We are what we remember: the American past through commemoration Jeffrey Lee Meriwether, Laura Mattoon D'Amore. 2012. We are what we remember: the American past through commemoration.
The Future of Memory Richard Crownshaw, Jane Kilby, Antony Rowland. 2010. The Future of Memory. :319.
Witnessing history/embodying testimony: gender and memory in post-apartheid South Africa Annie E. Coombes. 2011. Witnessing history/embodying testimony: gender and memory in post-apartheid South Africa. Témoigner de l'histoire et incarner le témoignage : genre et mémoire dans l'Afrique du Sud post-apartheid.. 17:S92-S112.
Memory and representation in contemporary Europe: the persistence of the past Siobhan Kattago. 2011. Memory and representation in contemporary Europe: the persistence of the past.
War Memory and Popular Culture: Essays on Modes of Remembrance and Commemoration Michael Keren, Holger H Herwig. 2009. War Memory and Popular Culture: Essays on Modes of Remembrance and Commemoration. :206.
The Afghan War and ‘postmodern’ memory: commemoration and the dead of Helmand Anthony King. 2010. The Afghan War and ‘postmodern’ memory: commemoration and the dead of Helmand. British Journal of Sociology. 61(1):1-25.
Memorializing the Holocaust: gender, genocide, and collective memory Janet Liebman Jacobs. 2010. Memorializing the Holocaust: gender, genocide, and collective memory.
Building the Colonial Archive: The Case of Camus's Le premier homme Edward J.(Edward Joseph) Hughes. 1999. Building the Colonial Archive: The Case of Camus's Le premier homme. Research in African Literatures. 30(3):176-193.
Silent lines and the ebb of memory: narratives of Our Wall in the island of Cyprus Luisa Pèrcopo. 2011. Silent lines and the ebb of memory: narratives of Our Wall in the island of Cyprus. Social Semiotics. 21(1):125-141.