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1. The Routledge Companion to Global Indigenous History: Edited by Ann McGrath and Lynette Russell. London: Routledge, 2021. Pp. 798. A$431 cloth, A$91 paper.

2. INTIMATE GEOPOLITICS: Love, Territory, and the Future on India's Northern Threshold: By SARA SMITH. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 2020; 182 pp; index. $120 (cloth), isbn 9780813598574; $29.95 (paper), isbn 9780813598567; $29.95 (electronic) isbn 9780813598581; $29.95 (PDF), isbn 9780813598604

3. The Holocaust and Australia: Refugees, Rejection, and Memory: By Paul Bartrop. London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2022. Pp. 278. A$39.99 paper.

4. Cinema Memories: A People's History of Cinema-Going in 1960s Britain: MELVYN STOKES, MATTHEW JONES and EMMA PETT (eds.), 2022, London, British Film Institute, pp. xii + 237, illus., £25 (paper).

5. Books Received.

6. Fragments from a Contested Past: Remembrance, Denial, and New Zealand History.: By Joanna Kidman, Vincent O'Malley, Liana MacDonald, Tom Road and Keziah Wallis. Wellington: Bridget Williams Books, 2022. Pp. 183. NZ$ $17.99 paper.

7. Where Caciques and Mapmakers Met: Border Making in Eighteenth-Century South America: By Jeffrey Alan Erbig, Jr. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2020. ISBN 978-1-4696-5504-8 (paper); 978-1-4696-5503-1 (cloth). Pp. [xx], 259, illus. US $24.95 (paper); US $90.00 (cloth)

8. Into the Loneliness: The Unholy Alliance of Ernestine Hill and Daisy Bates: By Eleanor Hogan. Sydney: NewSouth Publishing, 2021. Pp. 448. A$34.99 paper.

9. The legacy of loss: a contemporary take on the Bengal partition of 1947 through the lens of art.

10. Harvard man, American dough boy, Mississippi Jew: the papers of Samuel (Sam) Leyens Switzer in Virginia.

11. Persistence and change.

12. A CELEBRATORY FEMINIST AESTHETICS IN POSTFEMINIST TIMES.

13. Collecting traces of the outside world: an alternative collective memory of the lockdown.

14. Boat dwellers and maritime heritage in Hong Kong: coming ashore to Yue Kwong Chuen (Fishing Lights Estate).

15. 'How can you feel guilty for colonialism? it is a folly': colonial memory in the Italian populist radical right.

16. Saving the Reef: The Human Story Behind One of Australia's Greatest Environmental Treasures: By Rohan Lloyd. Brisbane: University of Queensland Press, 2022. Pp. 272. A$32.99 paper.

17. History, Memory and Memorabilia: Kamala Dasgupta and the Politics of Remembering Revolutionary Bengal.

18. From pharaoh to hero: contested constructions of Mubarak’s image in Egyptian post-uprising collective memory.

19. 'Changing the Course of a Super Tanker': A Study of Senior and Junior Managers' Enactments of a Transition Narrative.

20. The arctic migration route: local consequences of global crises.

21. Feminist spirituality and Roma artistic activism: the Afterlife of the uncanonised Saint Sara Kali.

22. In Vienna 2018: Searching for Creativity in Times of Crisis.

23. Call for Papers.

24. Making a narrative tourism map: the case of Jiaxing's 'Red Boat Spirit Map', China.

25. Where the personal intersects with the political: I've Been Here All the While: Black Freedom on Native Land, by Alaina E. Roberts, Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press, 2021. Cloth $34.95. Paper $24.95.

26. Screening the red army faction: Historical and cultural memory: CHRISTINA GERHARDT, 2018, New York and London, Bloomsbury academic, pp. xii + 307, illus., bibliography, index, $135.00 (cloth), $39.95 (paper).

27. Stefano Lecchi: A Photographic Pilgrimage of War.

28. Crafting arts-based stories of exile, resistance and trauma among Chileans in the UK.

29. An Exploration of Collective Memory in the Tourism Context.

30. Settler memory and Indigenous counter-memories: narrative struggles over the history of colonialism in Aotearoa New Zealand.

31. Halted narratives: The combative futurity of Sahrawi female militant's public memory.

32. Historical significance and the challenges of African historiography: analysis of teacher perspectives.

33. Tunisian youth as drivers of socio-cultural and political changes: glocality and effacement of cultural memory?

35. Uncanny parallels: exile, pandemic, and the Palestinian experience.

36. What value in preserving a fragment of building? A sociological enquiry into the museum preservation of Robin Hood Gardens.

37. Walking the stories of colonial ghosts: A method of/against the geographically mundane.

38. Footprints without feet: theatre as recourse to collective memory in Kashmir.

39. Reflecting on a painful Past: Journalism, Temporal Reflexivity and the Collective Memory of Child Sexual Abuse in a Local News Setting.

40. Gender debates on the stage of the urban memorial: glitter, graffiti, and bronze.

41. A Lineage of Leakers?

42. Accented memory: Russian immigrants reimagine the Israeli past.

43. Tangibles, intangibles and other tensions in the Culture and Communities Mapping Project.

44. Dealing with a violent past and its remnants in the present: the challenges of remembering the wars in Chechnya in the Chechen Diaspora in the EU.

45. The Alphabet War: Language, Collective Memory and National Identity in Contemporary Debates over National Minority Rights in Croatia.

46. Digital preservation and the sustainability of film heritage.

47. The cultural legacy of ‘We’ll Meet Again’: an exploration of the song’s historical and ongoing ties to gender and the nation at war.

48. Immigrant Ghosts and Haunted Heritages in Rani Manicka’s <italic>The Rice Mother</italic>.

49. From AIDS to COVID-19, and back again.

50. The South Slav 'Golden Age' and Gender Representation in Music.