References
- Browne, S. H., 1995. Reading, rhetoric, and the texture of public memory, Quarterly Journal of Speech 81 (1995), pp. 237–250.
- Bunch, L., 1992. Embracing controversy: Museum exhibitions and the politics of change, The Public Hestorian 14 (3) (1992), pp. 63–65.
- Comaroff, J., and Comaroff, J., 1992. Ethnography and the historical imagination. Boulder. CO: WestView Press; 1992.
- Confino, A., 1997. Collective memory and cultural history: Problems of method, The American Hestorical Review 102 (1997), pp. 1386–1403.
- Eisterhold, G. L., 1992. National Civil Rights Museum, Museum News 71 (1992), pp. 52–53.
- Fleming, J. E. (1994 December) African-America museums, history, and the American ideal, The Journal of American History, 81, 1020-1026..
- Phillips, K. R., 1999. A rhetoric of controversy, Western Journal of Communication 63 (1999), pp. 488–510.
- Savage, K., 1994. "The politics of memory: Black emancipation and the civil war movement". In: Gillis, J. E., ed. Communication: The politics of national identity. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press; 1994. pp. 127–149.
- Swarns, R. L. (2001, Dec. 10). Oppression in black and White: South African museum recreates apartheid. New York Times, E1, E3..
- Weisman, L. K. (1992). Discrimination by design: A feminist critique of the manmade envirnment Urbana: University of Illinois Press..
- Young, J.E., 1993. The texture of memory: Holocaust memorial and meaning. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press; 1993.
- Zelizer, B., 1995. Reading the past against the grain: The shape of memory studies, Critical Studies in Mass Communication (1995), pp. 11–12, 214-239.
- Foote, K. E., 1997. Shadowed ground. Austin: University of Texas Press; 1997.
- Gallagher, V., 1995. Remembering together: Rhetorical integration and the case of Martin Luther King, Jr., Memorial, The Southern Communication Journal 60 (1995), pp. 109–119.
- Honey, M., 1995. Doing public history at the National Civil Rights Museum: A conversation with Juanita Moore, Public Historian 17 (1) (1995), pp. 71–84.
- Hooper-Greenhill, E., 2000. Changing values in the art museum: Rethinking communication and learning, International Journal of Heritage Studies 6 (1) (2000), pp. 9–31.
- Kateriel, T., 1993. "Our future is where our past is": Studying heritage museums as ideological and performative arenas, Communication Monograhs 60 (1993), pp. 69–75.
- Macdonald, S., 1996. "Theorizing museums: An introduclion". In: Macdonald, S., and Fyfe, G., eds. Theorizing museums. Cambridge, MA: Blackwell; 1996. pp. 1–18.
- MuseumAfrica (n.d.). Johannesburg, South Africa: Author..
- National Civil Rights Museum (2000). Available at: http://www.midsouth.rr.com/civilrights/museum.html.
- Adams, R. M., 1999. Forums, not temples, The American Behavioral Scientist 42 (1999), pp. 968–976.
- Ardener, S. (1993). Ground rules and social maps for women: An introduction. In S. Ardener (Ed.), Women and space: Ground rules and social maps (rev. ed. pp. 1-30). Providence, RI: Berg..
- Armada, B.J. (1998). Memorial Agon: An interpretive tour of the National Civil Rights Museum. The Southern Communication Journal, 63, 235-243..
- Asmal, K., Asmal, L., and Roberts, R. S., 1996. Reconciliation through truth. Claremont, South Africa: David Philip; 1996.
- Bennett, T., 1995. The birth of the museum: History, theory, politics. London: Routledge; 1995.
- Blair, C., 1999. "Contemporary U.S. memorial sites as exemplars of rhertoric's materiality". In: Selzer, J., and Crowley, S., eds. Rhetorical bodies. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press; 1999. pp. 16–57.
- Blair, C., 2001. Reflections on criticism and bodies: Parables from public places, Western Journal of Communication 65 (2001), pp. 271–291.
- Boylan, P.J., 1991. Museums and cultural identity, Museums Journal 90 (10) (1991), pp. 29–33.
- Brown, R. H., and Davis-Brown, B., 1998. The making of memory: The politics of archives, libraries and museums in the construction of national consciousness, History of the Human Sciences 11 (1998), pp. (4)17–32.