Memory Studies Portal

Found 6111 results
2018
Adriaan van Veldhuizen.  2018.  Collective Memory and the Historical Past, written by Jeffrey Andrew Barash.
Nader H. Hakim, Glenn Adams.  2018.  Collective memory as tool for intergroup conflict: The case of 9/11 commemoration. Journal of Social and Political Psychology. 5(2):630–650.
Borja Martinovic, Jolanda Jetten, Anouk Smeekes, Maykel Verkuyten.  2018.  Collective memory of a dissolved country: Group-based nostalgia and guilt assignment as predictors of interethnic relations between diaspora groups from former Yugoslavia. Journal of Social and Political Psychology. 5(2):588–607.
Rafi Nets-Zehngut.  2018.  Collective memory of conflict is not all about politics—The Israeli case: Empirical, theoretical, and practical aspects. Conflict Resolution Quarterly. 35(3):275–294.
Adam L. Putnam, Morgan Q. Ross, Laura K. Soter, Henry L. Roediger III.  2018.  Collective Narcissism: Americans Exaggerate the Role of Their Home State in Appraising US History. Psychological science. :0956797618772504.
Manuel Le Gallo, Daniel Krebs, Federico Zipoli, Martin Salinga, Abu Sebastian.  2018.  Collective Structural Relaxation in Phase-Change Memory Devices. Advanced Electronic Materials. :1700627.
Gilad Hirschberger.  2018.  Collective Trauma and the Social Construction of Meaning. Frontiers in Psychology. 9:1441.
Daphna Canetti, Gilad Hirschberger, Carmit Rapaport, Julia Elad-Strenger, Tsachi Ein-Dor, Shifra Rosenzveig, Tom Pyszczynski, Stevan E. Hobfoll.  2018.  Collective trauma from the lab to the real world: The effects of the holocaust on contemporary Israeli political cognitions. Political Psychology. 39(1):3–21.
Andrea Bedoya, Luis Harvey Gordillo, Luis Enrique Romero, Ricardo Stiglich Campos.  2018.  Colombian Cultural Identity In The Teaching Of English As A Foreign Language. OPENING WRITING DOORS JOURNAL. 12(1):52–80.
Courtney E. Cole.  2018.  Commemorating Mass Violence: Truth Commission Hearings as a Genre of Public Memory. Southern Communication Journal. 83(3):149-166.
Theofilos Gkinopoulos, Peter Hegarty.  2018.  Commemoration in crisis: A discursive analysis of who ‘we’and ‘they’have been or become in ceremonial political speeches before and during the Greek financial downturn. British Journal of Social Psychology.
Caterina Agostini.  2018.  Communicating Across Cultures: The Case of Primo Levi, Italo Calvino, and Pliny the Elder. :63–77.
Mohamad El Haj, Ralph Miller.  2018.  The communicative function of destination memory. Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 41
Michelle Metro-Roland.  2018.  Community, Identity, and International Student Engagement.. Journal of International Students. 8(3)
Jeffrey Blustein.  2018.  Conceptions of Genocide and the Ethics of Memorialization. :21–47.
Ivana Marková.  2018.  Conclusion: Changing Imaginings of Collective Futures. :273–294.
Paul Jackson, Danielle Beswick.  2018.  Conflict, security and development: An introduction.
Li-Ching Ho.  2018.  “Consensus not conflict”: harmony and multicultural education in Singapore. :97–104.
Susanne Fredholm, Ingegärd Eliasson, Igor Knez.  2018.  Conservation of historical landscapes: What signifies ‘successful’management? Landscape Research. 43(5):735–748.
Susanne Fredholm, Ingegärd Eliasson, Igor Knez.  2018.  Conservation of historical landscapes: What signifies ‘successful’management? Landscape Research. 43(5):735–748.
Omer Tekdemir.  2018.  Constructing a social space for Alevi political identity: Religion, antagonism and collective passion. National Identities. 20(1):31–51.
Lynne Hibberd, Zoë Tew-Thompson.  2018.  Constructing memories of Holmfirth through Last of the Summer Wine. Memory Studies. 11(2):245–256.
Ann Murray.  2018.  Constructing the Memory of War in Visual Culture Since 1914: The Eye on War.
Daniel L. Schacter, Alexis C. Carpenter, Aleea Devitt, Reece P. Roberts, Donna Rose Addis.  2018.  Constructive episodic simulation, flexible recombination, and memory errors. Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 41
Lorenzo Zamponi.  2018.  Contentious Memories of the Italian Student Movement: The ‘Long 1968’in the Field of Public Memory. :59–118.