Second Polish Republic. East European Politics & Societies 25(3): 393-409. doi:10.1177/0888325411398913

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