Including references to Israel Friedmann of Ruzhin (818-819), Joseph Perl (822,823), Solomon Judah Rapoport, Nachman Krochmal (823), Jetty Wohlerner (830), Maurycy Gottlieb (840), Uri Zevi Greenberg (841) and Martin Buber (844).
Including refernces to women in the essays of the following persons (according to index): Isaac Erter, Reuben Asher Braudes, Mordecai David Brandstaedter, Naphtali Herz Homberg, Joseph Perl, and Nachman Krochmal.
Including:
Chapter 8: 'printing books and distributing them in the 19th century, and the identity of their authors' (117-142) - whereby the following matters appear: 117-121 - a comparison between two main print cities in the 19th century - Lwów and Vilnius.
And in addition, according to index, there are references to the following communities: Galicia, Buczacz, Brody, Gwoździec, Drohobycz, Żółkiew, Jarosław, Lwów, Lemberg, Nowy Sancz, Kołomyja, Komarno, Kraków; and so, references to the following persons: Abraham David Wahrmann, Moshe Ungerfeld, Menachem Mendel Bodek. Meir Balaban, Reuben Asher Braudes, Simon Bernfeld, Nathan Michael Gelber, Abraham Meir Habermann, Naphtali Herz Homberg, Samuel Shmelke Horowitz, Naphtali Herz Imber, Hayyim Halberstam, Bernhard Wachstein, Isaiah Sonne, Wolf Tugenhold, Jacob Zevi Jolles, Hanoch Yalon, Abraham Naphtali Hertz Jenner, Abraham Yaari, Yehuda Yaari, Mendel Lefin, Raphael Mahler, Zevi Hirsch Meisels, Menachem Mendel [Hager] of Kosov, David Neumark, Naphtali Hertz of Lwow, Joseph Saul Nathanson, Dov Sadan, Shmuel Yosef Agnon, Simon Federbusch, Joseph Perl, Zevi Hirsch of Zhidachov [Eichenstein], Hirsch Jacob Zimmels, Karpel Lippe, Naftali Keller, Getzel Kressel, Judith Rosanis. Zevi Hirsch Rosanis, Solomon Rubin, Nathan Rotenstreich, Emanuel Ringelblum, Solomon Judah Rapoport, Solomon Schiller, Chaim Elazar Shapira.
Including references, according to index, mainly to Hinde Bergner, as well as to Moshe Ungerfeld,
Naphtali Herz Imber, Isaac Erter, Meir Bosak, Hertz Bergner, Reuben Asher Braudes, Samson Bloch,
Joseph Kohen-Zedek, Eliezer Meir Lipschuetz, Itzik Manger, Dov Sadan, Shmuel Yosef Agnon,
Reuben Fahn, Simhah Pinsker, Joseph Perl, Nachman Krochmal, Melech Ravitch (Bergner), and Sara
.Shapira.
Including references to Galicia, mostly in pp 412, 421, 426—431, and to the following persons in
particular: Naphtali Herz Homberg (409), Aaron Friedenthal (409). Samson Bloch (409, 421, 426, 428),
joseph Terler (409—410, 429), Isaac Erter (410, 412), Mendel Lefin (410, 428-429), Abraham Goldberg
(412), Nachman Krochmal (412, 428, 429), Solomon Judah Rapoport (412, 428), Jacob Samuel Bick
(421, 426, 428), Abraham Natkes (426), Jacob Meshulam Ornstein (428), Joseph Perl (428, 429), Tobias
Feder (428, 429), Max Letteris, Judah Leib Mieses and Bezalel Stern (429).
And in a slight different version: Feiner Shmuel, A culture battle: The Jewish Enlightenment
movement in the 19th century, Carmel, Jerusalem, 2010, 43-75 (Heb.).
Including references to attitudes towards the HaGra by the following Galician Maskilim: Max Letteris
(31-32), Reuben Asher Braudes (35, 50-51), Tobias Feder (36-37), especially in chapter 4 - 'the image of
the HaGra as a fighter against Hasidism in the satiric work of Joseph Perl' (42-46), and so on Solomon
Judah Rapoport (46).
Including references to attitudes towards Luzzatto by the following Galician Maskilim: Jacob Landau
of Brody (3-4), Max Letteris (4, 13, 21—22), Dov Ginzburg (5, 15), Jacob Samuel Bick (6), Chaim
Satanover (6), Joshua Heschel Schorr (14-15), Tobias Feder (16), and Solomon Judah Rapoport (18).
Including references to essays of Isaac Erter (189—190, 199), Joshua Heschel Schorr (189-190), Judah Leib Mieses (192-195), and Max Letteris (196).
And in a revisited edition (Hebrew): The aforementiond, between halacha and haskalah: the place of halachic issues in the framework of literary genres, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan, 2004, 17-34.