Terrorist attacks Vol. 49, 2019/1 - pagesPages 5 to 19What terror attacks do to societies: Fieldwork and case studiesBy Gérôme TrucPages 21 to 31The echo of bombs: The invention of indiscriminate terrorism (1893–1895)By Gilles FerraguPages 33 to 43“We are all Versaillais”: Letters sent to the Palace of Versailles following the 1978 terrorist attackBy Sylvain AntichanPages 45 to 62Taking civic action on November 27, 2015: Flying the French tricolor flag after the November 13 attacks in the city of Brest By Philippe Lagadec, Laurent Le Gall, Jean-François Simon, Mannaig Thomas, translated from the French by John AngellPages 63 to 75Guardians of memory: Mobilizations and conflicts of appropriation surrounding post-terrorist attack memorials in Madrid, London, and ParisBy Gérôme Truc, Maëlle Bazin, translated from the French by John AngellPages 77 to 88Emotions, neighbors, and nation-state identifications at the grassroots memorials for the Madrid train bombingsBy Cristina Sánchez-CarreteroPages 89 to 102“20 años sin justicia”By Sébastien Tank-StorperPages 103 to 118Memory under constraint: Commemorating the Beslan hostage-takingBy Anne Le HuérouPages 119 to 129Memory wound: Architectural controversies in Norway after the July 22 attacksBy Charlotte Heath-KellyPages 131 to 139Media, witnessing, and intersubjectivity after the 2005 London bombingsBy Matthew AllenPages 141 to 152Going underground with Murakami Haruki: Storytelling, oral history, and the “Japanese psyche” after the Tokyo subway sarin attackBy Mark PendletonPages 153 to 176ReviewsPages 177 to 182Quick readingsPages 183 to 193The two bodies of the cancer patient: Cancer politics, testimony, and asymmetrical knowledgeBy Gilles RaveneauPages 195 to 206Co-culturation, a tool for rethinking interethnic relations: Gypsy case studiesBy Bernard Formoso