1. Arnold, B. (1991). The deposed princess of Vix: the need for an engendered European prehistory. In D. Walde & N. D. Willows (Eds.), The Archaeology of Gender: Proceedings of the 22nd Annual Chacmool Conference (pp. 366–374). Calgary: University of Calgary.
2. Arnold, B. (2005). Mobile men, sedentary women? Material culture as a marker of regional and supra-regional interaction in early Iron Age southwest Germany. In H. Dobrzanska, J. V. S. Megaw, & P. Poleska (Eds.), Celts on the Margin: Studies in European Cultural Interaction 7th c. BC–1st c. AD. Dedicated to Zenon Wozniak (pp. 17–26). Krakow: Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology of the Polish Academy of the Sciences.
3. Arnold, B. (2006). Gender in mortuary ritual. In S. M. Nelson (Ed.), Handbook of Gender Archaeology (pp. 137–170). Walnut Creek: AltaMira.
4. Arnold, B. (2010). Memory maps: the mnemonics of central European Iron Age burial mounds. In K. T. Lillios & V. Tsamis (Eds.), Material Mnemonics: Everyday Memory in Prehistoric Europe (pp. 147–173). Oxford: Oxbow.
5. Arnold, B. (2012a). The Vix Princess redux: a retrospective on European Iron Age gender and mortuary studies. In L. Prados Torreira (Ed.), La arqueología funeraria desde una perspectiva de género (pp. 215–232). Madrid: UA Ediciones.