Terrorist attacks Vol. 49, 2019/1 - 208 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 BrestBy 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 PendletonReadings on the topicPages 153 to 176ReviewsPages 177 to 182Quick readingsVariaPages 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