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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 January 2019
1 Jeffrey K. Olick, 2007, The Politics of Regret. On Collective Memory and Historical Responsibility (New York, Routledge).
2 Jeffrey K. Olick, 2005, In the House of the Hangman: The Agonies of German Defeat, 1943-1949 (Chicago, University of Chicago Press).
3 Bill Niven, 2006, Germans as Victims: Remembering the Past in Contemporary Germany (Basingstoke, Palgrave).
4 Bernhard Forchtner, 2016, Lessons from the Past. Memory, Narrativity, Subjectivity (Basingstoke, Palgrave).
5 Aristotle, 1926, Art of Rhetoric (Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press—Loeb Classical Library, 193).
6 John Richardson, 2018, “Sharing values to safeguard the future: British Holocaust Memorial Day Commemoration as Epideictic rhetoric”, Discourse and Communication, 12(2): 171-191; Ruth Wodak, Rudolf de Cillia, Martin Revisigl and Karin Liebhart, 2009 [1999], The Discursive Construction of National Identity (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press).
7 Northrop Frye, 1957, Anatomy of Criticism: Four Essays (Princeton, Princeton University Press).