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PERIODICALS AND COLLECTED ESSAYS Compiled by Pamela Barmash, Shachar Pinsker, and Rick Painter ASSOCIATION FOR JEWISH STUDIES REVIEW. 32.2 (2008) Steven D. Fraade, “Introduction to the Symposium: What is (the) Mishnah?” pp. 221–223; Elizabeth Shanks Alexander, “Recent Literary Approaches to the Mishnah,” pp. 225–234; Ishay Rosen-Zvi, “Orality, Narrative, Rhetoric: New Directions in Mishnah Research,” pp. 235–249; Moshe Simon-Shoshan, “Between Philology and Foucault: New Syntheses in Contemporary Mishnah Studies,” pp. 251–262; Avraham Walfish, “The Nature and Purpose of Mishnaic Narrative: Recent Seminal Contributions,” pp. 263–289; Christine Hayes, “What is (the) Mishnah? Concluding Observations,” pp. 291–297; Alex P. Jassen, “Prophets and Prophecy in the Qumran Community,” pp. 299–334; Isaac B. Gottlieb, “The Politics of Pronunciation,” pp. 335–368; Annette Aronowicz, “The Downfall of Haman: Postwar Yiddish Theater between Secular and Sacred,” pp. 369– 388. Review Essay. Steven M. Wasserstrom, “Melancholy Jouissance and the Study of Kabbalah: A Review Essay of Elliot R. Wolfson, Alef, Mem, Tau,” pp. 389–396. Book Reviews, pp. 397–479. ASSOCIATION FOR JEWISH STUDIES REVIEW. 33.1 (2009) Elisheva Carlebach and Robert Goldenberg, “Statement from the Incoming Editors,” p. 1; Ken Frieden, “Neglected Origins of Modern Hebrew Prose: Hasidic and Maskilic Travel Narratives,” pp. 3–43; Shai Secunda, “Talmudic Text and Iranian Context: On the Development of Two Talmudic Narratives,” pp. 45–69; Dimitry Shumsky, “Czechs, Germans, Arabs, Jews: Franz Kafka’s “Jackals and Arabs” between Bohemia and Palestine,” pp. 71–100; Alyssa M. Gray, “The Formerly Wealthy Poor: From Empathy to Ambivalence in Rabbinic Literature of Late Antiquity,” pp. 101–133; Susan Einbinder, “Theory and Practice: A Jewish Physician in Paris and Avignon,” pp. 135–153. Review Essay. Charlotte Elisheva Fonrobert, “The New Spatial Turn in Jewish Studies,” pp. 155–164. Book Reviews, pp. 165–224. Hebrew Studies 50 (2009) 430 Periodicals and Collected Essays ISRAEL STUDIES. 14.1 (2009) Tuvia Friling, “Introduction,” pp. v–xvii; Dalia Ofer, “The Past that Does Not Pass: Israelis and ‘Holocaust Memory,’” pp. 1–35; Daniel Gutwein, “The Privatization of the Holocaust: Memory, Historiography, and Politics,” pp. 36–64; Shlomo Aronson, “Israel’s Security and the Holocaust: Lessons Learned, but Existential Fears Continue,” pp. 65–93; Hanna Yablonka, “Oriental Jewry and the Holocaust: A Tri-Generational Perspective,” pp. 94– 122; Tuvia Friling, “A Blatant Oversight? The Right-Wing in Israeli Holocaust Historiography,” pp. 123–169. ISRAEL STUDIES. 14.2 (2009) Holocaust, History, and Memory. Idit Gil, “Teaching the Shoah in History Classes in Israeli High Schools,” pp. 1–25; Yechiam Weitz, “In the Name of Six Million Accusers: Gideon Hausner as Attorney-General and His Place in the Eichmann Trial,” pp. 26–49; Sveta Roberman, “From Exclusion to Inclusion: Jewish WWII Soldiers in the Israeli National Narrative,” pp. 50–71. Zionist Dialectics—Partition Debates. Itzhak Galnoor, “Introduction: The Zionist Debates on Partition (1919–1947),” pp. 72–87; Colin Shindler, “Opposing Partition: The Zionist Predicaments After the Shoah,” pp. 88– 104; Asher Susser, “Partition and the Arab Palestinian Minority in Israel,” pp. 105–119; As’ad Ghanem, “The Bi-National State Solution,” pp. 120– 133. Gender Issues. Judith Tydor Baumel-Schwartz, “The Lives and Deaths of Female Military Casualties in Israel During the 1950s,” pp. 134–157; Elisheva Rosman-Stollman, “Women of Valor: The Garin Program and the Israel Defense Forces,” pp. 158–177; Daphna Hacker, “Inter-Religious Marriages in Israel: Gendered Implications for Conversion, Children, and Citizenship,” pp. 178–197; Esther Fuchs, “The Evolution of Critical Paradigms in Israeli Feminist Scholarship: A Theoretical Model,” pp. 198– 221. Book Reviews, pp. 222–230. ISRAEL STUDIES. 14.3 (2009) Maoz Azaryahu, “Introduction: ‘One of the World’s Coolest Cities’: TelAviv at 100,” pp. vii–xii; Maoz Azaryahu, “Tel-Aviv’s Birthdays: Anniversary Celebrations of the First Hebrew City 1929–1959,” pp. 1–20; Yoram Bar-Gal, “From ‘European Oasis’ to Downtown New York: The Image of Tel-Aviv in School Textbooks,” pp. 21–37; Barbara Mann, “Der Hebrew Studies 50 (2009) 431 Periodicals and Collected Essays eko fun goles: ‘The Spirit of Tel-Aviv’ and the Remapping of Jewish Literary History,” pp. 38–61; Amynadav Dykman, “A Poet and a City in Search of a Myth: On Shlomo Skulsky’s Tel-Aviv Poems...

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