%% Books and Monographs
@misc{fds288470,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {An Improper Profession: Women, Gender, and Journalism in
Late Imperial Russia},
Publisher = {Duke University Press},
Editor = {Norton, BT and Gheith, J},
Year = {2001},
Key = {fds288470}
}
@misc{fds288473,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {Finding the Middle Ground: Evgeniia Tur, V. Krestovskii, and
the Power of Ambivalence in Nineteenth-Century Women’s
Prose},
Publisher = {Northwestern University Press},
Year = {2004},
Key = {fds288473}
}
@misc{fds327188,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {Finding the middle ground: Krestovskii, Tur, and the power
of ambivalence in nineteenth century Russian women's
prose},
Pages = {1-302},
Year = {2004},
Month = {December},
ISBN = {9780810117143},
Abstract = {Though among the most prominent writers in Russia in the mid
nineteenth century, Evgeniia Tur (1815 92) and V.
Krestovskii (1820? 89) are now little known. By looking in
depth at these writers, their work, and their historical and
aesthetic significance, Jehanne M. Gheith shows how taking
women's writings into account transforms traditional
understandings of the field of nineteenth century Russian
literature. Gheith's analysis of these writers' biographies,
prose, and criticism intervenes in debates about the Russian
literary tradition in general, Russian women's writing in
particular, and feminist criticism on female authors and
authority as it has largely been developed in and for
Western contexts. © 2004 by Northwestern University Press.
All Rights Reserved.},
Key = {fds327188}
}
@misc{fds288474,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {Gulag Voices},
Year = {2011},
Month = {January},
Key = {fds288474}
}
@misc{fds143564,
Author = {J. Gheith and K. Jolluck},
Title = {Gulag Voices: Oral Histories of Soviet Incarceration and
Exile},
Publisher = {Palgrave MacMillan},
Key = {fds143564}
}
@misc{fds288471,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {History of Women’s Writing in Russia},
Publisher = {Cambridge University Press},
Editor = {Barker, A and Gheith, J},
Year = {2002},
Key = {fds288471}
}
@misc{fds288472,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {Russian Women, 1698-1917: Experience and Expression. An
Anthology of Sources},
Publisher = {Indiana University Press},
Editor = {Bisha, R and Gheith, J and Holden, C and Wagner, W},
Year = {2002},
Key = {fds288472}
}
%% Papers Published
@article{fds288465,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {"August 1991," an account of my experiences in Moscow during
the failed coup of August, 1991},
Journal = {Women East-West},
Year = {1991},
Month = {November},
Key = {fds288465}
}
@article{fds288464,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {"August 1991," an account of my experiences in Moscow during
the failed coup of August, 1991},
Journal = {CREES Newsletter},
Publisher = {Stanford},
Year = {1991},
Key = {fds288464}
}
@article{fds288480,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {"Solovki"; "Legacy of the Gulag"},
Journal = {on-line "Stalin Project"},
Year = {2008},
url = {http://www.stalinproject.com/},
Key = {fds288480}
}
@article{fds288456,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {"Women of the Thirties and Fifties: A Reperiodization"},
Booktitle = {A History of Women’s Writing in Russia},
Publisher = {Cambridge University Press},
Editor = {Barker, A and Gheith, J},
Year = {2002},
Key = {fds288456}
}
@article{fds288479,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {"‘It’s Difficult to Convey’: Oral History and Memories
of Gulag Survivors"},
Journal = {Gulag Studies},
Volume = {2-3},
Year = {2010},
Month = {November},
Key = {fds288479}
}
@article{fds288460,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {"’It’s Hard to Convey’: Oral History and Memories of
Gulag Survivors},
Pages = {99-116},
Booktitle = {Kaiken Takana oli Pelko},
Publisher = {Werner Söderström Osakeyhtiö (WSOY)},
Editor = {Oksanen, S},
Year = {2009},
Month = {January},
Abstract = {This article examines issues of memory through a close
reading of two of my oral history interviews with Gulag
survivors and also suggests how gender inflects narration
and memory in Gulag accounts. While this essay was
translated into Finnish, a revision of it is appearing in
English in Gulag Studies.},
Key = {fds288460}
}
@article{fds368918,
Author = {Gheith, JM and Jolluck, KR},
Title = {A Life in the Forest: Interview with Sira Stepanovna
Balashina},
Pages = {17-28},
Booktitle = {Palgrave Studies in Oral History},
Year = {2011},
Month = {January},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230116283_2},
Doi = {10.1057/9780230116283_2},
Key = {fds368918}
}
@article{fds368916,
Author = {Gheith, JM and Jolluck, KR},
Title = {A Mother in Exile: Interview with Larisa Mikhailovna
Lappo-Danilevskaia},
Pages = {69-86},
Booktitle = {Palgrave Studies in Oral History},
Year = {2011},
Month = {January},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230116283_5},
Doi = {10.1057/9780230116283_5},
Key = {fds368916}
}
@article{fds288482,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {A Slanted Perspective: Russian Literary Criticism and
Women’s Prose in the Nineteenth Century},
Journal = {Teksty},
Volume = {4-5-6},
Pages = {213-224},
Year = {1993},
Key = {fds288482}
}
@article{fds363892,
Author = {Fowler, M and Gheith, J},
Title = {A Therapeutic Welcome: Mental Health within the Reality
Ministries Disability Community},
Journal = {Journal of Disability and Religion},
Volume = {27},
Number = {2},
Pages = {358-382},
Year = {2023},
Month = {January},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23312521.2022.2078758},
Abstract = {Discrimination and exclusion have been associated with
mental health issues for people with intellectual and
developmental disabilities. This mixed-methods study
examines the impact of Reality Ministries (RM), a Christian
community center open to all abilities and faiths, on
participants’ views toward disability and mental health.
Semi-structured interviews were administered to 32 RM
community members. Results associate participation in RM
with greater disability acceptance, lower loneliness, higher
self-esteem and mental wellbeing, more and closer
friendships, and higher participation in personally
meaningful activities. Findings support the importance of a
community of belonging for the wellbeing of people with and
without disabilities.},
Doi = {10.1080/23312521.2022.2078758},
Key = {fds363892}
}
@article{fds288458,
Author = {J. Gheith and Gheith, J and Holmgren, B},
Title = {Art and Prostokvasha: Avdotia Panaeva’s
Work},
Booktitle = {The Russian Memoir: History and Literature},
Publisher = {Northwestern University Press},
Editor = {Holmgren, B},
Year = {2003},
Key = {fds288458}
}
@article{fds288477,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {Article on Gulag Research},
Journal = {Encompass},
Year = {2012},
Key = {fds288477}
}
@article{fds368913,
Author = {Gheith, JM and Jolluck, KR},
Title = {Bridging Separate Worlds: Interview with Feliks Arkadievich
Serebrov},
Pages = {169-189},
Booktitle = {Palgrave Studies in Oral History},
Year = {2011},
Month = {January},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230116283_11},
Abstract = {Feliks Arkadievich Serebrov served four terms in the Soviet
forced labor system, two in his youth, for criminal
offenses, and two later in life, in connection with his
participation in the human rights movement. As a result, he
saw more of the Gulag than many survivors and can compare
conditions in diverse camp locations and
periods.},
Doi = {10.1057/9780230116283_11},
Key = {fds368913}
}
@article{fds368915,
Author = {Gheith, JM and Jolluck, KR},
Title = {Enumerated Units: Interview with Giuzel Gumerovna
Ibragimova},
Pages = {133-147},
Booktitle = {Palgrave Studies in Oral History},
Year = {2011},
Month = {January},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230116283_9},
Doi = {10.1057/9780230116283_9},
Key = {fds368915}
}
@article{fds369002,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {Essays on Karolina Pavlova},
Journal = {RUSSIAN REVIEW},
Volume = {61},
Number = {4},
Pages = {631-632},
Year = {2002},
Key = {fds369002}
}
@article{fds288459,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {Evgeniia Tur},
Booktitle = {Encyclopedia of Russian History},
Publisher = {New York: MacMillan Reference},
Editor = {Miller, JR},
Year = {2004},
Key = {fds288459}
}
@article{fds288448,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {Evgeniia Tur},
Booktitle = {Dictionary of Russian Women Writers, Marina
Ledkovsky},
Publisher = {Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press},
Editor = {Rosenthal, C and Zirin, MF},
Year = {1994},
Key = {fds288448}
}
@article{fds288451,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {Evgeniia Tur and the Crimean Letters},
Booktitle = {Russian Women Writers},
Publisher = {Garland},
Editor = {Tomei, CD},
Year = {1998},
Key = {fds288451}
}
@article{fds368922,
Author = {Gheith, JM and Jolluck, KR},
Title = {Fare Thee Well: Excerpts from the Camp Correspondence of
Valentin Tikhonovich Muravskii and Rozalia Iosifovna
Muravskaia},
Pages = {219-222},
Booktitle = {Palgrave Studies in Oral History},
Year = {2011},
Month = {January},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230116283_17},
Abstract = {Born in 1928, Valentin Tikhonovich Muravskii has a life
story that reflects many of the most tragic episodes in
twentieth-century Russian history. His father, Tikhon
Romanovich Muravskii-Kocherga, a senior inspector for the
Leningrad radio broadcasting system and the director of a
short wave correspondence school, was arrested and executed
as a counter-revolutionary in 1937. Shortly thereafter,
Muravskii, his younger sister Dina, and his mother, Rozalia
losifovna Muravskaia, a doctor and, for a time, the head of
the Health Department of the Vyborg region of Leningrad,
were all exiled to Uzbekistan. Allowed to return home at the
end of 1940, the family faced new tragedies during the
Second World War, including the blockade of Leningrad,
evacuation from the city, and life under German occupation.
By 1943, all three members had been rounded up by the Nazis
and sent to perform forced labor. Muravskii ended up in
Austria, and his mother and sister in Germany. Although both
Muravskii and his mother returned to Leningrad after the
war, his sister married an American officer and made her way
to the United States. In 1947, Muravskii was arrested for
corresponding with her and given a three-year term in the
camps under Article 58. His mother received a ten-year
sentence for the same reason in 1948.},
Doi = {10.1057/9780230116283_17},
Key = {fds368922}
}
@article{fds288461,
Author = {Davidson, CN},
Title = {Foreword},
Pages = {xvii-xviii},
Booktitle = {Understanding Nadezhda Khvoshchinskaia’s Short Story
Collection: An Album: Groups and Portraits”},
Publisher = {IGI Global},
Year = {2010},
Month = {December},
ISBN = {9781609601201},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-60960-120-1},
Abstract = {I place Khvoshchinskaia's work in cultural and literary
context and place Karen Rosneck's book within the field of
Russian Gender Studies.},
Doi = {10.4018/978-1-60960-120-1},
Key = {fds288461}
}
@article{fds368911,
Author = {Gheith, JM and Jolluck, KR},
Title = {From Privilege to Exile: Interview with Valeriia Mikhailovna
Gerlin},
Pages = {151-167},
Booktitle = {Palgrave Studies in Oral History},
Year = {2011},
Month = {January},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230116283_10},
Abstract = {Valeriia Mikhailovna Gerlin was seven years old when her
parents were arrested in 1937. She was an only child. Her
father, Mikhail Gorb, was a former Socialist Revolutionary
who had participated in terrorist acts in the revolutionary
period. He joined the Bolshevik cause and rose to be a
high-ranking officer in the security police, then called the
GUGB, and worked in headquarters at the Lubianka in Moscow.
Gerlin refers to the service as the GB, the initials for the
Russian terms for state security, as in KGB. Her father was
arrested in the Great Terror of 1937–1938. As a wife of an
“enemy of the people,” Gerlin’s mother was arrested
and sentenced to eight years of forced labor in exile, in
conformity with an order issued in August 1937 on the
arrests of wives of “enemies of the people” and the
internment of their children in state orphanages.1 Prior to
her parents’ arrest, Gerlin lived in a fine apartment
opposite the Lubianka, with her own room, which she shared
with a nanny. After her parents’ arrests, she avoided
internment in an orphanage for children of “enemies of the
people. ”A married couple (never named by Gerlin), who had
worked with her parents in Kiev in the revolutionary
movement before 1917, took her in, along with her nanny.
When she left her parents’ apartment, young Valeriia
Gerlin had to leave behind her pet cat, and learned only
years later that the cat had been abandoned.},
Doi = {10.1057/9780230116283_10},
Key = {fds368911}
}
@article{fds288457,
Author = {Goss, KA},
Title = {Introduction},
Volume = {10},
Pages = {265-270},
Publisher = {Cambridge University Press (CUP)},
Year = {2014},
Month = {January},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1743923X14000063},
Doi = {10.1017/S1743923X14000063},
Key = {fds288457}
}
@article{fds288455,
Author = {Izatt, JA and Fujimoto, JG and Tuchin, VV},
Title = {Introduction},
Volume = {8213},
Pages = {xv-xvii},
Publisher = {SPIE},
Year = {2012},
Month = {January},
ISBN = {9780819488565},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.928212},
Doi = {10.1117/12.928212},
Key = {fds288455}
}
@article{fds368919,
Author = {Gheith, JM and Jolluck, KR},
Title = {Introduction},
Pages = {1-14},
Booktitle = {Palgrave Studies in Oral History},
Year = {2011},
Month = {January},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230116283_1},
Abstract = {The scope of the Gulag—the Soviet system of incarceration
and internal exile—is immense yet relatively little known.
Millions of people died in the Gulag, and millions more had
their lives radically disrupted by arrest, exile, or hard
labor in camps or in the labor army. The effects continue to
be evident in people’s memories, in fiction and other
forms of art, and in many social phenomena, including
people’s reactions to government.},
Doi = {10.1057/9780230116283_1},
Key = {fds368919}
}
@article{fds8140,
Author = {J. Gheith and Adele Barker},
Title = {Introduction},
Booktitle = {A History of Women's Writing in Russia},
Publisher = {Cambridge University Press},
Editor = {Adele Barker and Jehanne Gheith},
Year = {2002},
Key = {fds8140}
}
@article{fds8143,
Title = {Introduction},
Booktitle = {An Improper Profession: Women, Gender, and Journalism in
Late Imperial Russia},
Publisher = {Duke University Press},
Editor = {Barbara T. Norton and Jehanne Gheith},
Year = {2001},
Key = {fds8143}
}
@article{fds8150,
Title = {Introduction},
Booktitle = {Evgeniia Tur's Antonina},
Publisher = {Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press},
Year = {1996},
Key = {fds8150}
}
@article{fds288449,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {Introduction for a new edition of the Fiitzlyon
translation},
Booktitle = {The Memoirs of Princess Dashkova},
Publisher = {Durham, NC: Duke Press},
Year = {1995},
Key = {fds288449}
}
@article{fds368917,
Author = {Gheith, JM and Jolluck, KR},
Title = {It Wasn’t Life: Interview with Nina Ivanovna
Rodina},
Pages = {99-114},
Booktitle = {Palgrave Studies in Oral History},
Year = {2011},
Month = {January},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230116283_7},
Doi = {10.1057/9780230116283_7},
Key = {fds368917}
}
@article{fds288468,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {Karolina Pavlova},
Journal = {Russian Review},
Editor = {Fusso, S and Lehrman, A},
Year = {2002},
Key = {fds288468}
}
@article{fds313218,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {Marina Palei’s "Otdelenie propashchikh"},
Booktitle = {Lives in Transit},
Publisher = {Ardis},
Editor = {Goscilo, H},
Year = {1995},
Key = {fds313218}
}
@article{fds288452,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {N. D. Khvoshchinskaia},
Booktitle = {Reference Guide to Russian Literature},
Publisher = {St. James Press},
Editor = {Cornwell, N},
Year = {1998},
Key = {fds288452}
}
@article{fds288453,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {Nadezhda Durova},
Booktitle = {Dictionary of Literary Biography},
Publisher = {Bruccoli Clark Layman and Gale},
Year = {1999},
Key = {fds288453}
}
@article{fds288450,
Author = {Skinner, CS and Kobrin, SC and Campbell, MK and Sutherland,
L},
Title = {New technologies and their influence on existing
interventions},
Pages = {491-517},
Booktitle = {Patient Treatment Adherence: Concepts, Interventions, and
Measurement},
Year = {2005},
Month = {August},
ISBN = {9781410615626},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781410615626},
Doi = {10.4324/9781410615626},
Key = {fds288450}
}
@article{fds288478,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {Not the Atom Bomb? Interviewing/Filming Gulag Survivors in a
Culture of Dangerous Memory},
Journal = {Kritika},
Year = {2011},
Abstract = {An article detailing the intricacies of filming Gulag
survivors and the different considerations, given that
remembering and telling one's Gulag experiences has been
dangerous for over 70 years. Gulag survivors both want and
don't want to be filmed; there was a significant difference
in filming rather than in simply audio-recording the
interviews and I explore the cultural reasons behind
this.},
Key = {fds288478}
}
@article{fds288445,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {Painting and words: the art of sisterhood},
Booktitle = {The Sisters Khvoshchinskaia},
Editor = {Andrew, J and Hoogenboom, H and Rosenholm, A},
Year = {2006},
Key = {fds288445}
}
@article{fds288454,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {Redefining the Perceptible: The Journalism(s) of Avdot’ia
Panaeva and Evgeniia Tur},
Booktitle = {An Improper Profession: Women, Gender, and Journalism in
Late Imperial Russia},
Publisher = {Duke University Press},
Editor = {Norton, BT and Gheith, JM},
Year = {2001},
Key = {fds288454}
}
@article{fds303866,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {Reflections on Sibling Grief},
Journal = {Epilogue},
Year = {2013},
Month = {Fall},
Key = {fds303866}
}
@article{fds368921,
Author = {Gheith, JM and Jolluck, KR},
Title = {Soviet but German: Interview with Robert Avgustovich
lanke},
Pages = {29-46},
Booktitle = {Palgrave Studies in Oral History},
Year = {2011},
Month = {January},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230116283_3},
Doi = {10.1057/9780230116283_3},
Key = {fds368921}
}
@article{fds368914,
Author = {Gheith, JM and Jolluck, KR},
Title = {Surrounded by Death: Interview with Giuli Fedorovna
Tsivirko},
Pages = {87-97},
Booktitle = {Palgrave Studies in Oral History},
Year = {2011},
Month = {January},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230116283_6},
Doi = {10.1057/9780230116283_6},
Key = {fds368914}
}
@article{fds8149,
Title = {The Superfluous Man and the Necessary Woman: A
Re-vision},
Booktitle = {The Russian Review},
Year = {1996},
Month = {April},
Key = {fds8149}
}
@article{fds288475,
Author = {Gheith, JM},
Title = {The superfluous man and the necessary woman: A
"re-vision"},
Journal = {Russian Review},
Volume = {55},
Number = {2},
Pages = {226-244},
Publisher = {JSTOR},
Year = {1996},
Month = {January},
ISSN = {0036-0341},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/131838},
Doi = {10.2307/131838},
Key = {fds288475}
}
@article{fds368912,
Author = {Gheith, JM and Jolluck, KR},
Title = {Three Death Certificates but No Grave: Interview with Boris
Israelovich/Srul’evich Faifman},
Pages = {117-131},
Booktitle = {Palgrave Studies in Oral History},
Year = {2011},
Month = {January},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230116283_8},
Abstract = {This interview reveals much about life for a child of “
enemies of the people.” Both of Boris Faifman’s parents,
Communist believers who chose to emigrate to the USSR, were
arrested precisely because of their foreign origins. As was
true for many children of “enemies,” as a small child
Faifman became an orphan, and was treated as an enemy
himself. Though he had few memories of his parents, he bore
the consequences of their groundless arrests for his entire
life. Bitter about the injustices he suffered, he bemoans
the fact that he has several different death certificates
for each of his parents, but not a single grave to
visit.},
Doi = {10.1057/9780230116283_8},
Key = {fds368912}
}
@article{fds288467,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {Till My Tale Is Told: Women’s Memoirs of the
Gulag},
Journal = {Canadian-American Slavic Studies},
Editor = {Vilensky, S},
Year = {2001},
Key = {fds288467}
}
@article{fds314859,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {Tur/Grot correspondence},
Booktitle = {Russian Women: Experience and Expression},
Publisher = {Indiana University Press},
Editor = {al, RBE},
Year = {2006},
Key = {fds314859}
}
@article{fds368920,
Author = {Gheith, JM and Jolluck, KR},
Title = {Under Two Dictators: Interview with Abliaziz Umerovich
Ramazanov},
Pages = {47-66},
Booktitle = {Palgrave Studies in Oral History},
Year = {2011},
Month = {January},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230116283_4},
Doi = {10.1057/9780230116283_4},
Key = {fds368920}
}
@article{fds368923,
Author = {Gheith, JM and Jolluck, KR},
Title = {We Will Surely Die: Letter from Irena Grześkowiak to Her
Father, Andrzej},
Pages = {211-213},
Booktitle = {Palgrave Studies in Oral History},
Year = {2011},
Month = {January},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230116283_15},
Abstract = {The letter below is one of several hundred contained in the
archives of the Anders Army, the Polish army formed in the
USSR as a result of the Sikorskii-Maiskii Pact of July 30,
1941. These letters—many of them unopened—were written
by Poles deported font their homes after the Soviet
invasion, typically children, women, and elderly
individuals, seeking help in getting out of desperate
conditions in the USSR. Though technically fee after the
amnesty granted by the pact, many of these exiles lacked the
wherewithal to leave their former places of detention.
Soviet authorities frequently blocked their departure,
wanting to keep them for forced labor. Women with small
children and elderly relatives under their care did not have
the money, food, documents, or strength to journey in search
of outposts of the new Polish army. In some cases, men left
their families to join the army, hoping to be reunited with
them later. Many young children were stranded after such
departures or the death of parents, who succumbed to the
prevalent poverty, hunger, and disease.},
Doi = {10.1057/9780230116283_15},
Key = {fds368923}
}
@article{fds368910,
Author = {Gheith, JM and Jolluck, KR},
Title = {Why Did He Ruin Our Happiness?: Letter from Franciszka Dul
to Her Husband, Stanisław Dul},
Pages = {215-217},
Booktitle = {Palgrave Studies in Oral History},
Year = {2011},
Month = {January},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230116283_16},
Abstract = {The author of the following letter, Franciszka Dul, was
probably arrested and sent to a labor camp after the Red
Army invasion of Poland in 1939. The envelope records her
address in the Akmolinsk oblast in Kazakhstan (Map 1), the
site of many penal camps for women. She writes to her
husband, in care of the Anders Army, the Polish army in the
USSR. This letter was found in the archives of the army,
which contain, scattered in different boxes, at least four
others that she wrote to him. We must assume that he never
received them. In another of her letters, written on a page
torn from a book in the Kazakh language, Dul laments, “I
have already sent you 15 letters and received none from
you.”2},
Doi = {10.1057/9780230116283_16},
Key = {fds368910}
}
@article{fds288476,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {Women and gender in 18th-century Russia.},
Journal = {RUSSIAN REVIEW},
Volume = {64},
Number = {1},
Pages = {112-113},
Year = {2005},
Month = {January},
ISSN = {0036-0341},
url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=000226911000010&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92},
Key = {fds288476}
}
@article{fds369003,
Author = {Gheith, J and Edmondson, L},
Title = {Women and Society in Russia and the Soviet
Union},
Journal = {Russian Review},
Volume = {53},
Number = {2},
Pages = {315-315},
Publisher = {JSTOR},
Year = {1994},
Month = {April},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/130844},
Doi = {10.2307/130844},
Key = {fds369003}
}
@article{fds288466,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {Women in Russian and the Soviet Union},
Journal = {Russian Review},
Editor = {Edmonson, L},
Year = {1994},
Month = {April},
Key = {fds288466}
}
@article{fds288446,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {’Collecting Crumbs’: Rupture and Repair for Children of
the Gulag},
Booktitle = {The Gulag: History and Legacy},
Editor = {Barnes, S},
Year = {2009},
Key = {fds288446}
}
@article{fds288481,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {’I Never Talked...’: Enforced Silence, Non-Narrative
Memory, and the Gulag},
Journal = {Mortality},
Volume = {12},
Number = {2},
Pages = {159-175},
Publisher = {Routledge},
Year = {2007},
Month = {May},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13576270701255149},
Abstract = {Jehanne Gheith’s essay comes from a larger project of life
history interviews with Gulag survivors which she conducted
over the course of several years (multiple interviews with
each person) in which she explores the Gulag as cultural
haunting. The Gulag is typically left out of western
histories of traumatic memory in the twentieth century.
Gheith argues that this omission is connected to the silence
around the Gulag in Russia and to the fact that the dominant
models for traumatic memory are based on the Holocaust, an
experience that does not fit for Gulag survivors. Many
trauma theorists place narrative (telling the story) at the
center of healing from trauma. Yet, for some fifty years
after the height of Stalin’s purges, Gulag survivors
risked severe punishment if they discussed their experiences
in the labor camps so that this kind of narrative approach
was not open to them. One of the major effects of the
enforced silence, Gheith argues, is that absent the
narrative option, Gulag survivors developed creative,
non-narrative ways to deal with their memories and
experiences. Gheith discusses two interviews in depth as a
way to personalize the memories and to show how the Gulag
continues to be remembered.},
Doi = {10.1080/13576270701255149},
Key = {fds288481}
}
@article{fds288469,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {’Trudno peredat’: Traumatic Memory and the
Gulag},
Journal = {Gulag Studies},
Editor = {Cooke, O},
Year = {2009},
Abstract = {In this article, I examine issues related to cultural
memory, gender, oral history and the Gulag through comparing
two very different interviews. One person became the–often
military–hero of every story; the other retreated into
herself. In close readings of these case studies, I suggest
how these two ways of remembering and narrating model ways
of remembering common to many Gulag survivors.},
Key = {fds288469}
}
@article{fds184249,
Author = {J. Gheith},
Title = {“’The doctors said I was normal’: Trauma, the
non-narrative, and the Gulag.”},
Journal = {To be published in Slavic Review},
Year = {2010},
Abstract = {In this article, I argue that much western based trauma
theory does not work well for the context of Gulag
survivors. In the West, many trauma theorists argue that
narrative is an essential component of healing. The option
of narrative was not open to Gulag survivors for about
years. I show some of the creative, non-narrative ways that
Gulag survivors lived with and integrated their memories.
And I raise questions about universal notions of psyche and
treatment, arguing that we must take cultural context into
account in our models to a much greater extent than is
currently the case.},
Key = {fds184249}
}
@article{fds288447,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {“’The doctors said I was normal’: Trauma, the
non-narrative, and the Gulag”},
Journal = {Slavic Review},
Year = {2010},
Abstract = {Much trauma theory developed in western contexts argues that
it is essential for trauma survivors to compose and share
their narratives in a supportive atmosphere. This option was
not open to Gulag survivors as they risked rearrest or harm
to their families if they told their stories. I argue that
they found creative, non-verbal ways to work through these
memories. Given this evidence, I invite readers to rethink
notions of trauma and healing: rather than being universal,
they are intimately tied to cultural and historical
contexts.},
Key = {fds288447}
}
%% Papers Accepted
@article{fds184025,
Author = {J. Gheith},
Title = {“’The doctors said I was normal’: Trauma, the
non-narrative, and the Gulag”},
Journal = {Slavic Review},
Year = {2010},
Abstract = {Much trauma theory developed in western contexts argues that
it is essential for trauma survivors to compose and share
their narratives in a supportive atmosphere. This option was
not open to Gulag survivors as they risked rearrest or harm
to their families if they told their stories. I argue that
they found creative, non-verbal ways to work through these
memories. Given this evidence, I invite readers to rethink
notions of trauma and healing: rather than being universal,
they are intimately tied to cultural and historical
contexts.},
Key = {fds184025}
}
%% Book Reviews
@article{fds48240,
Author = {J. Gheith},
Title = {"August 1991," an account of my experiences in Moscow during
the failed coup of August, 1991},
Journal = {CREES Newsletter},
Publisher = {Stanford},
Year = {1991},
Month = {Fall},
Key = {fds48240}
}
@article{fds48237,
Author = {J. Gheith},
Title = {Women and gender in 18th-century Russia},
Journal = {Russian Review},
Editor = {Wendy Rosslyn},
Year = {2004},
Month = {October},
Key = {fds48237}
}
%% Translations
@misc{fds309964,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {Global Fund for Women brochure},
Year = {1990},
Key = {fds309964}
}
@misc{fds288462,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {Marina Palei’s "Otdelenie propashchikh"},
Booktitle = {Lives in Transit},
Publisher = {Ardis},
Editor = {Goscilo, H},
Year = {1995},
Key = {fds288462}
}
@misc{fds288463,
Author = {Gheith, J},
Title = {Tur/Grot correspondence},
Booktitle = {Russian Women: Experience and Expression},
Publisher = {Indiana University Press},
Editor = {al, RBE},
Year = {2006},
Key = {fds288463}
}