City and memory: Jerusalem in Israeli cinema Anat Zanger. 2016. City and memory: Jerusalem in Israeli cinema. Israel Studies. (3):206.
Keeping the Past Alive: Memories of Israeli Jews at the Turn of the Millennium Howard Schuman, Vered Vinitzky-Seroussi, Amiram D. Vinokur. 2003. Keeping the Past Alive: Memories of Israeli Jews at the Turn of the Millennium. Sociological Forum. 18(1):103.
Old Heroes in a New Medium: The Television Program Such a Life and the Formation of Israeli Collective Memory Avner Ben-Amos, Jéérôôme Bourdon. 2011. Old Heroes in a New Medium: The Television Program Such a Life and the Formation of Israeli Collective Memory. Jewish Social Studies. 17(3):156-181.
The Masada Myth: Collective Memory and Mythmaking in Israel Nachman Ben-Yehuda. 1995. The Masada Myth: Collective Memory and Mythmaking in Israel. :401.
The making of a myth: the story of Kfar Etzion in religious Zionism 1948-1967 Dror Greenblum. 2016. The making of a myth: the story of Kfar Etzion in religious Zionism 1948-1967. Israel Studies. (1):132.
Embracing the lived memory of genocide: Holocaust survivor and descendant renegade memory work at the House of Being Carol A. Kidron. 2010. Embracing the lived memory of genocide: Holocaust survivor and descendant renegade memory work at the House of Being. American Ethnologist. 37(3):429-451.
The Quest for Victory: Collective Memory and National Identification among the Arab-Palestinian Citizens of Israel Tamir Sorek. 2011. The Quest for Victory: Collective Memory and National Identification among the Arab-Palestinian Citizens of Israel. Sociology. 45(3):464-479.
The Texture of Memory: Holocaust Memorials and Meaning James Edward Young. 1993. The Texture of Memory: Holocaust Memorials and Meaning. :398.
Descending the Khazooq: 'working through' the trauma of the Nakba in Emile Habibi's oeuvre Assaf Peled. 2016. Descending the Khazooq: 'working through' the trauma of the Nakba in Emile Habibi's oeuvre. Israel Studies. (1):157.
Belonging, memory and the politics of planning in Israel Tovi Fenster. 2004. Belonging, memory and the politics of planning in Israel. Social & Cultural Geography. 5(3):403-417.