top of page

Articles/Reviews

Below, in reverse chronological order, please find a selection of my peer-reviewed articles/chapters and book reviews.
For a full listing, see my CV. If you'd like a pdf of any publication, please contact me directly.

Articles:

"Warn the Duke’: The Sarajevo Assassination in History, Memory, and Myth,”

Historical Reflections/Refléxions Historiques 45:1 (Spring 2019): 93–112.

 

"The First Shots of the First World War’: The Sarajevo Assassination in History and Memory,”

Central Europe 14:2 (November 2016), 141–56.

 

“Forgetting Franz Ferdinand: The Archduke in Austrian Memory,”

Austrian History Yearbook, vol. 46 (2015): 228–60.

 

“Yugoslav Eulogies: The Footprints of Gavrilo Princip,”

The Carl Beck Papers in Russian and East European Studies, no. 2304 (2014).

 

“From Annexation to Assassination: The Sarajevo Murders in Bosnian and Austrian Minds,” in Catherine Horel, ed.,

1908, l’annexion de la Bosnie-Herzégovine, cents ans après (Bruxelles: P.I.E. Peter Lang, 2011), 239–53.

 

“Just Like the Jews: Contending Victimization in the Former Yugoslavia,” in Jonathan Petropoulos, Lynn Rapaport, and John K. Roth, eds.,

Lessons & Legacies (Vol. IX) — Memory, History, and Responsibility: Reassessments of the Holocaust, Implications for the Future (Evanston: Northwestern UP, 2010), 251–68.

 

“The (Non) Bombing of Auschwitz: Perks and Perils in Counterfactual History,” in András Kovács and Michael L. Miller, eds.,

Yearbook IV: Jewish Studies at the CEU, 2004–2005 (Budapest: Central European University, 2006).

 

“Contested Memories: The Bosnian Genocide in Serb and Muslim Minds,”

Journal of Genocide Research 8:3 (September 2006): 311–24.

 

“David Wyman and the Controversy Over the Bombing of Auschwitz,”

Journal of Ecumenical Studies 40:4 (Fall 2003): 370–80.

 

“Down But Not Out: The Antimilitarist Left in the Aernoult-Rousset Affair, 1909–1912,”

French History 17:2 (June 2003): 172–85.

 

“Imagined Enemies, Real Victims: Bartov’s Transcendent Holocaust” (Forum Response Essay),

The American Historical Review 103:4 (October 1998): 1177–1181.

Book Reviews:

Peter Becker and Natasha Wheatley, eds., Remaking Central Europe: The League of Nations and the Former Habsburg Lands, in German History 40:2 (June 2022): 299–301.

 

John Zametica, Folly and Malice: The Habsburg Empire, the Balkans and the Start of World War One,

in Hungarian Studies Review 46–47 (2019–2020): 112–15.

 

James Lyon, Serbia and the Balkan Front, 1914: The Outbreak of the Great War; Richard L. DiNardo, Invasion: The Conquest of Serbia, 1915, in the Journal of Military History 81:2 (April 2017), 581–83.

 

Michael Curtis, Verdict on Vichy: Power and Prejudice in the Vichy France Regime,

in Holocaust and Genocide Studies 19:2 (Fall 2005): 311–14.

 

“The End of Genocide: A Hopeful Approach to a Seemingly Hopeless Human Phenomenon,” review of Benjamin A. Valentino, Final Solutions: Mass Killing and Genocide in the Twentieth Century,

H-Genocide, H-Net Reviews (Aug. 2005).

 

James Lehning, To Be a Citizen: The Political Culture of the Early French Third Republic,

in Nineteenth-Century French Studies 33:3&4 (Spring-Summer 2005): 404–06.

 

Harold Marcuse, Legacies of Dachau: The Uses and Abuses of a Concentration Camp, 1933–2001,

in Holocaust and Genocide Studies 17:1 (Spring 2003): 167–70.

bottom of page