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A Slavery Museum?: Race, Memory, and Landscape in Fredericksburg, Virginia Stephen P. Hanna. 2008. A Slavery Museum?: Race, Memory, and Landscape in Fredericksburg, Virginia Southeastern Geographer. 48(3):316-337.
Everybody Liked It: Collective Memories of Early Flemish Television Fiction Alexander Dhoest. 2006. Everybody Liked It: Collective Memories of Early Flemish Television Fiction. Particip@tions. 3(1)
Memory as a Cultural System: Abraham Lincoln in World War II Barry Schwartz. 1996. Memory as a Cultural System: Abraham Lincoln in World War II. American Sociological Review. 61(5):908-927.
Cohorts, Chronology, and Collective Memories Howard Schuman, Willard L Rodgers. 2004. Cohorts, Chronology, and Collective Memories. Public Opinion Quarterly. 68(2):217-254.
Breakfast with the Dictator: Memory, Atrocity, and Affect Alvin Cheng-Hin Lim. 2010. Breakfast with the Dictator: Memory, Atrocity, and Affect. Theory & Event. 13(4)
Symbolic Excavation and the Artifact Politics of Remembering Slavery in the American South: Observations from Walterboro, South Carolina Derek H. Alderman, Rachel M. Campbell. 2008. Symbolic Excavation and the Artifact Politics of Remembering Slavery in the American South: Observations from Walterboro, South Carolina. Southeastern Geographer. 48(3):338-355.
Tourists of History: Memory, Kitsch, and Consumerism from Oklahoma City to Ground Zero Marita Sturken. 2007. Tourists of History: Memory, Kitsch, and Consumerism from Oklahoma City to Ground Zero. :344.
From Collective Memory to the Sociology of Mnemonic Practices and Products Astrid Erll, Ansgar Nünning, Jeffrey K Olick. 2010. From Collective Memory to the Sociology of Mnemonic Practices and Products. :151-161.
The Idea of Progress Charles Lincoln Van Doren. 1967. The Idea of Progress. Concepts in Western thought series. :497.