Victoria_Khiterer

Victoria Khiterer

Victoria Khiterer

American historian


Victoria Khiterer (born 1968) is associate professor of history at Millersville University, Pennsylvania, adjunct professor at Gratz College, and a founding member of the Scientific Council of the Babyn Yar Holocaust Memorial Center in Kyiv, Ukraine.

Khiterer is an author and editor of six books and over a hundred articles on Russian and Eastern European Jewish History. The focus of Khiterer's research is the history of Jews in Kiev and Ukraine. Khiterer's major monograph “Jewish City or Inferno of Russian Israel? A History of the Jews in Kiev before February 1917” describes ten centuries of the history of Jews in Kiev, from the tenth century until the collapse of the monarchy in Russia.

Khiterer is an author of a book and several articles on Jewish pogroms in the Russian Empire and during the civil war in Ukraine. Khiterer has published several articles on Jewish-gentile relations in the Soviet Union, anti-Semitism, the contribution of Jews in Soviet popular culture, and Jewish religious life. Khiterer edited two volumes of Millersville University conference proceedings: “The Holocaust: Memories and History” and “Holocaust Resistance in Europe and America: New Aspects and Dilemmas.”

Writing

Books

  • Editor, Holocaust Resistance in Europe and America: New Aspects and Dilemmas (Newcastle upon Tyne, UK: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2017), 240 pp.
  • Jewish City or Inferno of Russian Israel? A History of the Jews in Kiev before February 1917 (Boston: Academic Studies Press, 2016), 492 pp.
  • Jewish Pogroms in Kiev during the Russian Civil War, 1918–1920 (Lewiston, Lampeter: The Edwin Mellen Press, 2015), 144 pp.
  • Editor, The Holocaust: Memories and History (Newcastle upon Tyne, UK: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2014), 415 pp.
  • Dokumenty po evreiskoi istorii XVI-XX vekov v kievskikh arkhivakh. [Jewish Documents in Kiev's Archives, (Sixteenth – Twentieth Century)] (Moscow, Kiev: Gesharim Publishing House and Institute of Jewish Studies, 2001), 223 pp.
  • Dokumenty, sobrannye Evreiskoi Istoriko-arheographicheskoi komissiei Vseukrainskoi Akademii Nauk. [Collection of Documents of the Historical-Archaeographical Commission of the All-Ukrainian Academy of Sciences]. (Jerusalem, Kiev: The Hebrew University of Jerusalem and Gesharim Publishing House, 1999), 299 pp.

Selected Peer-Reviewed Articles

  • “The Holodomor and Jews in Kyiv and Ukraine: An introduction and observations on a neglected topic” Nationalities Papers, 48, no. 3 (2020).
  • “How Jews Gained Their Education in Kiev,” Polin: Studies in Polish Jewry, 30 (2018): 155–179.
  • “Seekers of Happiness: Jews and Jazz in the Soviet Union,” Kultura Popularna, 1, no. 51 (2017): 26–50.
  • “The October 1905 Pogroms and the Russian Authorities,” Nationalities Papers. The Journal of Nationalism and Ethnicity, 43, no. 5 (2015): 788–803.
  • “Jews in Soviet Cinema: The Film Commissar by Aleksandr Askol’dov,” Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies, 33.1 (2014): 1-29.
  • “We Did Not Recognize Our Country: The Rise of Anti-Semitism in Ukraine Before and After World War II (1937-1947),” Polin: Studies in Polish Jewry, 26 (2014): 361–379.
  • “The Jewish Songs of Leonid Utesov,” On the Jewish Street, 2, no. 1 (2012): 1–48.
  • On the Jewish Street, 1, no. 2 (2011): 1-25.
  • “The Brodsky Sugar Kings: Jewish Industrialists, Philanthropists and Community Leaders of Late Imperial Russia” Jews and Slavs, 19 (2008): 25–41.- “Jewish Life in Kyiv at the Turn of the Twentieth Century.” Ukraina Moderna, 10, (2006): 74–94.
  • “Arnold Davidovich Margolin: Ukrainian-Jewish Jurist, Statesman and Diplomat,” Revolutionary Russia, 18, no. 2 (2005): 145–167.



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