Publications

1995
1995. Nabokov And Bergson. In The Garland Companion To Nabokov, Pp. 667-73. Ed. V. Alexandrov. New York: Garland.
1995. Représentation De La Crise Dans L’oeuvre De Nathaniel Hawthorne: Le Mode Carnivalesque, Trans. Christine Raguet-Bouvart. In Éclats De Voix: Crises En Représentation Dans La Littérat Ure Nord-Américaine, Pp. 97-109. Ed. Christine Raguet-Bouvart. La Rochelle: Rumeur des Ages. Abstract
Revised English version, "Carnival and Crisis in Three Stories by Nathaniel Hawthorne," in Towards the Ethics of Form in Fiction. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 2010, pp. 21-34. 
1995. Versions Of Job: Some Jewish Characters In The Stories Of Varlam Shalamov. In Jews And Slavs, 4:Pp. 253-66. Ed. W. Moskovich, S. Shwarzband, and A. Alekseev. Jerusalem: FPL.
1994
1994. Documentary Prose And The Role Of The Reader: Some Stories Of Varlam Shalamov. In Commitment In Reflection: Essays In Literature And Moral Philosophy, Pp. 169-93. Ed. Leona Toker. New York: Garland.
1994. Introduction. In Commitment In Reflection: Essays In Literature And Moral Philosophy, Pp. xi-xxxii. Ed. Leona Toker. New York: Garland.
Reprinted on the Zembla site. 
1994. Review Of Julian Connolly,Nabokov’s Early Fiction. Nabokov Studies, 1, Pp. 224-26.
1993
Leona Toker. 1993. Eloquent Reticence: Withholding Information In Fictional Narrative, Pp. 225. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky.
1993. Review Of Journal Of Anglo-Italian Studies, Vol. 1 (1991). Mediterranean Language Review, 6-7, Pp. 280-83.
Reprinted in Short Story Criticism: Criticism of the Works of Short Fiction Writers 92, ed. Jelena Krstov{\'ıc. Farmington Hills: Thomson Gale, 2006, pp. 74–79.
1993. “Signs And Symbols” In And Out Of Contexts. In A Small Alpine Form: Studies In Nabokov’s Short Fiction, Pp. 167-80. Ed. Charles Nicol and Gennady Barabtarlo. New York: Garland. Abstract
Reprinted in Anatomy of a Short Story, ed. Yuri Leving. London: Continuum, 2012, pp. 217-29.
1993. Varlam Shalamov’s Kolyma. In Between Heaven And Hell: The Myth Of Siberia In Russian Culture, Pp. 151-69. Ed. Galya Diment and Yuri Slezkine. New York: St. Martin’s Press.
1992
1992. Some Features Of The Narrative Method In Solzhenitsyn’s One Day In The Life Of Ivan Denisovich. In In Honour Of Professor Victor Levin: Russian Philology And History. Ed. W. Moskovich, J. Frankel, I. Serman, and S. Shvarzband. Jerusalem: Praedicta. Abstract
Included, with some revision, in the 2000 Return from the Archipelago
1991
1991. Philosophers As Poets: Reading Nabokov With Schopenhauer And Bergson. Russian Literature Triquarterly, 24, Pp. 185-96.
1991. A Tale Untold: Varlam Shalamov’s “A Day Off”. Studies In Short Fiction, 28, Pp. 1-8.
1991. Vladimir Nabokov. In Benét’s Reader’s Encyclopedia Of American Literature, Pp. 747-50. Ed. George Perkins, Barbara Perkins, and Philip Leininger. New York: Harper-Collins.