The Interpretation Is A-Changin': Memory, Museums, and Public History in Central Virginia James J. Broomall. 2013. The Interpretation Is A-Changin': Memory, Museums, and Public History in Central Virginia. The Journal of the Civil War Era. 3(1):114-124.
"Shoulder to Shoulder as Comrades Tried": Black and White Union Veterans and Civil War Memory Andre M. Fleche. 2005. "Shoulder to Shoulder as Comrades Tried": Black and White Union Veterans and Civil War Memory. Civil War History. 51(2):175-201.
Memory and the Abolitionist Heritage: Thomas Wentworth Higginson and the Uncertain Meaning of the Civil War W. Scott Poole. 2005. Memory and the Abolitionist Heritage: Thomas Wentworth Higginson and the Uncertain Meaning of the Civil War. Civil War History. 51(2):202-217.
"Living Monuments": Union Veteran Amputees and the Embodied Memory of the Civil War Brian Matthew Jordan. 2011. "Living Monuments": Union Veteran Amputees and the Embodied Memory of the Civil War. Civil War History. 57(2):121-152.
“Damned North Carolinians” and “Brave Virginians”: The Lane-Mahone Controversy, Honor, and Civil War Memory Kenneth W. Noe. 2008. “Damned North Carolinians” and “Brave Virginians”: The Lane-Mahone Controversy, Honor, and Civil War Memory. The Journal of Military History. 72(4):1089-1116.
Lest We Remember: Civil War Memory and Commemoration among the Five Tribes Jeff Fortney. 2012. Lest We Remember: Civil War Memory and Commemoration among the Five Tribes. The American Indian Quarterly. 36(4):525-544.