Erasing the Brown Scare: Referential Afterlife and the Power of Memory Templates Gary Alan Fine, Terence McDonnell. 2007. Erasing the Brown Scare: Referential Afterlife and the Power of Memory Templates. Social Problems. 54(2):170-187.
Mythologizing Memories: A Critique of the Utah Korean War Memorial Suhi Choi. 2012. Mythologizing Memories: A Critique of the Utah Korean War Memorial. Public Historian. 34(1):61-82.
Cultures of Denial: Avoiding Knowledge of State Violations of Human Rights in Argentina and the United States Barbara Sutton, Kari Marie Norgaard. 2013. Cultures of Denial: Avoiding Knowledge of State Violations of Human Rights in Argentina and the United States. Sociological Forum. 28(3):495–524.
Consumed Nostalgia: Memory in the Age of Fast Capitalism David Glassberg. 2016. Consumed Nostalgia: Memory in the Age of Fast Capitalism. American Historical Review. 121(3):983-985.
The September 11, 2001, Oral History Narrative and Memory Project: A First Report Mary Marshall Clark. Submitted. The September 11, 2001, Oral History Narrative and Memory Project: A First Report. Journal of American History. 89(2):569-579.
A "switch in Time" Beyond the Nine: Historical Memory and the Constitutional Revolution of the 1930s John W. Wertheimer. 2010. A "switch in Time" Beyond the Nine: Historical Memory and the Constitutional Revolution of the 1930s. Studies in Law, Politics & Society. 53:3-34.
Rereading the Gettysburg Address: Social Change and Collective Memory Barry Schwartz. 1996. Rereading the Gettysburg Address: Social Change and Collective Memory. Qualitative Sociology. 19(3):395.
The "Dam Talk" of Butler, Tennessee: Tracing the Stability and Change of Historical Memory in Newspaper Coverage Christie M. Kleinmann. 2012. The "Dam Talk" of Butler, Tennessee: Tracing the Stability and Change of Historical Memory in Newspaper Coverage. American Journalism. 29(3):40-58.
Anniversary Journalism, Collective Memory, and the Cultural Authority to Tell the Story of the American Past Carolyn Kitch. 2002. Anniversary Journalism, Collective Memory, and the Cultural Authority to Tell the Story of the American Past. Journal of Popular Culture. 36(1):44-67.