Recent Published Works by Members of the Network

Dr. Nicola Abram

Prof. Nathan Abrams

Prof. David Brauner

Prof. Bryan Cheyette

  • Recently published blog on the subject of processing a long list.

http://www.the-tls.co.uk/articles/public/translating-jewishness/

Prof. Phyllis Lassner

Dr. Peter Lawson

Dr. Silvia Pellicer-Ortin

  • 2017. Co-edition with María Jesús Martínez-Alfaro. Memory Frictions in Contemporary Literature. London, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • 2015. Eva Figes’ Writings: A Journey through Trauma. Newcastle-upon-Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. ISBN ISBN 987-1-4438-8062-6. ISBN-10: 1443880620
  • 2014. “Separateness and Connectedness”: Generational Trauma and the Ethical Impulse in Anne Karpf’s Limit-case Autobiography The War After: Living with the Holocaust”. In The Ethics of Form in Limit-case Trauma Narratives. Eds. Jean-Michel Ganteau and Susana Onega, pp. 293-320.

Dr. Karen Skinazi

  • (2017) Skinazi, Karen E. H. and Lori Harrison-Kahan. “Feminist Collaboration in an Era of Academic Instability.” American Periodicals 27.1 : 16-20.
  • (2015) Skinazi, Karen E. H. and Lori Harrison-Kahan. “Miriam Michelson’s Yellow Journalism and the Multi-Ethnic West.” MELUS: Journal of the Society for the Study of Multiethnic Literature of the United States40.2: 182-217.
  • (2015) Skinazi, Karen E. H. “Kol Isha: Malka Zipora’s Lekhaim as the Voice of the Hasidic Woman in Quebec.” Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies 33.2: 1-26.

Axel Staehler

  • “Stories of Jewish identity: survivors, exiles and cosmopolitans”, in Dominic Head (ed.), The Cambridge History of the English Short Story (Cambridge: CUP, 2016), pp. 323–340.
  • “‘Almost too good to be true’: Israel in British Jewish Fiction, Pre-Lebanon”, in David Brauner and Axel Stähler (eds), The Edinburgh Companion to Modern Jewish Fiction (Edinburgh: EUP, 2015), pp. 237–252.
  • “The Writing on the Wall: Israel in British Jewish Fiction, Post-Lebanon”, in David Brauner and Axel Stähler (eds), The Edinburgh Companion to Modern Jewish Fiction (Edinburgh: EUP, 2015), pp. 253–266.