Memory Studies

Papers
(The TQCC of Memory Studies is 2. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2021-06-01 to 2025-06-01.)
ArticleCitations
‘There is no room in our city for hate’: The re-emerged debates over the current and former place name of a Canadian city43
A creativity-focused anniversary: Montreal’s 375th anniversary celebrations at the heart of a cultural economy of the past25
Spatializing collective memory: The idea of home and the War and Women’s Human Rights Museum18
Book review: Human Rights Museums: Critical Tensions Between Memory and Justice Jennifer Carter17
The digital turn in memory studies16
Memory and time in early Quakerism16
Memorials’ politics: Exploring the material rhetoric of the Statue of Peace15
Lived multidirectionality: “Historikerstreit 2.0” and the politics of Holocaust memory14
The COVID-19 crisis chronotope: The pandemic as matter, metaphor and memory13
Lived queer memorials: How socially inclusive are queer sites of memory?13
Ghostly pasts and postponed futures: The disorder of time during the corona pandemic13
The art of memory activism in the global South13
Media-generated characteristics of Homeland War–related commemorations in Croatia12
Memory care and queer akinship at the former Uckermark concentration camp for girls and young women12
Erratum to Introduction: Sites of reckoning special issue10
Mediating memories: Individual remembering of two mass protests in Hong Kong10
Spain’s democratic anxieties through the lens of Franco’s reburial10
Lens to difficult history: Museums of Hansen’s disease in Malaysia, South Korea, and Taiwan10
Mobilizing MSA Forward10
Book review: Moving Memory: Remembering Palestine in Postdictatorship Chile10
Unnaming buildings9
Book review: Continuous Pasts: Frictions of Memory in Postcolonial Africa9
Legitimation crisis, memory, and United States exceptionalism: Lessons from post-communist Eastern Europe8
Book Review: Carnivalizing Reconciliation: Contemporary Australian and Canadian Literature and Film beyond the Victim Paradigm8
Redrawing the lesbian: The memory of lesbian feminism in Kate Charlesworth’s Sensible Footwear: A Girl’s Guide8
Ethical memory and cinema: Confronting the past in Fatih Akın’s The Cut8
Beyond difficult pasts: Towards a fuller understanding of memory-making in tourism7
The monumentalization of the Portuguese Colonial War: Commemorating the soldier’s efforts amid the persistence of imperial imaginaries7
Memorializing the unspectacular: Toward a minor remembrance7
Contesting public forgetting: Memory and policy learning in the era of Covid-197
Memory and protest in Belgrade: Remembering the 1990s in the mass demonstrations of 20237
The living past in the lives of victims-/survivors of conflict-related sexual violence: Temporal implications for transitional justice7
Changing the story: Intergenerational dialogue, participatory video and perpetrator memories in Cambodia7
Memorial reparation: Women’s work of remembrance, repair and restoration in rural Colombia6
Race, memory and implication in Tulsa’s Greenwood Rising6
Book review: Milieus of ReMemory: Relationalities of Violence, Trauma, and Voice6
A non-existent cemetery: The memory of Germans in today’s Belgrade6
HIV/AIDS in the context of a queer institution: The Schwules Museum, Berlin6
Curating conflict-related sexual violence: Museological visibilities at the Imperial War Museum6
Book Review: Remember Me: Memory and Forgetting in the Digital Age6
Constructing the tellability of intergenerational memory narratives in collective remembering in StoryCorps, a digital memory-sharing platform6
Divided memory, postcolonialism and trauma in the South Caucasus5
Remembering the victims of COVID-19: From personal to civic to reparative memory5
Authenticity, absence, and pedagogy on a historical injustice bus tour5
States of conception: Renegotiating the mnemonic order amid crisis5
Book Review: ESMA. Represión y poder en el centro clandestino de detención más emblemático de la última dictadura argentina Marina Franco and Claudia Feld (dir) FrancoMa5
‘We’re equal to the Jews who were destroyed. [. . .] Compensate us, too’. An affective (un)remembering of Germany’s colonial past?5
(Un)rest in revolution: Beijing’s Eight Treasures Mountain (Babaoshan) Revolutionary Cemetery and the making of China’s national memory5
Intergenerational transmission of historical memory of volcanic risk in Mexico5
Book Review: Museums, Narratives, and Critical Histories BarndtKerstinJaegerStephan (eds). Museums, Narratives, and Critical Histories. Berlin: De Gruyter, 2024, 367 pp.5
From disenchantment to glory: Fluctuations in the memory of World War II in Japanese Cinema (1980–2020)5
The difficult, divisive and disruptive heritage of the Queensland Native Mounted Police4
Introduction: Taking stock of memory studies4
The emancipatory potential of the Yugoslav socialist narratives of the Second World War4
Remembering the anti-Soviet partisan war in Lithuania, 1944–1953: The effects of heroization at different levels of remembrance4
Texturing concrete: Woodstock Beach beneath Woodstock streets – Place and material memory4
Yifat Gutman and Jenny Wüstenberg (eds) with Irit Dekel, Kaitlin M Murphy, Benjamin Nienass, Joanna Wawrzyniak and Kerry Whigham4
The counter-monument as mnemonic device: The case of the Statues of Peace in South Korea4
Between discovery and exploitation of history: Lay theories of history and their connections to national identity and interest in history4
Provincializing memory studies (again): Cosmopolitan, multidirectional, transcultural, and fugitive memories4
Book review: Remembrance and Forgiveness: Global and Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Genocide and Mass Violence4
Contentious vulnerability: The case of Rwandan genocide memorials4
Knotted memories of a betrayed sacrifice: Rethinking trauma and hope in South Africa4
Book review: Qualitative Studies of Silence: The Unsaid as Social Action4
The Mnemonics summer school: Reflections on a decade of international collaborative doctoral training in memory studies3
Reflexive ethnography of Poland’s non-memory about Jews and the Holocaust: Revisiting fieldwork, revising assumptions3
Book review: Memory Activism and Digital Practices after Conflict: Unwanted Memories Orli Fridman3
Incriminated writers and their wives: Gendered memory of a national campaign in Mao’s China3
Sacred memory, creole orientalism and India in the plantationscape of Mauritius3
Book review3
Making memory work: The SARS memory and China’s war on COVID-193
Walking tours as transcultural memory activism: Referencing memories of trauma and migration to redefine urban belonging3
The potential of transnational history education: Attempts at university teaching practice in East Asia3
Turkey’s 12 September coup: From trauma to nostalgia3
Public spaces and circumscribed spaces of the collective memory: A research on the location of commemorative monuments3
Closure in dystopia: Projecting memories of the end of crises in speculative fiction3
Non-forgetfulness and forgetfulness 忘 (wang) in ancient Chinese philosophical texts3
Conjuring the ‘ship of dreams’: Spatial narratives and making the absent present around and within Titanic Belfast3
Book review: The Politics of Trauma and Integrity: Stories of Japanese “Comfort Women”3
Book review: Post-Conflict Memorialization. Missing Memorials, Absent Bodies3
Book review: Beyond Memory: Can We Really Learn From the Past?3
Environmental commemoration: Guiding principles and real-world cases3
‘Fiction keeps memory about the war alive’: Mnemonic migration and literary representations of the war in Bosnia3
Navigating victimhood: Women’s life writing and activist memory in Turkey3
Visual symbols, democracy and memory: The monument of Ivan Stepanovich Konev and the memory of communism in the Czech Republic2
Mnemonic reciprocity: Activating Sydney’s Comfort Women statue for decolonial memory2
Memories of indenture: An analysis of representations of indentured labour at the Aapravasi Ghat and the 1860 heritage centre2
Book review: Remembering Asia’s World War Two2
Beyond trauma: Positive postmemories among second- and third-generation North Korean war refugees2
A politics of placelessness? The limits of democratising memory in the Centro de Documentación e Investigación of Lima’s Lugar de la Memoria2
Book review: Cultural Recycling in the Postdigital Age Miriam Llamas Ubieto and Johanna Vollmeyer (eds)2
Post-memory and the third generation’s inheritance of the Indian partition (1947): A comparative study of the linguistic register across spatial axes2
Book review: An Everlasting Name: Cultural Remembrance and Traditions of Onymic Commemoration2
Book review: The Great Exodus from China: Trauma, Memory, and Identity in Modern Taiwan2
Monuments and ‘nonuments’: A typology of the forgotten memoryscape2
Challenges of antagonistic memory: Scholars versus politics and war2
Homonationalism, LGBT desaparecidos, and the politics of queer memory in Argentina2
The user is dead, long live the platform? Problematising the user-centric focus of (digital) memory studies2
Introduction: Communities in flux across the globe2
Affective future and non-existent history: The issue of future past in memory research2
Memory discourses in visitor books of travelling exhibits in Southern Chile2
Book review: A House in the Homeland: Armenian Pilgrimages to Places of Ancestral Memory2
Filmic memory texts: Seeing America’s archeological turn from salvage to conservation in Spadework for History2
Marielle restored? Mortuary graphisms, memory and ritual in intersectional and anti-racist responses to necropolitical violence in Rio de Janeiro2
My body my choice: The hostile appropriation of feminist cultural memory in American anti-vaccine movements2
Democratizing memory and the question of Black difference in Brazil (ca. 1980–1988): The transformation of the Serra da Barriga (Alagoas), from haunted “Black territory” to national memorial in the tr2
The Windrush and the BUMIDOM: The memorialization of Caribbean migration2
“It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men”: Decolonial memory activists and the duty to remember in postcolonial Belgium (2010–present)2
Challenging the meaning of the past from below: A typology for comparative research on memory activists2
Entrepreneurs of memory: Selling history in the GDR Museum shop in Berlin2
Activist turns: The (in)compatibility of scholarship and transformative activism2
Collective memory or the right to be forgotten? Cultures of digital memory and forgetting in the European Union2
Russian LGBT activism and the memory politics of sexual citizenship2
Revisiting memoricide: The everyday killing of memory2
Thanatographical fiction: Death, mourning and ritual in contemporary literature and film2
Book review: Reparando mundos. Víctimas y Estado en los Andes peruanos María Eugenia Ulfe and Ximena Málaga Sabogal2
Promnesic futures: Technology, climate, déjà vu2
Memorials from the perspective of experience: A comparison of Spain’s Valley of the Fallen to contemporary counter-memorials2
‘We thought she was a witch’: Gender, class and whiteness in the familial ‘memory archive’2
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