Including references to Uri Zevi Greenberg (121), Melech Ravitch (121, 122), Samuel Jacob Imber (121), Itzik Manger (121, 122), and Abraham Moshe Fuchs (122).
Including references to Gershom Bader (524), Moshe Nadir (524, 525), Moses Leib Halpern (525), Naphtali Gross (525, 526), Harry Sackler, Berish Weinstein, Meyer Stiker, Judah Leib Teller, Isaac Metzker (526) and more.
Including reference to the Hebrew Haskalah Center in Poland, and reference to the people associated with it, among them, from Galicia, Joseph Perl, Isaac Erter, Max Letteris, Nachman Krochmal and is son Abraham Krochmal, Solomon Judah Rapoport, Solomon Rubin, Solomon Buber and Zevi Hirsch Chajes (53), reference to pioneers of Jewish nationalism and Zionism, among them Osias Thon, Marcus Ehrenpreis and David Neumark, Nachman Krochmal and Naphtali Herz Imber (54), to the Yiddish writers Harry Sackler, Chone Gottesfeld, Moshe Nadir, Moshe Leib Halpern, Reuben Iceland and Judah Leib Teller and to the scholars Gershom Bader, Ignacy Schiper, Meir Balaban and Menashe Unger.
The sections dealing with Yiddish literature in Galicia are found mainly in chapter 3, About Haskalah Literature (pages 81-84, with references to Mendel Lefin, Joseph Perl and Jacob Samuel Bick) and in chapter 16, About Yiddish Literature in Various Countries (327 - reference to the Galician school and its creators: Ber Horowitz, David Koenigsberg, Ber Schnapper, Nachum Bomze and Mendel Nerugroeschel. Reference to Yiddish writers who left Galicia is also included, among them, Moshe Leib Halpern and Uri Zevi Greenberg (according to the index).