1.
Weiss, J.G., Rapoport-Albert, A., Institute of Jewish Studies (London, England): Hasidism reappraised. Vallentine Mitchell, London (1996).
2.
Dresner, Samuel H.: The Zaddik: the doctrine of the Zaddik according to the writings of Rabbi Yaakov Yosef of Polnoy. Abelard-Schuman, London (1960).
3.
Elior, Rachel, Green, Yaacov Jeffrey, Jeffrey M. Green (Translator): The paradoxical ascent to God: the kabbalistic theosophy of Habad Hasidism. State University of New York Press, Albany (1993).
4.
El-Or, Tamar: Educated and ignorant: ultraorthodox Jewish women and their world. Lynne Rienner Publishers, Boulder (1994).
5.
Rachel Elior: Messianic Expectations and Spiritualization of Religious Life in the Sixteenth Century. Revue des Études Juives. 145, 35–49 (1986). https://doi.org/10.2143/REJ.145.1.2012956.
6.
Rachel Elior: The Lubavitch messianic resurgence: the historical and mystical background 1939-1996. In: Toward the millenium: messianic expectations from the Bible to Waco. pp. 383–408. Brill, Boston (1998). https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004378995_017.
7.
Enlow, H.G.: Kavvanah: the Struggle for Inwardness in Judaism. Studies in Jewish literature: issued in honor of Professor Kaufmann Kohler, Ph.D, on the occasion of his seventieth birthday, May the Tenth, nineteen hundred and thirteen. (1913).
8.
Etkes, I., Sternberg, Saadya. (Translator.): The Besht: magician, mystic, and leader. University Press of New England, Hanover (2005).
9.
E. Etkes: Marriage and Torah study among the Lomdim in Lithuania in the nineteenth century. In: The Jewish family: metaphor and memory. pp. 153–178. Oxford University Press, New York (1989).
10.
E. Etkes: Immanent Factors and External Influences in the Development of the Haskalah Movement in Russia. In: Toward modernity: the European Jewish model. pp. 13–32. Transaction Books, New Brunswick ; Oxford (1987).
11.
E., E.: The Study of Hasidism: Past Trends and New Directions. Hasidism reappraised. The Littman library of Jewish civilization, 447–464 (1996).
12.
David E. Fishman: Musar and Modernity:The Case of Novaredok. Modern Judaism. 8, 41–64 (1988). https://doi.org/10.1093/mj/8.1.41.
13.
David E. Fishman: Preserving Tradition in the Land of Revolution: the Religious Leadership of Soviet Jewry, 1917-1930. In: The uses of tradition: Jewish continuity in the modern era. pp. 85–118. Jewish Theological Seminary of America, Cambridge, Mass (1992).
14.
Foxbrunner, Roman A.: Ḥabad: the Hasidism of R. Shneur Zalman of Lyady. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa, AL (1992).
15.
Menachem Friedman: The Lost Kiddush Cup: Changes in Ashkenazi Haredi Culture - A Tradition in Crisis. In: The uses of tradition: Jewish continuity in the modern era. pp. 175–186. Jewish Theological Seminary of America, Cambridge, Mass (1992).
16.
Green, Arthur: Tormented master: a life of Rabbi Nahman of Bratslav. University of Alabama Press, University (1979).
17.
Elior, R., Dan, J.: ‘Three Warsaw Mystics’. In: Ḳolot rabim: sefer ha-zikaron le-Rivḳah Shats-Ufenhaimer. pp. 1–58. ha-Universiṭah ha-ʻIvrit, ha-Makhon le-madaʻe ha-Yahadut, ha-Ḥug le-maḥshevet Yiśraíel, Yerushalayim (1996).
18.
Greenberg, G.: ‘An Active Messianic Response During the Holocaust. Mahane Israel-Lubavitch’,. In: Bearing witness to the Holocaust, 1939-1989. E. Mellen Press, Lewiston, N.Y., USA (1991).
19.
Greenberg, G.: ‘An Active Messianic Response During the Holocaust. Mahane Israel-Lubavitch’. In: Bearing witness to the Holocaust, 1939-1989. E. Mellen Press, Lewiston, N.Y., USA (1991).
20.
Greenberg, G.: ‘An Active Messianic Response During the Holocaust. Mahane Israel-Lubavitch’,. In: Bearing witness to the Holocaust, 1939-1989. E. Mellen Press, Lewiston, N.Y., USA (1991).
21.
Cohn-Sherbok, Dan: ‘Redemption After the Holocaust According to Mahane Israel-Lubavitch 1944-45’,. In: Modern Judaism. Macmillan Press, Basingstoke (1996).
22.
Hundert, Gershon David: Essential papers on Hasidism: origins to present. New York University Press, New York (1991).
23.
Idel, Moshe: Hasidism: between ecstasy and magic. State University of New York Press, Albany (1995).
24.
Jacobs, Louis: Hasidic prayer. Routledge & Kegan Paul, London (1972).
25.
Jacobs, Louis: Religion and the individual: a Jewish perspective. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1992).
26.
Jacobson, Yoram, Translated from the Hebrew by Jonathan Chipman: Hasidic thought. MOD Press, Tel-Aviv (1998).
27.
Katz, Jacob, Cooperman, Bernard Dov: Tradition and crisis: Jewish society at the end of the Middle Ages. New York University Press, New York (1992).
28.
Katz, Jacob: A house divided: orthodoxy and schism in nineteenth-century Central European Jewry. Brandeis University Press, Hanover, NH; London (1998).
29.
Kranzler, George: Hasidic Williamsburg: a contemporary American Hasidic community. Jason Aronson, Northvale, N.J (1995).
30.
Lamm, Norman: The religious thought of Hasidism: text and commentary. Michael Scharf Publication Trust of Yeshiva University Press, New York (1999).
31.
Langer, F.: Introduction by Frantisek Langer, on Westernized Jews and Hasidism c.1913. In: Nine gates to the Chassidic mysteries. p. vii-xxxi. (1961).
32.
Khaim Liberman: ‘Rabbi Nakhman Bratslaver and the Maskilim of Uman’,. Yiṿo bleṭer : shrifṭ fun yidishn ṿisnshafṭlekhn insṭiṭuṭ. VI, 201–219 (1951).
33.
Loewenthal, Naftali: Communicating the infinite: the emergence of the Habad school. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (1990).
34.
Loewenthal, N.: ‘Hasidism and Modernity: The Case of Habad’. In: Proceedings of the Eleventh World Congress of Jewish Studies, Division C,. pp. 205–210.
35.
Loewenthal, N.: ‘Reason’ and ‘Beyond Reason’ in Habad Hasidism. In: ʻAle Shefer: meḥḳarim be-sifrut he-hagut ha-yehudit mugashim li-khevod ha-rav Dr. Alexander Safran. p. 109*-126*. Bar-Ilan University Press, Ramat-Gan (1990).
36.
Weiss, J. G., Rapoport-Albert, Ada, Institute of Jewish Studies (London, England): ‘Habad Approaches to Contemplative Prayer, 1790-1920’,. In: Hasidism reappraised. pp. 288–300. Vallentine Mitchell, London (1996).
37.
Naftali Loewenthal: The Neutralisation of Messianism and the Apocalypse. In: Ḳolot rabim: sefer ha-zikaron le-Rivḳah Shats-Ufenhaimer. pp. 59–73. ha-Universiṭah ha-ʻIvrit, ha-Makhon le-madaʻe ha-Yahadut, ha-Ḥug le-maḥshevet Yiśraíel, Yerushalayim (1996).
38.
Naftali, Loewenthal: Contemporary Habad and the Paradox of Redemption. In: Perspectives on Jewish thought and mysticism: proceedings of the International Conference held by the Institute of Jewish Studies, University College London, 1994, in celebration of its fortieth anniversary : dedicated to the memory and academic legacy of its founder Alexander Altmann. pp. 381–402. Harwood Academic, Amsterdam (1997).
39.
Naftali, Loewenthal: Women and the Dialectic of Spirituality in Hasidism. In: Be-maʻgele Ḥasidim: ḳovets meḥḳarim le-zikhro shel Profesor Mordekhai Ṿilensḳi. pp. 7–65. Mosad Byaliḳ, Yerushalayim (1999).
40.
Loewenthal, N.: 'From the Source of Rahamim’: Graveside Prayer of Habad Hasidism. In: Studies in Jewish prayer. pp. 207–223. Oxford University Press on behalf of the University of Manchester, Oxford (2005).
41.
Loewenthal, N.: ’From the Source of Rahamim’: Graveside Prayer of Habad Hasidism. Studies in Jewish prayer. Journal of Semitic studies, 207–223 (2005).
42.
Loewenthal, N.: "The Baal Shem Tov’s Iggeret HaKodesh  and Contemporary Habad ‘Outreach’”. In: Yashan mi-pene ḥadash: meḥḳarim be-toldot Yehude mizraḥ Eropah uve-tarbutam : shai le-ʻEmanuʼel Eṭḳes. pp. 205–210. Merkaz Zalman Shazar le-Toldot Yiśraʼel, Yerushalayim (769).
43.
Mahler, Raphael, Translated from the Yiddish by Eugene Orenstein; Translated from the Hebrew by Aaron Klein and Jenny Machlowitz Klein: Hasidism and the Jewish Enlightenment: their confrontation in Galicia and Poland in the first half of the nineteenth century. Jewish Publication Society of America, Philadelphia (1985).
44.
Mark, Zvi: Mysticism and madness: the religious thought of Rabbi Nachman of Bratslav. Shalom Hartman Institute, [Jerusalem] (2009).
45.
Yehoshua Mondshine: The Fluidity of Categories in Hasidism: Averah lishmah in the Teachings of R. Zevi Elimelekh of Dynow. In: Hasidism reappraised. pp. 301–320. Vallentine Mitchell, London (1996).
46.
Piekarz, Mendel: Hasidut Polin: megamot raʻayoniyot ben shete ha-milḥamot u-vi-gezerot, 1940-1945 (ha-shoʼah). Mossad Bialik, Jerusalem (1990).
47.
Polen, N.: Miriam’s Dance: Radical Egalitarianism in Hasidic Thought. Modern Judaism. 12, 1–21 (1992). https://doi.org/10.1093/mj/12.1.1.
48.
Polen, Nehemia: The holy fire: the teachings of Rabbi Kalonymus Kalman Shapira, the rebbe of the Warsaw ghetto. J. Aronson, Northvale, N.J (1994).
49.
Rapoport-Albert, A.: Hagiography with Footnotes: Edifying Tales and the Writing of History in Hasidism. Essays in Jewish historiography. History and theory, 119–159 (1988).
50.
Ada Rapoport-Albert: On Women in Hasidism, S.A. Horodecky and the Maid of Ludmir Tradition. In: Jewish history: essays in honour of Chimen Abramsky. pp. 495–525. Halban, London (1988).
51.
Ada Rapoport-Albert: The emergence of a female constituency in twentieth-century HaBaD. In: Yashan mi-pene ḥadash: meḥḳarim be-toldot Yehude mizraḥ Eropah uve-tarbutam : shai le-ʻEmanuʼel Eṭḳes. pp. 7–68. Merkaz Zalman Shazar le-Toldot Yiśraʼel, Yerushalayim (769).
52.
Weiss, J.G., Rapoport-Albert, A., Institute of Jewish Studies (London, England): Hasidism reappraised. Vallentine Mitchell, London (1996).
53.
Ravitzky, Aviezer: Messianism, Zionism, and Jewish religious radicalism. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (1996).
54.
Ira Robinson: Kabbala and Science in ‘Sefer Ha-Berit:’ A Modernization Strategy for Orthodox Jews. Modern Judaism. 9, 275–288 (1989).
55.
Rosman, Murray Jay: Founder of Hasidism: a quest for the historical Ba`al Shem Tov. University of California Press, Berkeley, Calif (1996).
56.
Moshe Rosman: "Hasidism as a Modern Phenomenon, the paradox of modernisation without secularisation”,. Jahrbuch des Simon Dubnow Instituts. Band 122, 215–224 (2007).
57.
Rosman, Murray (Moshe) Jay: The postmodern period in Jewish history. In: How Jewish is Jewish history? pp. 56–81. The Littman Library of Jewish Civilization, Oxford (2007).
58.
Rubin, Israel: Satmar: an island in the city. Quadrangle Books, Chicago (1972).
59.
Scholem, Gershom Gerhard: Hasidism, the Latest Phase. In: Major trends in Jewish mysticism. pp. 325–350. Schocken Books, New York (1961).
60.
Scholem, Gershom Gerhard: Devekuth, or Communion with G-d. In: The Messianic idea in Judaism: and other essays on Jewish spirituality. pp. 203–227. Schoken Books, New York (1971).
61.
Shafir, W.: Jewish Messianism Lubavitch Style: An Interim Report. Jewish journal of sociology. 35, 115–128.
62.
William Shaffir: Secular studies in a hasidic enclave – ‘what do we need it for?’ Jewish journal of sociology. XLVI, 59–77 (2004).
63.
Stephen, Sharot: Magic, Religion, Science and Secularization. In: Religion, science, and magic: in concert and in conflict. pp. 261–283. Oxford University Press, New York (1989).
64.
Michael Silber: The Emergence of Ultra-Orthodoxy - the Invention of a Tradition. In: The uses of tradition: Jewish continuity in the modern era. pp. 23–84. Jewish Theological Seminary of America, Cambridge, Mass (1992).
65.
Solomon, Norman: The Analytic Movement: Hayyim Soloveitchik and his circle. Scholars Press, Atlanta, Ga (1993).
66.
Michael, Stanislawski: Beginnings of the Russian Haskalah. In: Tsar Nicholas I and the Jews: the transformation of Jewish society in Russia, 1825-1855. pp. 49–96. Jewish Publication Society of America, Philadelphia, Pa (1983).
67.
Weissler, Chava: Voices of the matriarchs: listening to the prayers of early modern Jewish women. Beacon Press, Boston, Mass (1998).
68.
Chava  Weissler: The Religion of Traditional Ashkenazic Women: Some Methodological Issues. AJS Review. 12, 73–94 (1987).
69.
Weissler, C.: The traditional piety of Ashkenazic women. In: Jewish spirituality. pp. 245–275. Routledge & Kegan Paul, London (1986).
70.
D. Weissman: Beit Yaakov: a historical model for Jewish feminists. In: The Jewish woman: new perspectives. Schocken Books, New York (1976).
71.
Wertheimer, Jack: The uses of tradition: Jewish continuity in the modern era. Distributed by Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (1992).
72.
Wodziński, Marcin: Haskalah and Hasidism in the Kingdom of Poland: a history of conflict. Littman Library of Jewish Civilization, Oxford (2005).
73.
Katrina, Mann: ‘You’re Next!’: Postwar Hegemony Besieged in ‘Invasion of the Body Snatchers’. Cinema Journal. 44, 49–68 (2004).
74.
Katrina Mann: ‘You’re Next!’: Postwar Hegemony Besieged in ‘Invasion of the Body Snatchers’. Cinema Journal. 44, 49–68 (2004).
75.
Katrina Mann: ‘You’re Next!’: Postwar Hegemony Besieged in ‘Invasion of the Body Snatchers’. Cinema Journal. 44, 49–68 (2004).