Memory Studies

Papers
(The TQCC of Memory Studies is 1. 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 2020-11-01 to 2024-11-01.)
ArticleCitations
Challenging the meaning of the past from below: A typology for comparative research on memory activists25
Remaking memory and the agency of the aesthetic23
The new grey of memory: Andrew Hoskins in conversation with Huw Halstead20
Between remembrance and knowledge: The Spanish Flu, COVID-19, and the two poles of collective memory16
When does an epidemic become a ‘crisis’? Analogies between Covid-19 and HIV/AIDS in American public memory13
Content analysis of living historical memory around the world: Terrorization of the Anglosphere, and national foundations of hope in developing societies13
Capture the feeling: Memory practices in between the emotional affordances of heritage sites and digital media12
Exploring functions of and recollections with photos in the age of smartphone cameras12
Enacting memories through and with things: Remembering as material engagement12
Ghostly pasts and postponed futures: The disorder of time during the corona pandemic11
Making memory work: The SARS memory and China’s war on COVID-1911
The rise of illiberal memory11
Fascination, nostalgia, and knowledge desire in digital memory culture: Emotions and mood work in retrospective Facebook groups10
Editorial: Cultural memorial forms10
The intergenerational hero: Carrier of a bonding memory10
Selfies in Auschwitz: Popular and contested representations in a digital generation10
The COVID-19 crisis chronotope: The pandemic as matter, metaphor and memory9
Non-memory: Remembering beyond the discursive and the symbolic8
Remembering and silencing complexity in post-genocide memorialisation: Cambodia’s Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum8
Memory, counter-memory and denialism: How search engines circulate information about the Holodomor-related memory wars8
White Armband Day: From global social media campaign to transnational commemoration day8
Digital disorientation and place7
Challenging the placeless imaginary in digital memories: The performation of place in the work of Forensic Architecture7
Non-subsumptive memory and narrative empathy7
New constellations of mnemonic wars: An introduction7
“Let me tell you what we already know”: Collective memory between culture and interaction7
Born translated memories: Transcultural memorial forms, domestication and foreignisation6
Moving hearts: How mnemonic labour (trans)forms mnemonic capital6
Pre-emptive memories: Anticipating narratives of Covid-19 in practices of commemoration6
Cyberplace: From fantasies of placelessness to connective emplacement6
Lived multidirectionality: “Historikerstreit 2.0” and the politics of Holocaust memory6
Streaming media and the dynamics of remembering and forgetting: The Chernobyl case6
The alliance of victory: Russo-Serbian memory diplomacy6
Theuth, Thamus, and digital civics: Plato’s formulation of memory and its lessons for civic life in the digital age6
Making and contesting far right sites of memory. A case study on Romania5
Memory wars beyond the metaphor: Reflections on Russia’s mnemonic propaganda5
Remembering 1989: A case study of anniversary journalism in Hong Kong5
Memorials’ politics: Exploring the material rhetoric of the Statue of Peace5
Organized memory and popular remembering: The encounter of Yugonostalgia theories with socialism5
Perceived societal anomie and the implicit trajectory of national decline: Replicating and extending Yamashiro and Roediger (2019) within a French sample5
‘The primitive accumulation of capital and memory’: Mnemonic wars as national reconciliation discourse in (post-)Yugoslavia5
The digital turn in memory studies5
The return of suppressed memories in Eastern Europe: Locality and unsilencing difficult histories5
Memory and Crisis: An Introduction5
‘Comfort women must fall’? Japanese governmental responses to ‘comfort women’ statues around the world5
The labour of place: Memory and extended reality (XR) in migration museums4
Facing dominant master narratives on gender and sexuality: Identity reconstruction of women in situations of inequality4
Tracing the politics of aesthetics: From imposing, via counter to affirmative memorials to violence4
Transcultural memory and literary translation: Mapping the Field (with a case study on Lydie Salvayre’s Pas pleurer and its Spanish translation)4
The 2019–2020 Chilean anti-neoliberal uprising: A catalyst for decolonial de-monumentalization4
‘Nothing is lost’: Mourning and memory at the National Memorial for Peace and Justice4
Memory politics in the future tense: Exceptionalism, race, and insurrection in America4
Collective memory or the right to be forgotten? Cultures of digital memory and forgetting in the European Union4
Affordances of memorability: Finnish reception of the oppression of Ingrian Finns in the Soviet Union4
‘We’re equal to the Jews who were destroyed. [. . .] Compensate us, too’. An affective (un)remembering of Germany’s colonial past?4
Far-right anniversary politics and social media: The Alternative for Germany’s contestation of the East German past on Twitter4
Collective memory of environmental change and connectedness with nature: Survey evidence from Aotearoa New Zealand3
Fear and loathing in monuments: Rethinking the politics and practices of monumentality and monumentalization3
Memory laws, mnemonic weapons: The diffusion of a norm across Europe and beyond3
The place of data: Mobile media, loss and data in life, death and afterlife3
Towards a resonant theory of memory politics3
Changing the story: Intergenerational dialogue, participatory video and perpetrator memories in Cambodia3
Media-generated characteristics of Homeland War–related commemorations in Croatia3
Cued recall: Using photo-elicitation to examine the distributed processes of remembering with photographs3
Far-right digital memory activism: Transnational circulation of memes and memory of Yugoslav wars3
Closure in dystopia: Projecting memories of the end of crises in speculative fiction3
Heritage, memory and identity of Harbin: A confluence of Russian and Japanese colonial effects3
Design elements evoke embodiment at cultural sites in Rwanda and South Africa3
Gendering arctic memory: Understanding the legacy of Josephine Diebitsch-Peary3
The structure and organization of collective memory representations3
Collective memory and the populist cause: The Ulucanlar Prison Museum in Turkey3
Dancing through time: A methodological exploration of embodied memories3
The UNESCO Memory of the World Programme and claims for recognition of atrocities: The nominations of Documents of Nanjing Massacre and Voices of the ‘Comfort Women’3
The counter-boomerang effect of transnational revisionist activism on the memory of ‘comfort women’2
Concealment, coexistence, and citizenship: (Post-)conflict strategies of survival and inclusion in Sacsamarca, Peru2
Legacies of a martial race: Sikh investment and implication in the US police state2
Homonationalism, LGBT desaparecidos, and the politics of queer memory in Argentina2
Challenges of antagonistic memory: Scholars versus politics and war2
Spain’s democratic anxieties through the lens of Franco’s reburial2
Lubyanka: Dissonant memories of violence in the heart of Moscow2
Invisible threads linking phantasmal landscapes in Java: Haunted places and memory in post-authoritarian Indonesia2
Entangled memories of violence: Jean Améry and Frantz Fanon2
State, market, and the manufacturing of war memory: China’s television dramas on the War of Resistance against Japan2
Claiming Martin Luther King, Jr. for the right: The Martin Luther King Day holiday in the Reagan era2
The archival riot: Travesti/Trans* audiovisual memory politics in twenty-first-century Argentina2
The Immortal Regiment and its glocalisation: Reformatting Victory Day in Bulgaria2
‘I can’t remember how many I killed. . .’: Child soldiers and memory work in YouTube2
Entrepreneurs of memory: Selling history in the GDR Museum shop in Berlin2
Legitimation crisis, memory, and United States exceptionalism: Lessons from post-communist Eastern Europe2
‘We thought she was a witch’: Gender, class and whiteness in the familial ‘memory archive’2
The battle for influence: Commemoration of transnational martyrs in the Italian diaspora of the U.S. under fascism2
Remembering through fragmented narratives: Third generations and the intergenerational memory of the 1965 anti-leftist violence in Indonesia2
A politics of placelessness? The limits of democratising memory in the Centro de Documentación e Investigación of Lima’s Lugar de la Memoria2
Putting metaphor centre-stage: A case study of Alison Landsberg’s ‘Prosthetic Memory’2
Memory and far-right historiography: The case of the Christchurch shooter2
The shift in the regime of silence: Selective erasure of the 1965 massacre in post-New Order Indonesia’s official narrative2
Remembering terrorist attacks: Evolution over time2
Remembering forgotten heroes and the idealisation of true love: Veteran memorial activism in contemporary China2
Victim-heroes in collective memory: Surviving soviet repressions heroically2
Memory as a means of governmentality2
The user is dead, long live the platform? Problematising the user-centric focus of (digital) memory studies2
Affective future and non-existent history: The issue of future past in memory research2
Notes towards a historical, critical theory of memory constellations: Postcolonial nationalist memory in Michael Anthony’s King of the Masquerade2
Queering memory: Toward re-membering otherwise2
Environmental commemoration: Guiding principles and real-world cases2
Mnemonic wars and parallel polis: The anti-politics of memory in Central and Southeast Europe: Kosovar women and Black/Roma Lives Matter1
Reimagining cultural memory of the arctic in the graphic narratives of Oqaluttuaq1
Memorials from the perspective of experience: A comparison of Spain’s Valley of the Fallen to contemporary counter-memorials1
Burning Karen’s Headquarters: Gender, Race, & the United Daughters of the Confederacy Headquarters1
The monumentalization of the Portuguese Colonial War: Commemorating the soldier’s efforts amid the persistence of imperial imaginaries1
Russian war of aggression in Ukraine: Challenges for memory studies. An Editorial1
Transnational therapeutic memories: Remembering forced migration in documentary film1
Fake news and fading views: A vanishing archive of the 1906 Atlanta race massacre1
Knotted memories of a betrayed sacrifice: Rethinking trauma and hope in South Africa1
Memory conflicts and memory grey zones: War memory in Bosnia–Herzegovina between public memory disputes, literary narratives and personal experience1
“History is Illuminating”: Public memory crises and collectives in Richmond, Virginia1
Contesting public forgetting: Memory and policy learning in the era of Covid-191
Unsettling homocolonial frames of remembrance: Two-Spirit and Indigiqueer interventions at the museum1
Memory dynamics in times of crisis: An interview with Sarah Gensburger1
Territorial phantom pains: Third-generation postmemories of territorial changes1
The ‘sites of oblivion’: How not to remember in a world of reminders1
Marginal(ized) plurality: An empirical conceptualization of Michael Rothberg’s “multidirectional memory” in German educational settings1
Casa 1, a site of LGBTQ memory in São Paulo, Brazil1
Postcatastrophic entanglement? Contemporary Czech writers remember the holocaust and post-war ethnic cleansing1
Between discovery and exploitation of history: Lay theories of history and their connections to national identity and interest in history1
Pro-dictatorship memorialization in democratic Chile (1990–2020): How is it maintained?1
A more perfect union? The place of Black lives in presidential plantation sites1
Memories of a fishing landscape: Making sense of flow and decline1
Visual symbols, democracy and memory: The monument of Ivan Stepanovich Konev and the memory of communism in the Czech Republic1
Left-wing melancholia and activist memories of the Colombian conflict in Fabiola Calvo Ocampo’s Hablarán de mí1
Spectacular memory: Zombie pasts in the themed shopping malls of Dubai1
Post-memory and the third generation’s inheritance of the Indian partition (1947): A comparative study of the linguistic register across spatial axes1
Collective memory and trans history in the Italian context: Archival practices and the creation of the first trans archive in Italy1
Taking the soldier home: Sustaining the domestic presence of absent fallen soldiers in Israel1
‘Fiction keeps memory about the war alive’: Mnemonic migration and literary representations of the war in Bosnia1
Book review: How Nations Remember1
The significance of family reminiscing for children’s historical consciousness1
Racialised regimes of remembrance: The politics of trivialising and forgetting the murders of Black children in Brazil1
The difficult, divisive and disruptive heritage of the Queensland Native Mounted Police1
Therapeutic improvisation in Cambodia: Moderated exposure, the Tuol Sleng Museum of Genocidal Crimes, and the quest to weave the “world’s longest krama”1
The ludic lives of memoryscapes: Skateboarding post-Soviet peripheries1
Introduction: Taking stock of memory studies1
Promnesic futures: Technology, climate, déjà vu1
Placeless and barrier-free? Connecting place memories online within an unequal society1
Russian LGBT activism and the memory politics of sexual citizenship1
Diasporic memory practice on the Internet: Remembering lost homelands1
Reparation policies in Colombia: Memory as a Repertoire1
The fight over the Marian Column and a religious narrative template in a society of unbelievers1
Narrating political participation: How do lifetime activists remember their political experiences?1
Recollections of a lost kingdom: The varied interactions between history and memory in South Sulawesi, Indonesia1
Mnemonic land war: Memory constellations through Lebanon and South Africa1
A new agenda for a consolidated field of studies: New and old themes of memory studies in Latin America11
Silent memorylands: City branding and the coloniality of cultural memory in the Hamburg HafenCity1
Finding place in Northeast and Southeast Asia: Collective memory construction of the marginalized, disenfranchised, and dislocated1
The Windrush and the BUMIDOM: The memorialization of Caribbean migration1
‘I remember little. Almost nothing’. Participatory theatre as a means to access subjugated memories1
Living in history and by the cultural life script: What events modulate autobiographical memory organization in a sample of older adults from Romania?1
Non-forgetfulness and forgetfulness 忘 (wang) in ancient Chinese philosophical texts1
Ambivalent Déjà-vu: World War II in the poetry of the Northern Irish Troubles1
Schematic narrative templates in national remembering1
A network of photographs: The visual public memory of the Dutch Provo movement, 1967–20161
‘Travelling landscapes’ and the potential of Artscapes1
Marielle restored? Mortuary graphisms, memory and ritual in intersectional and anti-racist responses to necropolitical violence in Rio de Janeiro1
Echoes of famine: Effects of the embodied memories of the Spanish Hunger Years (1939–1952) on survivors’ subsequent food practices and attitudes1
(Un)drawing Belgium’s colonial monuments: Comics’ engagement with decolonial debates1
Introduction: Sites of reckoning special issue1
Memori melompat (‘jumping memory’): The mnemonic motion of Indonesian popular culture and the need for a local reframing1
Judging the past: Memory, others, and intergenerational responsibility among the Japanese youth1
‘We did commit these crimes’: Post-Ottoman solidarities, contested places and Kurdish apology for the Armenian Genocide on Web 2.01
Afro-Germans, multidirectional memory and French colonial aphasia: The legacy of the First World War in Galadio by Didier Daeninckx1
The autobiographical archive in post-communist Romania: “True” heroes and collective victimization1
Antifascist memory revisited: Hungarian historical exhibitions in Oświęcim and Paris, 19651
Revisiting memoricide: The everyday killing of memory1
Civilizational mnemonics and the longue durée: The Bulgarian case1
Reconstructing the ‘Reconquista’: Students’ negotiation of a Spanish master narrative1
A global label and its local appropriations. Representations of the Righteous Among the Nations in contemporary European museums1
Lack of bump in public events when recent events prevail1
“I think it is [the] mother who keeps things going”: The gendered division of labor in the transmission of memory of the Armenian Genocide1
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