[
Abeyta, Andrew A., Clay Routledge, and Jacob Juhl. “Looking Back to Move Forward: Nostalgia as a Psychological Resource for Promoting Relationship Goals and Overcoming Relationship Challenges.” Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 109 (2015): 1029-1044. Print.10.1037/pspi0000036
]Search in Google Scholar
[
Coe, Jonathan. Middle England. London: Penguin, 2018. Print.
]Search in Google Scholar
[
Dorling, Danny, and Sally Tomlinson. Rule Britannia: Brexit and the End of Empire. London: Biteback, 2020. Print.
]Search in Google Scholar
[
Edwards, Reginald. “Margaret Thatcher, Thatcherism and Education.” McGill Journal of Education 24.2 (1989): 203-214. Print.
]Search in Google Scholar
[
Grey, Chris. Brexit Unfolded: How No One Got What They Wanted and Why They Were Never Going To. London: Biteback, 2021. Print.
]Search in Google Scholar
[
Kenny, Michael. “Back to the Populist Future? Understanding Nostalgia in Contemporary Ideological Discourse.” Journal of Political Ideologies 22.3 (2021): 256-273. Print.10.1080/13569317.2017.1346773
]Search in Google Scholar
[
Lodge, David. Nice Work. London: Penguin, 1988. Print.
]Search in Google Scholar
[
Mengel, Ewald, and Michela Borzaga, eds. Trauma, Memory, and Narrative in the Contemporary South African Novel: Essays. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2012. Print.10.1163/9789401208451
]Search in Google Scholar
[
Mengel, Ewald. “The Contemporary South African Trauma Novel: Michiel Heyns’ Lost Ground (2011) and Marlene van Niekerk’s The Way of the Women (2008).” Anglia 138.1 (2020): 144-165. Print.10.1515/ang-2020-0007
]Search in Google Scholar
[
Sedikides, Constantine, Tom Wildschut, and Elena Stephan. “Nostalgia Shapes and Potentiates the Future.” The Social Psychology of Living Well. Ed. Joseph P. Forgas and Roy F. Baumeister. London: Routledge, 2018. 181-199. Print.10.4324/9781351189712-11
]Search in Google Scholar
[
Whitehead, Anne. Trauma Fiction. Edinburgh: Edinburgh UP, 2004. Print.10.1515/9780748666010
]Search in Google Scholar