| 1. | How Shekhinah Became the God(dess) of Jewish Feminism | 400 | 4 |
| 2. | Shekhinah as ‘shield’ to Israel: Refiguring the Role of Divine Presence in Jewish Tradition and the Shoah | 312 | 3 |
| 3. | “I Sleep, but My Heart Waketh”: Contiguity between Heinrich Heine's Imago of the Shulamite and Amy Levy's “Borderland” | 245 | 4 |
| 4. | Active/Passive, ‘Diminished’/‘Beautiful’, ‘Light’ from Above and Below: Rereading Shekhinah’s Sexual Desire in Zohar al Shir ha-Shirim (Song of Songs) | 211 | 348 |
| 5. | Kedushah in Anglo-Liberal Judaism: Lily Montagu’s Employment of the Holy in the Everyday | 204 | |
| 6. | “Zion, memory and hope of all ages”: Nina Davis Salaman’s romantic-Zionist poetry | 140 | 130 |
| 7. | Amy Levy Collected Writings | 124 | 9 |
| 8. | Book review of The Jewish Pedlar: An Untold Criminal History, by Tony Kushner, Manchester, Manchester University Press, 2025, 344 pp. ISBN: 9781526178022, £20 (hardcover) | 20 | |