Faculty Publications

As of August 2017, this database is no longer being updated. For the most current publications from the faculty, students, and staff of Touro University, please check our institutional repository, Touro Scholar, and email any questions or publication submissions to touro.scholar@touro.edu.

Total number of publications: 7,082

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  • 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. (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. (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). "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. This material can be found here.

  • 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. (2003). Jewish responses to antisemitism in Poland, 1944-1947. In J. Zimmerman (Ed.), Contested memories: Poles and Jews during the Holocaust and in its aftermath (pp. 247-261). New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. 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. (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

  • 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. (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. (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. (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). 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. (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

  • Armbruster, J., & Theiss-Abendroth, P. (2016). Deconstructing the myth of Pasewalk: Why Adolf Hitler's psychiatric treatment at the end of World War I bears no relevance. Archives of Clinical Psychiatry, 43(3), 56-9. This material can be found here.

  • Bilsky, L., Citron, R., & Davidson, N. R. (2014). From Kiobel back to structural reform: The hidden legacy of Holocaust restitution litigation. Stanford Journal of Complex Litigation, 2, 138-184. This material can be found here.

  • Eckman, L. (1977). The Jewish resistance: The history of the jewish partisans in Lithuania and White Russia during the Nazi occupation, 1940-1945. New York: Shengold Publishers. This material can be found here.

  • Kliot, R., & Mitsios, H. (2011). Waltzing with the enemy: A mother and daughter confront the aftermath of the Holocaust. Jerusalem, Israel: Urim.

  • Levy, D. B. (2011). [Review of the internet resource Digital collections from Yad Vashem]. Choice Reviews Online. This material can be found here.

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