Race, Racial Cultural Memory and Multicultural Curriculum in an Obama "post-Racial" U.s Keffrelyn D. Brown. 2011. Race, Racial Cultural Memory and Multicultural Curriculum in an Obama "post-Racial" U.s. Race, Gender & Class. 18(3/4):123-134.
What Do These Memories Do? Civil Rights Remembrance and Racial Attitudes Larry J Griffin, Kenneth A Bollen. 2009. What Do These Memories Do? Civil Rights Remembrance and Racial Attitudes American Sociological Review. 74(4):594-614.
Making JFK Matter: Popular Memory and the Thirty-fifth President Steven R. Goldzwig. 2016. Making JFK Matter: Popular Memory and the Thirty-fifth President. Presidential Studies Quarterly. 46(1):224-225.
One Nation Divided by Slavery: Remembering the American Revolution While Marching toward the Civil War Christopher Childers. 2016. One Nation Divided by Slavery: Remembering the American Revolution While Marching toward the Civil War. Civil War History. 62(4):437-439.
Politics of memory, politics of incest: Doing therapy and politics that really matter Laura S. Brown. 1996. Politics of memory, politics of incest: Doing therapy and politics that really matter. Women & Therapy. 19(1):5.
Reading the Reparations Debate Jacqueline Bacon. Submitted. Reading the Reparations Debate. Quarterly Journal of Speech. 89(3):171.
Surveillance in America: An Interview With Christian Parenti Christopher Sprinkle. 2005. Surveillance in America: An Interview With Christian Parenti. American Behavioral Scientist. 48(10):1375-1382.
More than fact and fiction: cultural memory and the Tuskegee Syphilis Study Sm Reverby. 2001. More than fact and fiction: cultural memory and the Tuskegee Syphilis Study. Hastings Center Report. 31(5):22-28.
'Just keeps rollin' along': rebellions, revolts and radical black memories of slavery in the 1930s. Paul Gardullo. 2007. 'Just keeps rollin' along': rebellions, revolts and radical black memories of slavery in the 1930s.. Patterns of Prejudice. 41(3/4):271-301.
Memory by Consensus: Remembering the American Revolutionary War in Chicago Christopher J. Young. 2016. Memory by Consensus: Remembering the American Revolutionary War in Chicago. Journal of American Studies. 50(4):971-1997.