Literature Cited
- Alderman, D. H. 2012. “History by the spoonful” in North Carolina: The textual politics of state highway historical markers. Southeastern Geographer 52 (4):355–73. doi: 10.1353/sgo.2012.0035.
- Anselin, L. 1995. Local indicators of spatial association—LISA. Geographical Analysis 27 (2):93–115. doi: 10.1111/j.1538-4632.1995.tb00338.x.
- Awbery, B. D., and S. Awbery. 2013. Why stop?: A guide to Texas roadside historical markers. 6th ed. Lanham, MD: Taylor Trade.
- Awbery, B. D., and C. Dooley. 1992. Why stop?: A guide to Texas historical roadside markers. 3rd ed. Houston, TX: Gulf Publishing.
- Awbery, B. D., and C. Dooley. 1999. Why stop?: A guide to Texas historical roadside markers. 4th ed. Houston, TX: Lone Star Books.
- Awbery, B. D., and C. Dooley. 2005. Why stop?: A guide to Texas historical roadside markers. 5th ed. Lanham, MD: Taylor Trade.
- Azaryahu, M. 1996. The power of commemorative street names. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 14 (3):311–30. doi: 10.1068/d140311.
- Azaryahu, M., and K. E. Foote. 2008. Historical space as narrative medium: On the configuration of spatial narratives of time at historical sites. GeoJournal 73 (3):179–94. doi: 10.1007/s10708-008-9202-4.
- Balossi, G. 2014. A corpus linguistic approach to literary language and characterization: Virginia Woolf’s The waves. Philadelphia, PA: John Benjamins.
- Beeman, C. J., and D. K. Utley. 2008. “A gallant cause”: The formative years of the Texas Historical Commission. Sound Historian 11:24–37.
- Behnken, B. D. 2011. Fighting their own battles: Mexican Americans, African Americans, and the struggle for civil rights in Texas. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.
- Boswell, A. 2018. Women in Texas history. College Station: Texas A&M University Press.
- Bright, C. F., K. N. Foster, A. Joyner, and O. Tanny. 2021. Heritage tourism, historic roadside markers and “just representation” in Tennessee, USA. Journal of Sustainable Tourism 29 (2–3):428–47. doi: 10.1080/09669582.2020.1768264.
- Brinkman, B. 2010. Invisible Texans: Seeking minorities in 100 years of Texas Official Historical Markers. Touchstone 29:58–65.
- Collins, L. 2011. How can semantic annotation help us to analyse the discourse of climate change in online user comments? Linguistik Online 70 (1):43–60. doi: 10.13092/lo.70.1743.
- Dooley, C., and B. Dooley. 1985. Why stop?: A guide to Texas historical roadside markers. 2nd ed. Houston, TX: Lone Star Books.
- Dwyer, O. J. 2004. Symbolic accretion and commemoration. Social & Cultural Geography 5 (3):419–35. doi: 10.1080/1464936042000252804.
- Fehrenbach, T. R. 2000. Lone star: A history of Texas and the Texans. 2nd ed. Boulder, CO: Da Capo Press.
- Foote, K. E. 1990. To remember and forget: Archives, memory, and culture. The American Archivist 53 (3):378–92. doi: 10.17723/aarc.53.3.d87u013444j3g6r2.
- Foote, K. E. 2003. Shadowed ground: America’s landscapes of violence and tragedy. 2nd ed. Austin: University of Texas Press.
- Foote, K. E., and M. Azaryahu. 2007. Toward a geography of memory: Geographical dimensions of public memory and commemoration. Journal of Political and Military Sociology 35 (1):125–44. doi: 10.2307/45372710.
- Foote, K. E., A. Toth, and A. Arvay. 2000. Hungary after 1989: Inscribing a new past on place. Geographical Review 90 (3):301–34. doi: 10.2307/3250856.
- Hanna, S. P., and E. F. Hodder. 2015. Reading the signs: Using a qualitative geographic information system to examine the commemoration of slavery and emancipation on historical markers in Fredericksburg, Virginia. Cultural Geographies 22 (3):509–29. doi: 10.1177/1474474014548161.
- Jordan, T. G. 1986. A century and a half of ethnic change in Texas, 1836–1986. The Southwestern Historical Quarterly 89 (4):385–422.
- Loewen, J. W. 2019. Lies across America: What our historic sites get wrong. 2nd ed. New York: The New Press.
- López-Rodríguez, C. I. 2022. Emotion at the end of life: Semantic annotation and key domains in a pilot study audiovisual corpus. Lingua 277:103401. doi: 10.1016/j.lingua.2022.103401.
- Lowenthal, D. 1975. Past time, present place: Landscape and memory. Geographical Review 65 (1):1–36. doi: 10.2307/213831.
- McEnery, T., and A. Hardie. 2012. Corpus linguistics: Method, theory, and practice. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
- McMichael, K. 2009. Sacred memories: The Civil War monument movement in Texas. Denton: Texas State Historical Association.
- Meinig, D. W. 1969. Imperial Texas: An interpretive essay in cultural geography. Austin: University of Texas Press.
- Moretti, F. 2005. Graphs, maps, trees: Abstract models for literary history. London: Verso.
- National Park Service. 2000. History in the National Park Service: Themes & concepts. Accessed September 2, 2023. http://npshistory.com/publications/history-themes-concepts.pdf.
- O’Sullivan, D., and D. J. Unwin. 2010. Geographic information analysis. 2nd ed. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.
- Rayson, P. 2003. Matrix: A statistical method and software tool for linguistic analysis through corpus comparison. PhD dissertation, Lancaster University.
- Rayson, P. 2008. From key words to key semantic domains. International Journal of Corpus Linguistics 13 (4):519–49. doi: 10.1075/ijcl.13.4.06ray.
- Schoen, H. 1938. Monuments erected by the state of Texas to commemorate the centenary of Texas independence: The report of the Commission of Control for Texas centennial celebrations. Austin, TX: The Steck Company.
- Texas Historical Commission (THC). 2011. Official Texas Historical Marker procedures. Accessed August 31, 2023. https://www.thc.texas.gov/public/upload/OFFICIAL%20TEXAS%20HISTORICAL%20MARKER%20PROCEDURES.pdf.
- Veselka, R. E. 2000. The courthouse square in Texas, ed. K. E. Foote. Austin: University of Texas Press.
- Virginia Department of Historic Resources. 2023. Highway markers. Accessed August 31, 2023. https://www.dhr.virginia.gov/programs/highway-markers/.