Books • 1989. ''Diaghilev's Ballets Russes''. New York: Oxford University Press. • 1991.
André Levinson on Dance: Writings from Paris in the Twenties. Edited and with an introduction by Joan Acocella and Lynn Garafola. Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press. Includes a bibliography of Levinson's writings. • 1991.
The Diaries of Marius Petipa. Translated from the Russian and edited by Lynn Garafola, with an introduction and chronology of works. Studies in Dance History, a monograph series, no. 3.1, published by the Society of Dance History Scholars. •
The Origins of the Bolero School. Edited by Lynn Garafola. Studies in Dance History, a monograph series, no. 4.1, published by the Society of Dance History Scholars. This is an English-language version of the Spanish original, edited by Javier Suárez-Parajes and Xoán M. Carreira, and translated by Elizabeth Coonrod Martinez, Aurelia de la Vega, and Lynn Garafola. • 1994.
Of, By, and For the People: Dancing on the Left in the 1930s. Edited by Lynn Garafola. Studies in Dance History, a monograph series, no 5.1, published by the Society of Dance History Scholars. • 1997.
Rethinking the Sylph: New Perspectives on the Romantic Ballet. Edited and introduced by Lynn Garafola. Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press. • 1998.
José Limon: An Unfinished Memoir. Edited by Lynn Garafola. Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press. • 1999.
Dance for a City: Fifty Years of the New York City Ballet. Edited by Lynn Garafola with Eric Foner. New York: Columbia University Press. • 1999.
The Ballets Russes and Its World. Edited by Lynn Garafola and Nancy Van Norman Baer. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press. • 2005.
Legacies of Twentieth-Century Dance. Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press. • 2011.
Sergei Diaghilev and the Ballets Russes: A Tribute to the First Hundred Years. Annual issue,
Experiment: Journal of Russian Culture, vol. 17. Edited by Lynn Garafola and John E. Bowlt and published by the Institute of Modern Russian Culture, University of Southern California, Los Angeles. • 2022.
La Nijinska: Choreographer of the Modern. New York: Oxford University Press. • 2024.
Crafting the Ballets Russes: Music, Dance, Design: The Robert Owen Lehman Collection, by Robinson McClellan, with a contribution by Lynn Garafola. New York: The Morgan Library & Museum.
Online volumes • 2015.
Russian Movement Culture of the 1920s and 1930s. Edited volume based on a symposium organized with Catharine Theimer Nepomnyashchy, Harriman Institute, Columbia University, 12-14 Feb. 2015. Published by the Harriman Institute in fall 2015. • 2017.
Dancing the Cold War. Edited volume based on a symposium sponsored by the Harriman, Institute, Columbia University, 16-18 Feb. 2017. Published by the Harriman Institute in winter 2018. • 2018.
Arthur Mitchell: Harlem’s Ballet Trailblazer. Exhibition website created for the Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Columbia University, in tandem with the Wallach Art Gallery exhibition of the same title, 2018.
Selected articles in other books • 1983. "Les Soirées de Paris." In
Lydia Lopokova, edited by Milo Keynes. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. • 1988. "Toward an American Dance: Dance in the City, 1940–1965." In
New York: Culture Capital of the World, 1940–1965, edited by Leonard Wallock. New York: Rizzoli. • 1988. "The Ballets Russes in America." In ''The Art of Enchantment: Diaghilev's Ballets Russes, 1909–1929'', edited by Nancy Van Norman Baer. New York: Universe Books. • 1995. "The Ballets Suédois and the Ballets Russes." In
Paris Modern: The Swedish Ballet, 1920–1925, edited by Nancy Van Norman Baer. San Francisco: Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. • 2001. "The Choreography of
Le Tricorne." In
Los Ballets Russes de Diaghilev y España (
The Ballets Russes of Diaghilev and Spain), edited by Yvan Nommick and Antonio Alvarez Cañibano. Madrid: Centro de Documentación de Música y Danza. • 2003. "Ballet: Reinvention and Continuity over Five Centuries." In
The Living Dance: An Anthology of Essays on Movement and Culture, edited by Judith Chazin-Bennahum. Dubuque, Iowa: Kendall Hunt. • 2005. "Agrippina Vaganova and Her Times." Introduction to
Vaganova: A Dance Journey from Petersburg to Leningrad, by Vera Krasovskaya, translated from the Russian by Vera M. Siegel. Gainesville: University Press of Florida. • 2007. "Voice of the Zeitgeist: Sally Banes and Her Times." Introduction to
Before, Between, After: Three Decades of Dance Writing, by Sally Banes. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press. • 2009. "Workshop of the Muses: Diaghilev and Monte Carlo." In
A Feast of Wonders: Sergei Diaghilev and the Ballets Russes, edited by John E. Bowlt. Milan: Skira Rizzoli. • 2011. "Astonish Me!: Diaghilev, Massine, and the Experimentalist Tradition." In
Ballets Russes in Australia and Beyond, edited by Mark Carroll. Adelaide, S.A.: Wakefield Press. • 2011. "Abstraction and the Dance: Bronislava Nijinska's
Les Noces." In
Arturo Herrera: Les Noces (The Wedding), exhibition catalog, edited by Gabriela Rangel. New York: American Society. • 2013.
Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes: A New Kind of Company. In
Avatar of Modernity: The Rite of Spring Reconsidered. Ed. Hermann Danuser and Heidy Zimmermann. London: Paul Sacher Foundation/Boosey & Hawkes, 2013. • 2014.
"Chernota delaet roscherk v dyshe moei" (Blackness makes a stroke on my soul). Publication of the original Russian text of Bronislava Nijinska's 1919-22 diary and her 1918-19 treatise
School and Theater of Movement, with an accompanying essay. In
Mnemozina: dokumenty I facty iz istorii otechestvennogo teatra XX veka. Ed. V.V. Ivanov. Moscow:
Indrik 2014. • 2014. “Foreword.
Like a Bomb Going Off: Leonid Yakobson and Ballet as Resistance in Soviet Russia, by Janice Ross. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2014. • 2014.
In Search of Eden: Bronislava Nijinska in California. In
Kinetic Los Angeles: Russian Emigrés in the City of Self-Transformation. Ed. Lorin Johnson. Leiden: Brill, 2014. Special issue of
Experiment: Journal of Russian Culture 20 (2014). • 2016
“H.P.: A Lost Dance of the Americas.” In
Dance: American Art 1830–1960. Ed. Jane Dini. Detroit Institute of Art/Yale University Press, 2016. • 2017
“A Century of Rites: The Making of an Avant-Garde Tradition.” In
The Rite of Spring at 100. Ed. Severine Neff, Maureen Carr, and Gretchen Horlacher, with John Reef. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2017. • 2019.
“Lincoln Kirstein, Man of the People.” In catalogue of ''Lincoln Kirstein's Modern,'' 17 Mar.-30 June 2019. New York: Museum of Modern Art, 2019.
Selected journal articles • 1982. "Hollywood and the Myth of the Working Class."
Radical America (Somerville, Mass., January–February 1980). • 1985–1986. "The Travesty Dancer in Nineteenth-Century Ballet."
Dance Research Journal (New York) 17.2 (Fall 1985) and 18.1 (Spring 1986). Reprinted in
Crossing the Stage: Controversies on Cross-Dressing, edited by Lesley Ferris (London: Routledge, 1993). • 1988. "Mark Morris and the Feminine Mystique."
Ballet Review (New York) 16.3 (December 1988). • 1995. "Forgotten Interlude: Eurhythmic Dancers at the Paris Opera."
Dance Research (Edinburgh) 13.1 (Summer 1995). • 1995. "A las Márganes del Occidente: El Destino Transpirenaico de la Danza Española desde la Época del Romanticismo" ("On the Margins of the West: The Destiny of Spanish Dance beyond the Pyrenees since the Era of Romanticism").
Cairón: Revista del Estudios de Danza (Alcalá de Henares, Madrid, 1995). • 2002. "Dollars for Dance: Lincoln Kirstein, City Center, and the Rockefeller Foundation."
Dance Chronicle: Studies in Dance and Related Arts (New York) 25.1 (Spring 2002). • 2006. "Making Dances: Process and Practice in Diaghilev's Ballets Russes."
Culture Teatrali: Studi, Interventi e Scrittore sullo Spettacolo (Bologna) 14 (Spring 2006), special issue, edited by Rosella Mazzaglia. Reprinted in
Denkfiguren: Performatives zwischen Bewegen, Schreiben und Erfinden (
Conceptions of Interactions between Movement, Writing, and Creativity), edited by Nicole Haitzinger and Karin Fenbock (Munich: Epodium Verlag, 2010). • 2006. "Serguéi Diághilev: La Creación del Ballet Moderno" ("Sergei Diaghilev: The Creation of Modern Ballet"),
La Tempestad (Barcelona) 8.50 (October 2006). • 2011.
“Crafted by Many Hands: Re-Reading Bronislava Nijinska’s Early Memoirs.” Dance Research (Edinburgh) 29.1 (Summer 2011). • 2011.
“An Amazon of the Avant-Garde: Bronislava Nijinska in Revolutionary Russia.” Dance Research (Edinburgh) 29. 2 (Winter 2011). • 2015.
“Interlude oubliée: la danse rythmique à l’Opéra de Paris.” Trans. Marina Nordera.
Recherches en Danse, Jan. 2015.
Selected lectures and public readings • 1985. "Remaking Ballet in the Diaghilev Era: The Choreographic Revolution of Fokine, Nijinsky, Massine, and Nijinska." The Houston Seminar, Houston, Texas. • 1991. "Nijinsky and Nijinska." Fundaçáo Calouste Gulbenkian, Lisbon. • 1993. "Writing the History of Dance." History Society, Pembroke College, University of Oxford. • 1996. "Léonide Massine: Symphonic Choreographer." New York Public Library for the Performing Arts. • 2000. "George Antheil and the Dance." Great Hall, Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art, New York. • 2002. "Stravinsky and Ida Rubenstein." University of British Columbia, Vancouver. • 2003. "
On Your Toes, or The Americanization of George Balanchine." Annual meeting, Popular Culture Association, New Orleans. • 2004. "Balanchine and the Many Roots of Abstraction." Hermitage Theater, Saint Petersburg, Russia. • 2006. "A Model of Female Empowerment: Isadora Duncan and the Early Choreographic Career of Bronislava Nijinska." Harriman Institute, Columbia University, New York. • 2009. "Crossing Borders, Transcending Boundaries: Diaghilev's Ballets Russes and the Birth of Ballet Modernism." Macalester College, Saint Paul, Minnesota. • 2011. "The Ballets Russes and Twentieth-Century Dance." Waseda University, Shinjuku, Tokyo. • 2013. "Making Ballet Modern: Modernism and Diaghilev's Ballets Russes." George Washington University Summer in Paris. • 2013. "A Century of
Rites: The Making of an Avant-garde Tradition." Emory University, Atlanta; University of Dayton, Ohio; and Institut fŭr Theaterwissenschaft, Freie Universitãt Berlin. • 2013. "Discourses of Memory: The Marginalization of Bronislava Nijinska." Keynote address. “Gender and Creation in the History of the Performing Arts,” Paris, 14 Dec. 2013. • 2015. "Dancing through Adversity: Bronislava Nijinska's Théâtre de la Danse, 1932–34." Athens, Greece. • 2017. "Concealments and Revelations of the First Person:Bronislava Nijinska's Diaries." Seminério Internacional de História da Dança, Universidade Federal de Goiás, Brazil, 22 Sept. 2017. • 2017. "Amazon of the Avant-Garde on a Global Stage." Dance and the Avant-Garde in Central and Eastern Europe, a conference organized by the Adam Mickiewicz Institute. Lublin, Poland, 16 Nov. 2017. • 2018. "Bronislava Nijinska y el nacionalismo coreográfico de 'Rusia en el extranjero'" (Bronislava Nijinska and the Choreographic Nationalism of "Russia Abroad"). XI
Jornadas de investigación de danza 2018, Buenos Aires, 7 Sept. 2018. • 2018. "Bronislava Nijinska – from Kyiv to Hollywood." America House, Kyiv, 10 Nov. 2018. • 2019. "Pilgrimage to an Imagined West: Antiquity and the Early Ballets Russes." Institute for the Study of the Ancient World, New York, 28 Mar. 2019. • 2019. "The African-American Presence in Postwar American Ballet." University of California, Santa Barbara, 29 Apr. 2019. • 2019. “The Long History of Bronislava Nijinska’s
Bolero.” Presented at the international conference "Repensar El sombrero de tres picos: cien años después," Palacio de la Madraza, Granada, 5 July 2019. • 2020. "Gendered Selves and the Melancholy of Being: Francis Poulenc and Bronislava Nijinska." Presented at the symposium “Within and Without: ‘Les Six’ at 100.” Princeton University, 17 Jan. 2020. • 2020. "Anna Pavlova: A Ballerina for All.” Presented at the symposium "Ballerina: Fashion's Modern Muse." Fashion Institute of Technology (GIT), 6 Mar. 2020. • 2024. "Diaghilev—Man of Music." Scheduled to be presented April 18, 2024, at the
Morgan Library & Museum in connection with its exhibit "Crafting the Ballets Russes: The Robert Owen Lehman Collection", scheduled for June 28 through September 22, 2024. ==Selected exhibitions==