Memory Studies Portal

Found 6111 results
2005
Neal J. Z Schwartz, Raul Cabra, Calif.) National AIDS Memorial Grove(San Francisco.  2005.  Emergent memory: the national AIDS memorial competition.
Jill Liddington.  2005.  Era of Commemoration: Celebrating the Suffrage Centenary. History Workshop Journal. 59(1):194-218.
Ute Frevert.  2005.  Europeanizing Germany's Twentieth Century. History and Memory. 17(1/2):87-116,367.
Silvestra. Mariniello, James. Cisneros.  2005.  Experience and Memory in the Films of Wim Wenders. SubStance. 34(1):159-179.
Alon Confino.  2005.  Fantasies about the Jews: Cultural Reflections on the Holocaust. History and Memory. 17(1/2):296-322,366-367.
Biray Kolluoḡlu Kırlı.  2005.  Forgetting the Smyrna Fire. History Workshop Journal. 60(1):25-44.
John Cimprich.  2005.  Fort Pillow, a Civil War Massacre, and Public Memory.
Mary Marcel.  2005.  Freud's Traumatic Memory: Reclaiming Seducation Theory and Revisiting Oedipus.
Noel Packard, Christopher Chen.  2005.  From Medieval Mnemonics to a Social Construction of Memory: Thoughts on Some Early European Conceptualizations of Memory, Morality, and Consciousness. American Behavioral Scientist. 48(10):1297-1319.
Tara Brabazon.  2005.  From revolution to revelation: generation X, popular memory, and cultural studies.
Selma Leydesdorff, Luisa Passerini, Paul Richard Thompson.  2005.  Gender & Memory. :194.
Ananya Jahanara Kabir.  2005.  Gender, Memory, Trauma: Women's Novels on the Partition of India. Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East. 25(1):177-190.
Philip Clart.  2005.  Generals, Pigs, and Immortals: Views and Uses of History in Chinese Morality Books. Journal of Ritual Studies. 19(1):99-113.
Jonathan D. Greenberg.  2005.  Generations of Memory: Remembering Partition in India/Pakistan and Israel/Palestine. Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East. 25(1):89-110.
Robert G. Moeller.  2005.  Germans as Victims? Thoughts on a Post-Cold War History of World War II's Legacies History and Memory. 17(1/2):147-194,368.
Paul Betts.  2005.  Germany, International Justice and the Twentieth Century. History and Memory. 17(1/2):45-86,366.
Jeffrey Stepnisky.  2005.  Global Memory and the Rhythm of Life. American Behavioral Scientist. 48(10):1383-1402.
Max Pensky.  2005.  Globalizing Critical Theory. New critical theory. :254.
Mira. Bartok.  2005.  Gula, Gula --Listen, Listen: Memory and the Map of Childhood. Fourth Genre: Explorations in Nonfiction. 7(1):9-20.
Christine van der Zanden.  2005.  Harnessing the Holocaust: The Politics of Memory in France, Joan B. Wolf (Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press, 2004), 264 pp., $49.50. Holocaust & Genocide Studies. 19(2):295-297.
Richard Bessel.  2005.  Hatred after War: Emotion and the Postwar History of East Germany. History and Memory. 17(1/2):195-216,366.
Barry Schwartz, Howard Schuman.  2005.  History, Commemoration, and Belief: Abraham Lincoln in American Memory, 1945-2001. American Sociological Review. 70(2):183-203.
Barry Schwartz, Howard Schuman.  2005.  History, Commemoration, and Belief: Abraham Lincoln in American Memory, 1945-2001. American Sociological Review. 70(2):183-203.
Alison M. Moore.  2005.  History, Memory and Trauma in Photography of the Tondues: Visuality of the Vichy Past through the Silent Image of Women. Gender & History. 17(3):657-681.
Peter Carrier.  2005.  Holocaust monuments and national memory cultures in France and Germany since 1989: the origins and political function of the Vél' d'Hiv' in Paris and the Holocaust Monument in Berlin.