Reading the Posthuman Backwards: Mary Rowlandson's Doubled Witnessing Sidonie Smith. 2012. Reading the Posthuman Backwards: Mary Rowlandson's Doubled Witnessing. Biography. 35(1):137-152.
A Historical Memory for Women: The Gosteli Archive Documents More than One Hundred Years of Swiss Women's History Claudia Wirz, Kornelia Freitag, Karen M. Offen. 2000. A Historical Memory for Women: The Gosteli Archive Documents More than One Hundred Years of Swiss Women's History. Journal of Women's History. 12(1):165-171.
The Long Shadow of the Past: History, Memory and the Debate over West Germany's Nuclear Status, 1954-69 Susanna Schrafstetter. 2004. The Long Shadow of the Past: History, Memory and the Debate over West Germany's Nuclear Status, 1954-69. History & Memory. 16(1):118-145.
Framing Variations and Collective Memory: "Honest Abe" versus "the Great Emancipator" Howard Schuman, Amy Corning, Barry Schwartz. 2012. Framing Variations and Collective Memory: "Honest Abe" versus "the Great Emancipator". Social Science History. 36(4):451-472.
Negotiating a national memory: the British Empire & Commonwealth Museum Corinna McLeod. 2009. Negotiating a national memory: the British Empire & Commonwealth Museum. African & Black Diaspora. 2(2):157-165.
Hora: Social Conflicts and Collective Memories in Piana Degli Albanesi Joseph Fracchia. 2010. Hora: Social Conflicts and Collective Memories in Piana Degli Albanesi. Past & Present. 209(1):181-222.
There's No Dying in Baseball: Cultural Valorization, Collective Memory, and Induction into the Baseball Hall of Fame Nicholas L. Parsons, Michael J. Stern. 2012. There's No Dying in Baseball: Cultural Valorization, Collective Memory, and Induction into the Baseball Hall of Fame. Sociology of Sport Journal. 29(1):62-88.
Innovation and Revisionism in Israeli Historiography Derek Jonathan Penslar. 1995. Innovation and Revisionism in Israeli Historiography. History and Memory. 7(1):125.
The Ambivalences of German-Jewish Identity: Hannah Arendt in Jerusalem Richard Wolin. 1996. The Ambivalences of German-Jewish Identity: Hannah Arendt in Jerusalem. History and Memory. 8(2):9.