Publications

1995
1995. A Book that Nabokov Was Proud of: Review of Peter Kriksunov’s Hebrew Translation ofInvitation to a Beheading(in Hebrew). Haaretz, (Dec. 31), p.Books 7.
1995. The Fragmentation of Experience in Nabokov’s Fiction. Cycnos, 12, pp.124-34.
1995. If Everything Else Fails, Read the Instructions: Further Echoes of the Reception-Theory Debate. Connotations, 4, pp.151-64.
1995. L’éthique du camouflage narratif.” Trans. Hélène Fiamma. Europe: revue littéraire mensuelle, (791), pp.71-80.Abstract
Dutch translation, by Gerard de Vries, of a revised version: “Vorm en ethiek: Nabokovs romans en het scholen van de ontvankelijkheid” (“Form and Ethics: Nabokov’s Fiction and the Education of Sensibilities”) De Tweede Ronde (Amsterdam), Winter 1998/99: 191-200. Russian-language version: “Nabokov i etika kamufliazha,” in Vladimir Nabokov: Pro et Contra, ed. B. V. Averin. St. Petersburg: Russian Christian Institute for the Humanities, 2001 II: 377–86.
1995. Nabokov and Bergson. In The Garland Companion to Nabokov. Ed. V. Alexandrov. New York: Garland, pp. 667-73.
1995. Représentation de la crise dans l’oeuvre de Nathaniel Hawthorne: Le Mode Carnivalesque, trans. Christine Raguet-Bouvart. In Éclats de voix: Crises en représentation dans la littérat ure nord-américaine. Ed. Christine Raguet-Bouvart. La Rochelle: Rumeur des Ages, pp. 97-109.Abstract
Revised English version, "Carnival and Crisis in Three Stories by Nathaniel Hawthorne," in Towards the Ethics of Form in Fiction. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 2010, pp. 21-34. 
1995. Versions of Job: Some Jewish Characters in the Stories of Varlam Shalamov. In Jews and Slavs. Ed. W. Moskovich, S. Shwarzband, and A. Alekseev. Jerusalem: FPL, pp. 253-66.
1994
Toker, L. ed., 1994. Commitment in Reflection: Essays in Literature and Moral Philosophy, New York: Garland.
1994. Documentary Prose and the Role of the Reader: Some Stories of Varlam Shalamov. In Commitment in Reflection: Essays in Literature and Moral Philosophy. Ed. Leona Toker. New York: Garland, pp. 169-93.
1994. The Gulag in the Memoirs of Jewish Survivors. The Eleventh World Congress of Jewish Studies, C, III, pp.69-76.
1994. Introduction. In Commitment in Reflection: Essays in Literature and Moral Philosophy. Ed. Leona Toker. New York: Garland, p. xi-xxxii.
1994. Liberal Ironists and the “Gaudily Painted Savage”: On Richard Rorty’s Reading of Vladimir Nabokov. Nabokov Studies, 1, pp.196-206. Available at: . Publisher's VersionAbstract
Reprinted on the Zembla site. 
1994. Memory of Love Dressed up as Pasture: Review of The Russian Dozen, thirteen stories by Vladimir Nabokov in the Hebrew translation by Nili Mirsky (in Hebrew). Haaretz, August 3, p.Books 7.
1994. Review of Julian Connolly,Nabokov’s Early Fiction. Nabokov Studies, 1, pp.224-26.
1993
Toker, L., 1993. Eloquent Reticence: Withholding Information in Fictional Narrative, Lexington: University Press of Kentucky.
1993. Review of Journal of Anglo-Italian Studies, vol. 1 (1991). Mediterranean Language Review, 6-7, pp.280-83.
1993. Rhetoric and Ethical Ambiguities in “That Evening Sun”. Women’s Studies, 22, pp.429-39.Abstract
Reprinted in Short Story Criticism: Criticism of the Works of Short Fiction Writers 92, ed. Jelena Krstov{\'ıc. Farmington Hills: Thomson Gale, 2006, pp. 74–79.
1993. “Signs and Symbols” in and out of Contexts. In A Small Alpine Form: Studies in Nabokov’s Short Fiction. Ed. Charles Nicol and Gennady Barabtarlo. New York: Garland, pp. 167-80.Abstract
Reprinted in Anatomy of a Short Story, ed. Yuri Leving. London: Continuum, 2012, pp. 217-29.
1993. Varlam Shalamov’s Kolyma. In Between Heaven and Hell: The Myth of Siberia in Russian Culture. Ed. Galya Diment and Yuri Slezkine. New York: St. Martin’s Press, pp. 151-69.
1992
1992. Review of Vladimir Alexandrov’sNabokov’s Otherworld. American Literature, pp.186-87.