Oral History and People's Memory of the Malayan Emergency (1948-60): The Case of Pulai Tan Teng Phee. 2012. Oral History and People's Memory of the Malayan Emergency (1948-60): The Case of Pulai. SOJOURN: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia. 27(1):84-119.
Open veins: Spirits of violence and grief in Venezuela Francisco Ferrándiz. 2009. Open veins: Spirits of violence and grief in Venezuela. Ethnography. 10(1):39-61.
Race Talk and Local Collective Memory among African American Men in a Neighborhood Tavern Reuben A. Buford May. 2000. Race Talk and Local Collective Memory among African American Men in a Neighborhood Tavern. Qualitative Sociology. 23(2):201-214.
Urban Space and Collective Memory: Analysing the Various Dimensions of the Production of Memory Anouk Bélanger. 2002. Urban Space and Collective Memory: Analysing the Various Dimensions of the Production of Memory. Canadian Journal of Urban Research. 11(1):69-92.
Collective memory, candidacy, and victimisation: community epidemiologies of breast cancer risk T Salant, S Gehlert. 2008. Collective memory, candidacy, and victimisation: community epidemiologies of breast cancer risk. Sociology of Health & Illness. 30(4):599-615.
Locating Family in Cultural Memory Studies Astri Erll. 2011. Locating Family in Cultural Memory Studies. Journal of Comparative Family Studies. 42(3):303-318.
Collective memories: A complex construction Farhat Shahzad. 2012. Collective memories: A complex construction. Memory Studies. 5(4):378-391.
Remembering Forbidden Memories: Community Theatre and the Politics of Memory Shulamith Lev-Aladgem. 2006. Remembering Forbidden Memories: Community Theatre and the Politics of Memory. Social Identities. 12(3):269-283.
Colloquy: Do Interacting Groups Perform Better Than Aggregates of Individuals? Why We Have to Be Reductionists About Group Memory Charles Pavitt. Submitted. Colloquy: Do Interacting Groups Perform Better Than Aggregates of Individuals? Why We Have to Be Reductionists About Group Memory Human Communication Research. 29(4):592-599.
Why We Still Have to Be Reductionists About Group Memory Charles Pavitt. Submitted. Why We Still Have to Be Reductionists About Group Memory. Human Communication Research. 29(4):624-629.