Imagining the face of a nation: Scotland, modernity and the places of memory Andrew Blaikie. 2011. Imagining the face of a nation: Scotland, modernity and the places of memory. Memory Studies. 4(4):416-431.
Monuments and Memory for Our Times Partha Mitter. 2013. Monuments and Memory for Our Times. South Asian Studies. 29(1):159-167.
Collective memory, national identity, and ethnic conflict: Greece, Bulgaria, and the Macedonian question Victor Roudometof. 2002. Collective memory, national identity, and ethnic conflict: Greece, Bulgaria, and the Macedonian question. :265.
The Belgian national past: Between commemoration and silence Valérie Rosoux, Laurence van Ypersele. 2012. The Belgian national past: Between commemoration and silence. Memory Studies. 5(1):45-57.
Des noms et des représentations. (French) Nikos Kalampalikis. 2002. Des noms et des représentations. (French). Namensgebung und kognitive Repräsentation. (German). 53(1):20-31.
Functionalizing Cultural Memory: Foundational British Literary History and the Construction of National Identity Margit Sichert. 2003. Functionalizing Cultural Memory: Foundational British Literary History and the Construction of National Identity. MLQ: Modern Language Quarterly. 64(2):199-217.
Remembering to forget: Sabbateanism, national identity, and subjectivity in Turkey L. Neyzi. 2002. Remembering to forget: Sabbateanism, national identity, and subjectivity in Turkey. Comparative Studies in Society and History. 44(01):137–158.
Performing the New German Past The People's Day of Mourning and 27 January as Postunification Commemorations Alexandra Kaiser. 2008. Performing the New German Past The People's Day of Mourning and 27 January as Postunification Commemorations. German Politics & Society. 26(4):28-49.
Commemorations: the politics of national identity John R Gillis. 1994. Commemorations: the politics of national identity. :290.
“Jerusalem Assassinated Rabin and Tel Aviv Commemorated him”: Rabin Memorials and the Discourse of National Identity in Israel Vered Vinitzky‐Seroussi. 1998. “Jerusalem Assassinated Rabin and Tel Aviv Commemorated him”: Rabin Memorials and the Discourse of National Identity in Israel. City & Society. 10(1):183-203.