Memory Studies Portal

Found 6111 results
2005
John R Neff.  2005.  Honoring the Civil War Dead: Commemoration and the Problem of Reconciliation. Modern war studies. :328.
Magdalena Fahrni.  2005.  Household politics: Montreal families and postwar reconstruction.
Ban Wang.  2005.  Illuminations from the Past: Trauma, Memory, and History in Modern China. Cultural memory in the present. :311.
Eric. Mechoulan, Roxanne. Lapidus.  2005.  Immediacy and Forgetting. SubStance. 34(1):145-158.
Uta G. Poiger.  2005.  Imperialism and Empire in Twentieth-Century Germany. History and Memory. 17(1/2):117-143,368.
Sidonia Grama.  2005.  In Between Places of Remembrance and Realms of Memory: The 15-Years Commemoration of the Romanian Revolution in Timişoara. Philobiblon: Transylvanian Journal of Multidisciplinary Research in Humanities. 10-11:311-342.
Hilary. Masters.  2005.  In Rooms of Memory. Prairie Schooner. 79(4):13-20.
Jeffrey K Olick.  2005.  In the House of the Hangman: The Agonies of German Defeat, 1943-1949. :380.
Joachim J. Savelsberg, Ryan D. King.  2005.  Institutionalizing Collective Memories of Hate: Law and Law Enforcement in Germany and the United States. American Journal of Sociology. 111(2):579-616.
Francesca Borrelli, Cristina Ponsiglione, Luca Iandoli, Giuseppe Zollo.  2005.  Inter-Organizational Learning and Collective Memory in Small Firms Clusters: an Agent-Based Approach. Journal of Artificial Societies & Social Simulation. 8(3):54-81.
Bogumil. Jewsiewicki, Bob W. White.  2005.  Introduction. African Studies Review. 48(2):1-9.
E Langenbacher, F Eigler.  2005.  Introduction: Memory Boom or Memory Fatigue in 21st Century Germany? GERMAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY. 23(3):1-15.
Marie-Pascale Huglo, Johanne Villeneuve.  2005.  Introduction: Memory, Media, Art. SubStance. 34(1):78-80.
Rebecca Saunders, Kamran Scot Aghaie.  2005.  Introduction: Mourning and Memory. Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East. 25(1):16-29.
Idith Zertal.  2005.  Israel's Holocaust and the Politics of Nationhood. Cambridge Middle East studies. :236.
George Sanford.  2005.  Katyn and the Soviet massacre of 1940: truth, justice and memory.
Dan Laor.  2005.  Kishinev Revisited: A Place in Jewish Historical Memory. Prooftexts. 25(1):30-38.
Paul John. Eakin.  2005.  Living Autobiographically. Biography. 28(1):1-14.
Peter Gottschalk.  2005.  A Mahatma for Mourners and Militants: The Social Memories of Mohandas Gandhi in Arampur. Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East. 25(1):46-62.
Shankar. Raman.  2005.  Marking Time: Memory and Market in The Comedy of Errors. Shakespeare Quarterly. 56(2):176-205.
Jennifer A. Jordan.  2005.  A Matter of Time: Examining Collective Memory in Historical Perspective in Postwar Berlin. Journal of Historical Sociology. 18(1-2):37–71.
G. B Appel, H. T Cook, G. Hageman, J. C Jennette, M. Kashgarian, M. Kirschfink, J. D Lambris, L. Lanning, H. U Lutz, S. Meri et al..  2005.  Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis type II (dense deposit disease): an update. Journal of the American Society of Nephrology. 16(5):1392.
Rob. Harle.  2005.  Memories Are Made of This: How Memory Works in Humans and Animals (review). Leonardo. 38(5):433-434.
Barbara A Misztal.  2005.  Memory and Democracy. American Behavioral Scientist. 48(10):1320-1338.
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.