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Suedfeld's Holocaust Research References

In chronological order
  

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Suedfeld, P., Bochner, S., & Matas, C. (1971). Petitioner's attire and petition signing by peace demonstrators: A field experiment on reference group similarity. Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 1, 278-283.

Suedfeld, P., Bochner, S., & Wnek, D. (1972). Helper-sufferer similarity and a specific request for help: Bystander intervention during a peace demonstration. Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 2, 17-23.

Suedfeld, P. (1983). Authoritarian leadership: A cognitive-interactionist view. In J. Held (Ed.), The cult of power: Dictators in the Twentieth Century (pp. 1-22). Boulder, CO: East European Monographs.

Suedfeld, P. (1996). Thematic content analyses: Nomothetic methods for using Holocaust survivor narratives in psychological research. Holocaust Genocide Studies, 10, 168-180.

Suedfeld, P. (1996). The social psychology of "invictus": Conceptual and methodological approaches to indomitability. In C. McGarty & S. A. Haslam (Eds.), The message of social psychology: Perspective on mind in society (pp. 329-341). Cambridge, MA: Blackwell.

Suedfeld, P., & Bluck, S. (1996). Cognitive concomitants of life events--Finding a balance between generalizability and contextualization: Reply to Pennell (1996). Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 71, 781-784.

Suedfeld, P., Krell, R., Wiebe, R., & Steel, G. D. (1997). Coping strategies in the narratives of Holocaust survivors. Anxiety, Stress & Coping, 10, 153-179.

Suedfeld, P., & Pennebaker, J. D. (1997). Health outcomes and cognitive aspects of recalled negative life events. Psychosomatic Medicine, 59(2), 172-177.

Suedfeld, P. (1997). Reactions to societal trauma: Distress and/or Eustress. Political Psychology, 18, 849-861.

Suedfeld, P. (1997). Homo Invictus: The indomitable species. Canadian Psychology, 38, 164-173.

Suedfeld, P., Fell, C., & Krell, R. (1998). Structural aspects of survivors' thinking about the Holocaust. Journal of Traumatic Stress, 11, 323-336.

Suedfeld, P., & Soriano, E. (1998). Separating the qualitative to quantitative dimension from the data versus analyses distinction: Another way to study Holocaust survivors. The Reference Librarian, 61/62, 113-129.

Bar-On, D., Eland, J., Kleber, R., Krell, R., Moore, Y., Sagi, A., Soriano, E., Suedfeld, P., van der Velden, P., & van Ijzendoorn, M. (1998). Multigenerational perspectives on coping with the Holocaust experience: An attachment perspective for understanding the developmental sequelae of trauma across generations. International Journal of Behavioral Development, 22, 315-338.

Suedfeld, P. (1999). Toward a taxonomy of ethnopolitical violence: Is collective killing by any other name still the same? Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology, 5, 349-355.

Suedfeld, P. (2000). Reverberations of the Holocaust fifty years later: Psychology's contributions to understanding persecution and genocide. Canadian Psychology, 43, 1-9.

Suedfeld, P. (2001). Theories of the Holocaust: Trying to explain the unimaginable. In D. Chirot & M. Seligman (Eds.), Ethnopolitical warfare: Causes, consequences, and possible solutions (pp. 51-70). Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.

Suedfeld, P. (Ed.) (2001). Light from the ashes: Social science careers of young Holocaust refugees and survivors. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.

Suedfeld, P. (2002) Life after the ashes: The postwar pain, and resilience, of young Holocaust survivors. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum: Center for Advanced Studies (pp. 1-24). Washington, D. C.

Suedfeld, P., & Schaller, M. (2002). Authoritarianism and the Holocaust: Some cognitive and affective implications. In L. S. Newman & R. Erber (Eds.), Understanding Genocide: The social psychology of the Holocaust (pp. 68-90). Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Suedfeld, P., Paterson, H., & Soriano, E. (2002). Lethal stereotypes: Hair and eye color as survival characteristics during the Holocaust. Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 32, 2368-2376.

Suedfeld, P. (2003). Specific and general attributional patterns of Holocaust survivors. Canadian Journal of Behavioural Science, 35, 133-141.

Suedfeld, P. (2003). Reclaiming Heimat: Trauma and mourning in memoirs by Jewish Austrian reémigrés, Jacqueline Vansant (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 2001). Holocaust and Genocide Studies, 17(2), 366-368.

Last updated: Monday, May 31, 2004

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About this web-site

This web-site describes the research and other achievements of Dr. Peter Suedfeld, Professor Emeritus in the Department of Psychology at the University of British Columbia.

This page lists the publications Dr. Suedfeld has written with regard to survivors of the Holocaust. Although his work has only relatively recently been explicitly applied to Holocaust survivors, the first few references in this list can be seen as the early seeds of the later research. Links to more information about Dr. Suedfeld and all of his major topics of research appear below.

Personal information:

Biographic Info, Recent Publications, and Current Projects

Primary research topics:

Integrative ComplexityPolitical PsychologyExtreme & Unusual EnvironmentsHolocaust Studies


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