Who Needs the Nation? Interrogating ‘British’ History Antoinette Burton. 1997. Who Needs the Nation? Interrogating ‘British’ History Journal of Historical Sociology. 10(3):227–248.
Eichmann, Arendt and Freud in Jerusalem: On the Evils of Narcissism and the Pleasures of Thoughtlessness Jose Brunner. 1996. Eichmann, Arendt and Freud in Jerusalem: On the Evils of Narcissism and the Pleasures of Thoughtlessness. History and Memory. 8(2):61.
Imperialism and Empire in Twentieth-Century Germany Uta G. Poiger. 2005. Imperialism and Empire in Twentieth-Century Germany. History and Memory. 17(1/2):117-143,368.
Battlefields of Memory: Landscape and Identity in Polish-Jewish Relations Slawomir Kapralski. 2001. Battlefields of Memory: Landscape and Identity in Polish-Jewish Relations. History & Memory. 13(2):35-58.
Culture, memory and collective identities: a cross-modal analysis of metaphors in Italian corporate historical discourse Maria Cristina1 Gatti. 2016. Culture, memory and collective identities: a cross-modal analysis of metaphors in Italian corporate historical discourse. International Journal of Applied Linguistics. 26(1):3-24.
The World of Yesterday Revisited: Nostalgia, Memory, and the Jews of Fin-de-siècle Vienna Steven Beller. 1996. The World of Yesterday Revisited: Nostalgia, Memory, and the Jews of Fin-de-siècle Vienna. Jewish Social Studies. 2(2):37-53.
The Past in the Present Culture and the Transmission of Memory Ron Eyerrnan. 2004. The Past in the Present Culture and the Transmission of Memory. Acta Sociologica (Sage Publications, Ltd.). 47(2):159-169.
Photographs in the cultural account: contested narratives and collective memory in the Scottish Islands Andrew Blaikie. 2001. Photographs in the cultural account: contested narratives and collective memory in the Scottish Islands. Sociological Review. 49(3):345-367.
Between Eichmann and Kant: Thinking on Evil after Arendt Adi Ophir. 1996. Between Eichmann and Kant: Thinking on Evil after Arendt. History and Memory. 8(2):89.
Reinscribing Schlesien as Slask Andrew Demshuk. 2012. Reinscribing Schlesien as Slask. History and Memory. 24(1):39-86,178.