Chapter 1: Introduction, Lucy Bond and Jessica Rapson.- Chapter 2: Roundtable, Cathy Caruth, Stef Craps, Marianne Hirsch, Jill Jarvis and Ann Rigney.- Section 1: Reading and Writing Memory and Literature.- Chapter 3: This isn't about me: literature, memory and memoirs, Susannah Radstone.- Chapter 4: Cross-reading Memory: Remediating Loss in Noel Streatfeild's Saplings, Jessica Rapson.- Chapter 5: How do you say Brexit in French? Gender, Class and Exceptionality, Clare Hemmings.- Chapter 6: Diary of a Disappearance: Palestinian Processes, Yasmine Shamma.- Section 2: Remediations and Intersections in Memory and Literature.
- Chapter 7: Looking at Race with 20/20 Vision: How are we (Mis)Remembering the Past?, Jon Ward.- Chapter 8: "No no / He is dead." A chapter in which a nine-minute video about Bertolt Brecht is not a nine-minute video about Bertolt Brecht, Kate Graham.- Chapter 9: Literature between Archive and Memory in David Mitchell's Cloud Atlas and Thomas Pynchon's Bleeding Edge, Pieter Vermeulen and Tom Chadwick.- Chapter 10: Literary Memory across the longue durée: The Odyssey as a Travelling Narrative, Astrid Erll.- Section 3: Local to Global Cultures in Memory and Literature.- Chapter 11: Nostalgia for the "Sweet Smiling Village" in Ireland: Local Colour Fiction, Homeland and Diaspora, Marguerite Corporaal.- Chapter 12: Migration and Memory, Mads Rosendhal Thomsen.
- Chapter 13: Dark Food: Sugar and Memory in Cristina García's novel Dreaming in Cuban, Alessandra Pino.- Chapter 14: Footsteps, Asha Chand.- Section 4: Postcolonial and Decolonial Approaches to Memory and Literature.- Chapter 15: Mutable Past, Dreamable Future: The Work of Memory and the Making of Postcolonial Angola in Jose Eduardo Agualusa's Novels, Sakiru Adebayo.- Chapter 16: Memory and coloniality: A dialogue across history, literature, and Country, Chris Healy and Tony Birch.- Chapter 17: "But What We Are is What Our Ancestors Did": Indigenous Postmemory in Tommy Orange's There There, Jessica Young. Chapter 18: What Remains: Postcolonial Ecofiction and Mnemonic Anchoring in Indra Sinha's Animal's People, Hanna Teichler.- Section 5: Environmental and More-than-Human Memory and Literature.
- Chapter 19: "Forget what it means to be human": Precarity, Posthumanism, and the Allegorical Imagination in Joshua Ferris's The Unnamed, Lucy Bond.- Chapter 20: Remembering Rain: Pluvial Poesis and Marronage in Dionne Brand's At the Full and Change of the Moon, Ifor Duncan.- Chapter 21: Remembering the Anthropocene in the Literature of War: Tim O'Brien's The Things They Carried, Rick Crownshaw.- Chapter 22: 'And then Country's Tone changed': Eco-Sonic Memory in Australian Pyrocene Fiction, Ben de Bruyn.- Section 6: Memory, Literature, Law and Justice.- Chapter 23: Guantánamo and the Production of Cosmopolitan Memory, Terri Tomsky.- Chapter 24: Justice for the Srebrenica Genocide? Law, Theatre and Memory, Anna Katila.- Chapter 25: In Search of A Spectral Other: the Ungrievable Tie and Time in Postsocialist China, Yawen Li.
- Chapter 26: Kafka and the right to memory, Noam Tirosh.