Including the chapter "La Haskala dans l'empire des Habsbourg" (The Enlightenment in the Habsburg Empire") (43-70), which refers mainly to the Galician Enlightenment, with sub-chapters on periodicals, from "Bikurei Ha'Itim" to "HaHalutz" (44-46), on the printing house of Anton Schmid, and on Samson Bloch and Nachman Krochmal (46-50), and on the works of Solomon Judah Rapoport (51-54), Max Letteris (54-57), Joseph Perl (62-66), and Isaac Erter (66-70).
Incuding references to the thesauruses of Ze'ev Wolf Buchner (88—95), and a cahpter on the thesauruses of Abraham Mendel Mohr and Max Letteris (237-252).
Including refernces mainly to works of authors of Galicia and Bucovina, as follows: Judah Tzvi Gelbard (56-57, 61, 62, 67-70), Shmuel Yosef Agnon (58, 59, and in particular sub-chapter 7: 'Shmuel Yosef Agnon: 'A king of grace was'', 80-82), Uri Zevi Greenberg (58,58, and in particular sub-chapter 1: "U.Z.G - the goal sanctifies the means", 71), Benjamin AriehHa-Cohen Weiss (59, 66, 68—69), Asher Barash (59, and in particular the sub-chapter: 'Asher Barash - 'the close and remote sister'', 75-78), Samuel Waldberg (60), Nota Jonah Meller (60, 67, 70), Yechiel Ha-Levi Rosenfeld (61, 67), Samuel Abele Apfel (61, 68, 69, 70), Moses Isaac Brettholz (61—62, 68, 69, 70), Isaac Fernhof (62), Ben Zion Katz (62-63, 70), Joseph Kohen-Zedek (63, 64, 68, 69, 70), Matithjahu Simcha Rabner (63), Shalom Roke'ah (63), Jacob Joshua Shternbach (63), Jakob Hirsch Sperling (63, 64, 68, 69), and Noah Furst (64, 69, 70).
A response ׂ(Heb.): Zimmerman Akiva, 'Comments on the article of Prof. Nurit Govrin: 'from a figure to an image, Emperor Franz Joseph I in Hebrew literature', Mahut, 8-9 (1991-1992), 138-140: including references to Isaac Erter, Jacob Bochman (138), Joseph Samuel Bloch (139), Menachem Gelerter and Meir Henish (140).
Including a chapter on Uri Zevi Greenberg (65-98), and more about him, according to index, and so on the following authors: Simon Bernfeld, Shmuel Yosef Agnon, Anda Amir, Dov Sadan, David Rokeach, Jehiel Mar.
Including references to France by Solomon Judah Rapoport and Jacob Samuel Bick (chapter 7, 500-502), Abraham Mendel Mohr (chapter 9, in particular 505) and Simon Bernfeld (chapter 13, and in particular 519-520).
In reprint: the aforementioned, 'HaKitza Ami', Magnes, Jerusalem 2001, 117-156.
Including references, according to index, to "Galicia", to Reuben Asher Braudes (in many places), and so to the following authors: Shmuel Yosef Agnon, Salo Wittmayer Baron, Simon Bernfeld, Isaac Erter, Nachman Krochmal, Judah Leo Landau, Mendel Lefin, Judah Leib Mieses, Dan Pagis, Joseph Perl, Solomon Judah Rapoport, Avraham Shaanan, Eisig Silberschlag.
A translation of the English original, from 1988: Response to Modernity: A History of the Reform Movement in Judaism. On the Galician Jewry and its individulls, especially in the following chapters: 'Chapter 4: The Movement Spreads over Europe' (168-209), and mainly the sub-chapter "Across the Austrian Emprire" (177-190). References to Galicia - 177-178, 180-183; with references to Naphtali Herz Homberg (177-178), to Nachman Krochmal (181), to Joseph Perl (181-182), to the scholars circle in Lemberg, to the temple they established, to the appointing of Abraham Kohn to a preacher and to the affair of his murder (182-183). 'Chapter 5: Integration and further progress (210-260) - on the attack on the tradition in Galicia, by Joshua Heschel Schorr (226-228) and Abraham Krochmal (228). More, according to index, on the aforementioned and on the followings: Jacob Meshulam Ornstein, Salo Wittmayer Baron, Martin Buber, Simon Bernfeld, Jacob Zallel Lauterbach, Raphael Mahler, Solomon Judah Rapoport and Shalom Spiegel, and so on Lemberg.
Including references, according to index, to Galicia (for further details - see Hebrew notes), and so the followings: Salo Wittmayer Baron, Simon Bernfeld, Martin Buber, Naphtali Herz Homberg, Abraham Krochmal, Nachman Krochmal, Jacob Zallel Lauterbach, Raphael Mahler, Jacob Meshulam Ornstein, Joseph Perl, Solomon Judah Rapoport, Joshua Heschel Schorr, and Shalom Spiegel.
The Hebrew version: Shazar, Jerusalem 1989.
Including the chapters: 'Elterer Dor' (the old generation) (10-13), with reference to Moses Schorr (10-11), Meir Balaban (11-12), and Ignacy Schiper (12-13); "Der Mitteler Dor" (the middle generation) (13-22), with references to Raphael Mahler (15), Emanuel Ringelblum (16-17), Philip Friedman (17-18), Mark Wischnitzer (20-21), Nathan Michael Gelber (21). More on their works in the later parts of the paper.
Including references, according to index, to the followings: Israel Eldad, Isaac Erter, Martin Buber, Nathan Birnabum, Simon Bernfeld, Asher Barash, Uri Zevi Greenberg, Eisig Silberschlag, David Neumark, Joseph Perl, Nachman Krochmal, Israel Rall, Solomon Rubin, Joshua Heschel Schorr.