Memory, sacrifice and the nation Michael Rowlands. 1996. Memory, sacrifice and the nation. New formations. Winter(30):8–17.
Review of the AHRC project concluding symposium 'Conflicts of Memory: Mediating and Commemorating the 2005 London Bombings', University of Nottingham, 4-5 December 2010 S. Petschick. 2011. Review of the AHRC project concluding symposium 'Conflicts of Memory: Mediating and Commemorating the 2005 London Bombings', University of Nottingham, 4-5 December 2010. Memory Studies. 4(3):332-335.
Lives, laws, and language: Commemorative versus non‐commemorative forms of effective public memory Michael Schudson. 1997. Lives, laws, and language: Commemorative versus non‐commemorative forms of effective public memory. The Communication Review. 2(1):3-17.
The Durability of Collective Memory: Reconciling the "Greensboro Massacre" David Cunningham, Colleen Nugent, Caitlin Slodden. 2010. The Durability of Collective Memory: Reconciling the "Greensboro Massacre". Social Forces. 88(4):1517-1542.
"No Sensible Comparison"? The Place of the Holocaust in Australia's History Wars Neil. Levi. 2007. "No Sensible Comparison"? The Place of the Holocaust in Australia's History Wars History & Memory. 19(1):124-156.
Memory in creation: The context of Rojas's literary recollection Julian Weiss. 2009. Memory in creation: The context of Rojas's literary recollection. The Bulletin of Hispanic Studies. 86(1):150-158.
Accumulated Lives: Metaphor, Materiality, and the Homes of the Elderly James Krasner. 2005. Accumulated Lives: Metaphor, Materiality, and the Homes of the Elderly. Literature and Medicine. 24:209-230.
Memory's Fragile Power in Kazuo Ishiguro's Remains of the Day and W. G. Sebald's "Max Ferber" Lilian R. Furst, Lilian R. Furst. 2008. Memory's Fragile Power in Kazuo Ishiguro's Remains of the Day and W. G. Sebald's "Max Ferber". Contemporary Literature. 48:530-553.