Between Chaos and Diversity: Is Social Memory Studies a Field? Jeffrey Olick. 2009. Between Chaos and Diversity: Is Social Memory Studies a Field? International Journal of Politics, Culture & Society. 22(2):249-252.
Using history to explain the present: The past as born and performed Pepper G. Glass. 2016. Using history to explain the present: The past as born and performed. Ethnography. 17(1):92-110.
Between Reconciliation and the Reactivation of Past Conflicts in Europe: Rethinking Social Memory Paradigms. (cover story) George Mink. 2008. Between Reconciliation and the Reactivation of Past Conflicts in Europe: Rethinking Social Memory Paradigms. (cover story). Czech Sociological Review. 44(3):469-490.
Notes to the Old Country: Body, Memory and Autobiographic Text - Israel September/October 2000 Louise Bethlehem. 2001. Notes to the Old Country: Body, Memory and Autobiographic Text - Israel September/October 2000. HAGAR: Studies in Culture, Polity & Identities. 2(1):119-129.
Historiography and Memory: Latrun, 1948 Anita Shapira. 1996. Historiography and Memory: Latrun, 1948. Jewish Social Studies. 3(1):20-61.
Re-Membering Peronism: An Ethnographic Account of the Relational Character of Political Memory Javier Auyero. 1999. Re-Membering Peronism: An Ethnographic Account of the Relational Character of Political Memory. Qualitative Sociology. 22(4):331-351.
Killing Off the Father: Social Science and the Memory of Frederick Taylor in Management Studies, 1950-75 Michael Roper. 1999. Killing Off the Father: Social Science and the Memory of Frederick Taylor in Management Studies, 1950-75. Contemporary British History. 13(3):39-58.
IT AIN'T NECESSARILY So: THE POLITICS OF MEMORY AND THE BYSTANDER NARRATIVE IN THE U.S. HOLOCAUST MEMORIAL MUSEUM Ronald J. Berger. 2003. IT AIN'T NECESSARILY So: THE POLITICS OF MEMORY AND THE BYSTANDER NARRATIVE IN THE U.S. HOLOCAUST MEMORIAL MUSEUM. Humanity & Society. 27(1):6-29.
Solitary Amnesia as National Memory: From Habermas to Luhmann Rodanthi1 Tzanelli. 2007. Solitary Amnesia as National Memory: From Habermas to Luhmann. International Journal of the Humanities. 5(4):253-260.