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Latest comment: 5 years ago1 comment1 person in discussion
I chose Yehudit Hendel as the preferred spelling of her name based on the fact that that's how she's spelled in all of the English-language newspaper articles I could find in Lexis Nexis. She was spelled Jehudit in the German papers. -Kenirwin/(talk) 15:41, 30 November 2018 (UTC)Reply
BAUMEL-SCHWARTZ, Judith Tydor. Perfect Heroes: The World War II Parachutists and the Making of Israeli Collective Memory. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 2010.
Berlovitz, Yaffah. Award citation. Newman Prize for Hebrew Literature, awarded to Judith Hendel. Bar-Ilan University, 1995;
Berlovitz, Yaffah. “Woman-to-Woman Metaphor: Small Change.” In Ha-Tekst ha-Musaf, 45–52. Tel Aviv: 1992;
Gertz, Nurit. “‘I Am the Other’: The Place of the Holocaust Survivor in Judith Hendel’s Story ‘They Are Different.’ In Aderet le-Binyamin: Sefer Yovel le-Binyamin Harshav, 150–167. Tel Aviv: 2001;
Miron, Dan. The Weak Force: Studies in the Prose of Judith Hendel. Tel Aviv: 2002;
Naveh, Hannah. “On Loss, Bereavement, and Mourning in Israeli Existence.” Alpayim 16 (1998): 85–118;
Rattok, Lily. “Every Woman Knows It: The Short Story Collection Small Change by Judith Hendel.” Aperion (Summer 1986): 13–17;
Shirav, Pnina. “Reflections on the Work of Judith Hendel.” In Non-Innocent Writing: Discourse Position and Female Representations in Works by Yehudit Hendel, Amalia Kahana-Carmon and Ruth Almog, 48–114. Tel Aviv: 1998;
Yehoshua, A. B. “Ha-Koah ha-Aher: The Madness of Art: Remarks On the Publication of Ha-Koah ha-Aher.” Siman Keri’ah 18 (1986): 424–425.