Cinquegrani, M. (2016), The Cinematic City and the Destruction of Lublin’s Jews. Holocaust Studies, 22 no. 2-3, pp. 244-255.
Elzanowski, J. (2012) Ruins, Rubble and Human Remains: Negotiating Culture and Violence in Post-Catastrophic Warsaw. Public Art Dialogue, 2 no. 2, pp. 114-146.
Holland, A. (2015) Negotiating Jewish Victimhood at Majdanek: Reluctant Communists, Political Flux and Nazi Guilt. MA Thesis, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign.
Hornstein, S. (2011) Losing Site: Architecture, Memory and Place. Surrey: Ashgate Publishing.
Jacobs, J. (2004) From the Profane to the Sacred: Ritual and Mourning at Sites of Terror and Violence. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 43 no. 3, pp. 311-315.
Knittel, S. (2014) The Historical Uncanny: Disability, Ethnicity and the Politics of Holocaust Memory. New York: Fordham University Press.
Lederman, N. (2017) A World Erased: A Grandson’s Search for His Family’s Holocaust Secrets. Rowman & Littlefield.
Lehrer, E. and Meng, M. (2015) Jewish Spaces in Contemporary Poland. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
Lehrer, E. (2015) Jewish Heritage, Pluralism, and Milieux de Mémoire: The Case of Kraków’s Kazimierz. In: Lehrer, E. and Meng, M., eds. Jewish Spaces in Contemporary Poland. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, pp.170-192.
Meng, M. (2011) Shattered Spaces. Harvard University Press.
Polonsky, A. and Michlic, J., eds. (2004) The Neighbors Respond: The Controversy over the Jedwabne Massacre in Poland. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Steffen, K. and Güttel, A. (2008) Disputed Memory: Jewish Past, Polish Remembrance. Osteuropa, Vol. 58, No.8/10, Impulses for Europe: Tradition and Modernity in East European Jewry, pp. 199-217.
Steinlauf, M. (1997) Bondage to the Dead: Poland and the Memory of the Holocaust. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press.
Szabłowski, S. (2016) “VIII Festival of Art in Public Space.” Center for Intercultural Creative Initiatives: http://opencity.pl/en/about/
Szymanska, O. (2016) Lachert, The Law Court on Leszno and Saska Kepa. Jewish Historical Institute, January 13, 2016: http://www.jhi.pl/en/blog/2016-01-13-lachert-the-law- courts-on-leszno-and-saska-kepa
Uchowicz, K. (2014) Reading Muranow. Memory of a Place / Memory of an Architect: Commentary on the postwar work of Bohdan Lachert. RIHA Journal, Special Issue “Contemporary art and Memory,” (December 31, 2014).
Wojcik, A., Bilewicz, M., Lewicka, M. (2010) Living on the ashes: Collective representations of Polish-Jewish history among people living in the former Warsaw Ghetto area. Cities, 27, pp. 195-203.
Young, J (1993). The Texture of Memory: Holocaust Memorials and Meaning. New Haven: Yale University Press.
Young, J. (2000) Memory and Counter-Memory: Toward a Social Aesthetics of Holocaust Memorials. In: DeCoste, F.C. and Schwartz, B., eds. The Holocaust's Ghost: Writings on Art, Politics, Law, and Education, Edmonton, Alta: University of Alberta Press, pp. 65-178.
Zaborowska, M. (2004) Reading Transparent "Constructions of History"; or, Three Passages through (In)Visible Warsaw. In Forrester, S., Zaborowska, M., Gapova, E. eds. Over the Wall/After the Fall: Post-Communist Cultures Through an East-West Gaze. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, pp. 97-119.
Google Scholar