Publications for Natalia Aleksiun natalia.aleksiun@touro.edu

Graduate School of Jewish Studies
  • Aleksiun, N. (2017). Intimate violence: Jewish testimonies on victims and perpetrators in Eastern Galicia. Holocaust Studies, 23(1-2), 17-33. doi:10.1080/17504902.2016.1209833

  • Aleksiun, N. (2016). An invisible web: Philip Friedman and the network of Holocaust research. In R. Fritz, É. Kovács, & B. Rásky (Eds.), Before the Holocaust had its name: Early confrontations of the Nazi mass murder of the Jews (pp. 149-165). Vienna, Austria: New Academic Press.

  • Aleksiun, N. (2016). Female, Jewish, educated, and writing Polish Jewish history. In N. Aleksiun, B. Horowitz, & A. Polonsky (Eds.), Writing Jewish history in Eastern Europe (pp. 195-216). Polin: Studies in Polish Jewry. Oxford, England: Littman Library of Jewish Civilization.

  • Aleksiun, N. (2016). Neighbours in Borysław: Jewish perceptions of collaboration and rescue in Eastern Galicia. In F. Bajohr & A. Löw (Eds.), The Holocaust and European societies: Social processes and social dynamics (pp. 243-266). London, England: Palgrave Macmillan UK. doi:10.1057/978-1-137-56984-4_14

  • Aleksiun, N. (2016). The Cadaver Affair in the Second Polish Republic: A case study of practical antisemitism? In R. Fritz, G. Rossoliński-Liebe, & J. Starek (Eds.), Alma mater antisemitica: Academic milieu, Jews and antisemitism at European universities between 1918 and 1939 (pp. 203-220). Vienna, Austria: New Academic Press.

  • Aleksiun, N., Horowitz, B., & Polonsky, A. (Eds.). (2016). Writing Jewish history in Eastern Europe. Polin: Studies in Polish Jewry. Oxford, England: Littman Library of Jewish Civilization.

  • Aleksiun, N. (2015). Pleading for cadavers: Medical students at the University of Vienna and the study of anatomy. S:I.M.O.N, 2(2), 4-10. This material can be found here.

  • Aleksiun, N. (2014). Gender and the daily lives of Jews in hiding in Eastern Galicia. Nashim, 27, 38-61. This material can be found here.

  • Aleksiun, N. (2014). Les jeunes historiens juifs dans la Pologne de l'entre-deux-guerres: L'identite nationale juive et la quete de l'histoire [Young Jewish historians in interwar Poland: Jewish national identity and historical research]. In D. Baric, T. Coignard, & G. Vassogne (Eds.), Identites juives en Europe central: Des Lumieres a l'entre-deux-guerres [Jewish identities in Central Europe: From the Enlightenment to the period between World Wars] (pp. 227-243). Tours, France: François-Rabelais.

  • Aleksiun, N. (2014). Together but apart: University experience of Jewish students in the Second Polish Republic. Acta Poloniae Historica, 109(2014), 109-137.

  • Aleksiun, N. (2014). "What matters most is life itself": Europe in the eyes of Marek Edelman. In Z. Mankowitz, D. Weinberg, & S. Kangisser-Cohen (Eds.),  Europe in the eyes of survivors of the Holocaust (pp. 91-126). Jerusalem, Israel: Yad Vashem.

  • Aleksiun, N. (2013). As citizens and soldiers: Military rabbis in the Second Polish Republic. In D. Diner (Ed.), Simon Dubnow Institute yearbook 12 (pp. 221-242). Göttingen, Germany: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht.

  • Aleksiun, N. (2013). Regards from the land of the dead: Jews in Eastern Galicia in the immediate aftermath of the Holocaust. Kwartalnik Historii Żydów, 2(246), 257-271. This material can be found here.

  • Aleksiun, N. (2012). Jewish students and Christian corpses in interwar Poland: Playing with the language of blood libel. Jewish History, 26(3-4), 327-342. doi:10.1007/s10835-012-9163-5

  • Aleksiun, N. (2012). Philip Friedman and the emergence of Holocaust scholarship. In D. Diner (Ed.), Simon Dubnow Institute yearbook 11 (pp. 333-346). Göttingen, Germany: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht.

  • 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

  • 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. (2008). Molding the liberal Jewish intelligentsia in interwar Poland: Miesiecznik Zydowski (The Jewish Monthly): And its audience. In M. A. Shmidman (Ed.), Turim: Studies in Jewish history and literature presented to Dr. Bernard Lander (pp. 25-47). Jersey City, NJ: KTAV. This material can be found here.

  • Aleksiun, N. (2007). Polish historians respond to Jedwabne. In R. Cherry & A. Orla-Bukowska (Eds.), Rethinking Poles and Jews: Troubled past, brighter future (pp. 169-187). Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. 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. (2005). Rescuing a memory and constructing a history of Polish Jewry: Jews in Poland 1944-1950. Jews in Russia and Eastern Europe, 1(2), 5-27.

  • Aleksiun, N. (2005). The Polish Catholic church and the Jewish question in Poland, 1944-1948. Yad Vashem Studies, 33, 143-170. This material can be found here.

  • Aleksiun, N. (2004). Polish historiography of the Holocaust-Between silence and public debate. German History, 22(3), 406-432. doi:10.1093/0266355403gh316oa

  • 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

  • Aleksiun, N. (2004). The vicious circle: Jews in communist Poland, 1944-1956. In E. Mendelsohn (Ed.), Studies in Contemporary Jewry: Vol. 19. Jews and the state: Dangerous alliances and the perils of privileges of state (pp. 157-180). New York, NY: Oxford University Press.

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