Memory and the Construction and Experience of Elite Masculinity in the Seventeenth-Century Autobiography of Lord Herbert of Cherbury Christine Jackson. 2013. Memory and the Construction and Experience of Elite Masculinity in the Seventeenth-Century Autobiography of Lord Herbert of Cherbury. Gender & History. 25(1):107-131.
Who Needs the Nation? Interrogating ‘British’ History Antoinette Burton. 1997. Who Needs the Nation? Interrogating ‘British’ History Journal of Historical Sociology. 10(3):227–248.
'Remembering Spring through Gorbals Voices': Autobiography and the Memory of a Community Avram Taylor. 2010. 'Remembering Spring through Gorbals Voices': Autobiography and the Memory of a Community. Immigrants & Minorities. 28(1):1-30.
Televising War: From Vietnam to Iraq Andrew Hoskins. 2004. Televising War: From Vietnam to Iraq. :148.
Keeping wartime memory alive: an oral history project about the wartime memories of people with learning difficulties in Cumbria John Dias, Malcolm Eardley, Elizabeth Harkness, Louise Townson, Chloe Brownlee-Chapman, Rohhss Chapman. 2012. Keeping wartime memory alive: an oral history project about the wartime memories of people with learning difficulties in Cumbria. Disability & Society. 27(1):31-49.
Selective Memory: A Note on Social Work Historiography David Burnham. 2011. Selective Memory: A Note on Social Work Historiography. British Journal of Social Work. 41(1):5-21.
The Expansion of England: Race, Ethnicity, and Cultural History Bill Schwarz. 1996. The Expansion of England: Race, Ethnicity, and Cultural History. :262.
The Afghan War and ‘postmodern’ memory: commemoration and the dead of Helmand Anthony King. 2010. The Afghan War and ‘postmodern’ memory: commemoration and the dead of Helmand. British Journal of Sociology. 61(1):1-25.
Crises in the British State, 1880-1930 Mary Langan, Bill Schwarz. 1985. Crises in the British State, 1880-1930. Hutchinson University Library. :288.