Places of Public Memory: The Rhetoric of Museums and Memorials Greg Dickinson, Carole Blair, Brian L Ott. 2010. Places of Public Memory: The Rhetoric of Museums and Memorials. :282.
The Craft of Thought: Meditation, Rhetoric, and the Making of Images, 400-1200 Mary Carruthers. 1998. The Craft of Thought: Meditation, Rhetoric, and the Making of Images, 400-1200. Cambridge studies in medieval literature. :399.
"The Patriot Blood of Our Fathers Runs Through Our Veins!": Revolutionary Heritage Rhetoric and the American Woman's Rights Movement, 1848-1890 [Anonymous]. 2016. "The Patriot Blood of Our Fathers Runs Through Our Veins!": Revolutionary Heritage Rhetoric and the American Woman's Rights Movement, 1848-1890.
"The Patriot Blood of Our Fathers Runs Through Our Veins!": Revolutionary Heritage Rhetoric and the American Woman's Rights Movement, 1848-1890 [Anonymous]. 2016. "The Patriot Blood of Our Fathers Runs Through Our Veins!": Revolutionary Heritage Rhetoric and the American Woman's Rights Movement, 1848-1890.
Revisiting the past through rhetorics of memory and amnesia: selected papers from the 50th meeting of the Linguistic Circle of Manitoba and North Dakota Dale L. Sullivan, Bruce Maylath, Russel K. Hirst. 2010. Revisiting the past through rhetorics of memory and amnesia: selected papers from the 50th meeting of the Linguistic Circle of Manitoba and North Dakota.
In digital remembrance: vernacular memory and the rhetorical construction of web memorials Aaron Hess. 2007. In digital remembrance: vernacular memory and the rhetorical construction of web memorials. Media, Culture & Society. 29(5):812-830.
The Paradox of Regret Bradford Vivian. 2012. The Paradox of Regret. History and Memory. 24(1):5-38,179.
Memory and Reconciliation in the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute Victoria J. Gallagher. 1999. Memory and Reconciliation in the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute. Rhetoric & Public Affairs. 2(2):303-320.
Public forgetting: the rhetoric and politics of beginning again Bradford, Vivian. 2010. Public forgetting: the rhetoric and politics of beginning again.
“They Died the Spartan’s Death”: Thermopylae, the Alamo, and the Mirrors of Classical Analogy Jeremy1, jlc628@psu.edu Cox. 2016. “They Died the Spartan’s Death”: Thermopylae, the Alamo, and the Mirrors of Classical Analogy. Advances in the History of Rhetoric. 19(3):276-297.