Ackroyd, Peter (1991) Dickens. London: Minerva.
Allen, Michael (1988) Charles Dickens’ childhood. Basingstoke: Macmillan.
Allen, Walter Ernest, Slater, Michael, and Dickens Fellowship (London, England) (1970) Dickens 1970: centenary essays. London: Chapman & Hall for the Dickens Fellowship.
Alton, A.H. (1992) ‘Education in Victorian Fact and Fiction: Kay- Shuttleworth and Dickens’s Hard Times.’, Dickens Quarterly, 9.2, pp. 67–80. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=dickens quarterly.
Anderson, A. (2001) ‘Cosmopolitanism in Different Voices: Charles Dickens’s Little Dorrit and the Hermeneutics of Suspicion’, in The Powers of Distance: Cosmopolitanism and the Cultivation of Detachment. Princeton, [N.J]: Princeton University Press, pp. 63–90.
Anderson, Amanda (1993) Tainted Souls and Painted Faces: Rhetoric of Fallenness in Victorian Culture. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
Andrews, M. (2008) ‘Illustrations’, in A companion to Charles Dickens. Malden, Mass: Blackwell. Available at: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://www.kentuk.eblib.com/patron/FullRecord.aspx?p=350865.
Andrews, Malcolm (1994) Dickens and the grown-up child. Basingstoke: Macmillan.
Andrews, Malcolm (2006) Charles Dickens and his performing selves: Dickens and the public readings. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Armstrong, Nancy (1987) Desire and domestic fiction: a political history of the novel. New York: O.U.P.
Baird, J.D. (1977) ‘Divorce and Matrimonial Causes’: An Aspect of Hard Times’, Victorian Studies, 20, pp. 401–412. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=victorian studies.
Bakhtin, M. (1996) ‘Heteroglossia in the Novel: Little Dorrit’, in Charles Dickens. London: Longman.
Barnes, C. (2004) ‘Hard Times: Fancy as Practice’, Dickens Studies Annual, 34, pp. 233–258. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=dickens studies annual.
Bauer, M. (1999) ‘Foreign Language and Original Understanding in Little Dorrit’, in Dickens, Europe and the new worlds. Basingstoke: St. Martin’s P., pp. 155–168.
Beauchamp, G. (1989) ‘Mechanomorphism in Hard Times’, Studies in the Literary Imagination, 22.1, pp. 67–77. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=studies in the literary.
Belcher, D.D. (1985) ‘Dickens’s Mrs. Sparsit and the Politics of Service’, Dickens Quarterly, 2, pp. 92–98. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=dickens quarterly.
Bigelow, G. (2000) ‘Market Indicators: Banking and Domesticity in Dickens’s Bleak House’, ELH, 67, pp. 589–615.
Blain, V. (1985) ‘Double Vision and the Double Standard in Bleak House: A Feminist Perspective’, Literature and History, 11, pp. 31–46. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=literature and history.
Bloom, H. (1987a) Charles Dickens’s Hard times. New York: Chelsea House.
Bloom, H. (1987b) ‘The Industrial Novels: Hard Times’, in Charles Dickens’s Hard times. New York: Chelsea House.
Bloom, Harold (1987a) Charles Dickens. New York: Chelsea House.
Bloom, Harold (1987b) Charles Dickens. New York: Chelsea House.
Blount, T. (1965) ‘Dickens’s Slum Satire in Bleak House’, JSTOR: All Volumes and Issues - Browse - The Modern Language Review, 60, pp. 340–351.
Bodenheimer, Rosemarie (2007) Knowing Dickens. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
Bowen, John (2000) Other Dickens: Pickwick to Chuzzlewit. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Bowen, John and Patten, Robert L. (2006) Palgrave advances in Charles Dickens studies. Houndmills, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. Available at: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/kentuk/detail.action?docID=270617.
Brake, L. (2012) ‘Half Full                              Half Empty’, Journal of Victorian Culture, 17(2), pp. 222–229. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/13555502.2012.683149.
Brantlinger, P. (1971) ‘Dickens and the Factories’, Nineteenth-Century Fiction, 26, pp. 270–285. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=nineteenth century fiction.
Butt, J. and Tillotson, K. (no date) ‘Hard Times: The Problems of a Weekly Serial’, in Dickens at work. London: Methuen, pp. 201–209.
Butt, John Everett and Tillotson, Kathleen Mary (no date a) ‘Chapter 7 - The Topicality of Bleak House’, in Dickens at work. London: Methuen.
Butt, John Everett and Tillotson, Kathleen Mary (no date b) Dickens at work. London: Methuen.
Butterworth, R.D. (1992) ‘Dickens the Novelist: The Preston Strike and Hard Times’, Dickensian, 88.2(427), pp. 91–102.
Butterworth, R.D. (1993) ‘Dickens the Journalist: The Preston Strike and ‘On Strike’’, Dickensian, 89.2(430), pp. 129–138.
Butwin, J. (1977) ‘Hard Times: The News and the Novel’, Nineteenth-Century Fiction, 32.2, pp. 166–187. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=nineteenth century fiction.
Buzard, James (2005) ‘Anywhere’s Nowhere: Bleak House as Metropolitan Autoethnography’, in Disorienting Fiction: The Autoethnographic Work of Nineteenth-Century British Novels. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, pp. 105–156. Available at: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://www.kentuk.eblib.com/patron/FullRecord.aspx?p=445460.
Campbell, Elizabeth A. (2003) Fortune’s wheel: Dickens and the iconography of women’s time. Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press.
Camus, Marianne (2004) Gender and madness in the novels of Charles Dickens. Lewiston, N.Y.: Edwin Mellen Press.
Carey, John (no date) The violent effigy: a study of Dickens’ imagination. London: Faber and Faber.
Carlisle, J. (1982) ‘Little Dorrit: Necessary Fictions.’, in The sense of an audience: Dickens, Thackeray and George Eliot at mid-century. [Place of publication not identified]: Harvester Press, pp. 195–214.
Carnall, G. (1964) ‘Dickens, Mrs. Gaskell, and the Preston Strike’, Victorian studies: a quarterly journal of the humanities, arts and sciences, 8, pp. 31–38.
Carr, J.F. (1995) ‘Writing as a Woman: Dickens, Hard Times and Feminine Discourses’, in David Copperfield and Hard times: Charles Dickens. Basingstoke: St. Martin’s Press, pp. 197–218.
Carr, J.F. (1996) ‘Writing as a Woman: Dickens, Hard Times and Feminine Discourses’, in Charles Dickens. London: Longman, pp. 159–177.
Chandler, James (2013) An archaeology of sympathy: the sentimental mode in literature and cinema. Chicago, Illinois: The University of Chicago Press.
Chapman, Raymond (1994) Forms of speech in Victorian fiction. London: Longman.
Childers, J. (2006) ‘Politicized Dickens: The Journalism of the 1850s’, in Palgrave advances in Charles Dickens studies. Houndmills, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 198–215. Available at: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://www.kentuk.eblib.com/patron/FullRecord.aspx?p=270617.
Childers, J. (2009) ‘So, this is Christmas’’, in Contemporary Dickens. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, pp. 113–130.
Chittick, Kathryn (1990) Dickens and the 1830’s. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Christ, Carol T. and Jordan, John O. (1995) Victorian literature and the Victorian visual imagination. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Cohen, Jane R. (1980) Charles Dickens and his original illustrators. Columbus: Ohio State University Press.
Cohen, M. (1998) ‘Dickens II: Little Dorrit in a Home: Institutionalization and Form’, in Professional domesticity in the Victorian novel: women, work, and home. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 100–124.
Cohen, Monica F. (1998) Professional domesticity in the Victorian novel: women, work, and home. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Coles, N. (1986) ‘The Politics of Hard Times: Dickens the Novelist Versus Dickens the Reformer’, Dickens Studies Annual, 15, pp. 145–179. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=dickens studies annual.
Collins, P. (1963) ‘Good Intentions and Bad Results’, in Dickens and education. London: Macmillan: New York, St. Martin’s Press, pp. 148–155.
Collins, P. (1971) ‘Hard times (1854)’, in Charles Dickens: the critical heritage. London: Routledge, pp. 300–355. Available at: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://www.kentuk.eblib.com/patron/FullRecord.aspx?p=168688.
Collins, P. (1973) ‘Dickens and London’, in The Victorian city: images and realities. Boston: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
Collins, P. (1980) ‘Dickens and Industrialism’, Studies in English Literature, 20, pp. 651–673. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=studies in english literature.
Collins, Philip (1971) Charles Dickens: the critical heritage. London: Routledge. Available at: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/kentuk/detail.action?docID=168688.
Collins, Philip Arthur William (1963) Dickens and education. London: Macmillan: New York, St. Martin’s Press.
Collins, Philip Arthur William (1981) Dickens, interviews and recollections. 1st ed. London: Macmillan.
Collins, Philip Arthur William (1994) Dickens and crime. 3rd ed. Basingstoke: Macmillan.
Connor, S. (1985) ‘Deconstructing Dickens: Bleak House’, in Charles Dickens. Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 59–88.
Connor, S. (1995) ‘Deconstructing Dickens: Hard Times’, in David Copperfield and Hard times: Charles Dickens. Basingstoke: Macmillan, pp. 155–170.
Connor, Steven (1985) Charles Dickens. Oxford: Blackwell.
Connor, Steven (1996a) Charles Dickens. London: Longman.
Connor, Steven (1996b) Charles Dickens. London: Longman.
Cook, Chris (1999) The Longman companion to Britain in the nineteenth century, 1815-1914. London: Longman.
Coveney, Peter (1967) The image of childhood: the individual and society: a study of the theme in English literature. Revised ed. Harmondsworth: Penguin.
Cronin, M. (1999) ‘Henry Gowan, William Makepeace Thackeray, and “The Dignity of Literature” Controversy’, Dickens Quarterly, 16(2), pp. 104–145. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=dickens quarterly.
Crosby, Christina (1991) ‘History and the Melodramatic Fix’, in The Ends of History: Victorians and the Woman Question. New York: Routledge, pp. 69–109.
Daleski, H.M. (1992) ‘Large Loose Baggy Monsters and Little Dorrit’, Dickens Studies Annual, 21, pp. 131–142. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=dickens studies annual.
Danahay, M. (1991) ‘Housekeeping and Hegemony in Bleak House’, Studies in the Novel, 23, pp. 416–431. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=studies in the novel.
David, Deirdre (2001) The Cambridge companion to the Victorian novel. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Available at: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://cco.cambridge.org/login2%3Fdest%3D%252Fbook%253Fid%253Dccol0521641500_CCOL0521641500.
Davis, P. (1990) ‘Chapters 1-3’, in The lives and times of Ebenezer Scrooge. New Haven: Yale University Press.
Davis, Paul (1999) The Penguin Dickens companion: the essential reference to his life and work. London: Penguin.
Dever, C. (1995) ‘Broken Mirror, Broken Words: Autobiography, Prosopopeia, and the Dead Mother in Bleak House’, Studies in the Novel, 27, pp. 42–62. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=studies in the novel.
Dickens, Charles et al. (1965) The letters of Charles Dickens. Pilgrim ed. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Dickens, Charles (1979) Dickens on England and the English. [Place of publication not identified]: Harvester Press.
Dickens, Charles (1994) Little Dorrit. London: Penguin.
Dickens, Charles (2000) ‘The Uncommercial Traveller: Night Walks’, in Drew, John and Slater, Michael (eds) The uncommercial traveller and other papers, 1859-70. London: Dent, pp. 148–156.
Dickens, Charles. & Fielding, K.J. (no date) The Speeches of Charles Dickens. Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
Dickens, Charles, Ford, George Harry, and Monod, Sylvère (1977) Bleak house: an authoritative and annotated text, illustrations, a note on the text, genesis and composition, backgrounds, criticism. 1st ed. New York: Norton.
Dickens, Charles, Kaplan, Fred, and Monod, Sylvère (2001a) Hard times: an authoritative text, contexts, criticism. 3rd ed. / edited by Fred Kaplan, Sylvère Monod. London: W.W. Norton & Co.
Dickens, Charles, Kaplan, Fred, and Monod, Sylvère (2001b) Hard times: an authoritative text, contexts, criticism. 3rd ed. / edited by Fred Kaplan, Sylvère Monod. London: W.W. Norton & Co.
Dickens, Charles and Leech, John (1946) A Christmas carol: in prose ; being a ghost story of Christmas. Harmondsworth: Penguin.
Dickens, Charles (Pascoe, D. ed) (1997a) Selected Journalism 1850-1870. London: Penguin Classics.
Dickens, Charles (Pascoe, D. ed) (1997b) Selected Journalism 1850-1870. London: Penguin Classics.
Dickens Society (no date) ‘Dickens quarterly’.
‘Dickens studies annual’ (no date).
Douglas-Fairhurst, R. (2009) ‘Dickens: Going Astray’’, in The Cambridge companion to English novelists. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Douglas-Fairhurst, Robert (2011) Becoming Dickens: the invention of a novelist. Cambridge, Mass: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.
Drew, John M. L. (2003a) Dickens the journalist. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan. Available at: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://www.kentuk.eblib.com/patron/FullRecord.aspx?p=343818.
Drew, John M. L. (2003b) Dickens the journalist. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan. Available at: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://www.kentuk.eblib.com/patron/FullRecord.aspx?p=343818.
Dugger, J.M. (2002) ‘Editorial Interventions: Hard Times’s Industrial Imperative’, Dickens Studies Annual, 32, pp. 151–177. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=dickens studies annual.
Dvorak, W. (1991) ‘The Misunderstood Pancks: Money and the Rhetoric of Disguise in Little Dorrit’, Studies in the Novel, 23(3), pp. 339–347. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=studies in the novel.
Easson, A. (1991) ‘A Novel Scarcely Historical? Time and History in Dickens’s Little Dorrit’, Essays and Studies, 44, pp. 27–40. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=essays and studies.
Easson, Angus and English Association (1991) ‘History and the novel’, Issued as: Essays and studies.-Vol. 41 (1991).
Eigner, E. (1993) ‘Dogmatism and Puppyism: The Novelist, the Reviewer, and the Serious Subject: The Case of Little Dorrit’, Dickens Studies Annual, 22, pp. 217–237. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=dickens studies annual.
Eigner, Edwin M. (1989) The Dickens pantomime. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Elam, D. (1996) ‘Another day done and I’m deeper in debt’: Little Dorrit and the Debt of the Everyday’, in Dickens refigured: bodies, desires, and other histories. Manchester: Manchester University Press, pp. 157–177.
Ericksen, D.H. (1983) ‘Bleak House and Victorian Art and Illustration: Charles Dickens’s Visual Narrative Style’, Journal of Narrative Technique, 13, pp. 31–46. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=journal of narrative technique.
Eysell, Joanne (2005) A medical companion to Dickens’s fiction. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang.
Fabrizio, R. (1995) ‘Wonderful No-Meaning: Language and the Psychopathology of Family in Hard Times’, in David Copperfield and Hard times: Charles Dickens. Basingstoke: St. Martin’s Press, pp. 219–254.
Fielding, K.J. (1954) ‘The Battle for Preston’, Dickensian, 50, pp. 159–162.
Fielding, K.J. (1958) ‘The Weekly Serialization of Dickens’s Novels’, Dickensian, 54, pp. 134–141.
Fielding, K.J. and Smith, A. (1970) ‘Hard Times and the Factory Controversy: Dickens vs. Harriet Martineau’, Nineteenth-Century Fiction , 24(4), pp. 404–427. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=Nineteenth-Century Fiction .
Flint, Kate (1986a) Dickens. Brighton: Harvester.
Flint, Kate (1986b) Dickens. Brighton: Harvester.
Flint, Kate (2000) The Victorians and the visual imagination. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Ford, George Harry (1974) Dickens and his readers: aspects of novel-criticism since 1836. New York: Gordian Press.
Ford, George Harry and Lane, Lauriat (1961) The Dickens critics. Edited by Ford, George H. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press.
Forster, John and Hoppé, A. J. (1966) The life of Charles Dickens. New ed. London: Dent.
Fowler, R. (1996) ‘Polyphony and Problematic in Hard Times’, in Charles Dickens. London: Longman, pp. 100–116.
Furneaux, Holly and Dawsonera (2009) Queer Dickens: erotics, families, masculinities. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Available at: http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=KentUniv&isbn=9780191573200.
Furniss, Harry and Cordery, Gareth (2005) An Edwardian’s view of Dickens and his illustrators: Harry Furniss’s ‘A sketch of Boz’. Greensboro, N.C.: ELT Press, English Dpt., University of North Carolina.
Gallagher, C. (1995) ‘Family and Society in Hard Times’, in David Copperfield and Hard times: Charles Dickens. Basingstoke: Macmillan, pp. 171–196.
Gallagher, Catherine (1985) The industrial reformation of English fiction: social discourse and narrative form, 1832-1867. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Gallagher, Catherine (2006) The body economic: life, death, and sensation in political economy and the Victorian novel [electronic resource]. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. Available at: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/kentuk/detail.action?docID=457799.
Gallagher, Catherine and Greenblatt, Stephen (2000) Practicing new historicism. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Garis, Robert (1965) The Dickens theatre: a reassessment of the novels. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Gilbert, Elliot L. (1989) Critical Essays on Charles Dickens’ ‘Bleak House’. Boston: G K Hall & Co, US.
Gillooly, Eileen and David, Deirdre (2009) Contemporary Dickens. Columbus: Ohio State University Press.
Gilmour, R. (1967) ‘The Gradgrind School: Political Economy in the Classroom’, Victorian studies: a quarterly journal of the humanities, arts and sciences, 11, pp. 207–224.
Gilmour, Robin (1993) The Victorian period: the intellectual and cultural context of English literature, 1830-1890. London: Longman.
Glavin, John (2003) Dickens on screen. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Gray, Paul E. (1969) ‘Hard Times’: A Collection of Critical Essays. 1st edition. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Pretice Hall.
Greenwell, M. (2000) ‘Dickens in Africa: “Africanizing” Hard Times’, in Dickens and the children of empire. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave, pp. 173–183. Available at: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://www.kentuk.eblib.com/patron/FullRecord.aspx?p=735932.
Greiner, Rae (2012) Sympathetic realism in nineteenth-century British fiction. Baltimore, Maryland: The Johns Hopkins University Press.
Gribble, J. (2004) ‘Why the Good Samaritan was a Bad Economist: Dickens’, Literature & Theology , 18(4), pp. 427–441. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=literature and theology.
Gross, John J. and Pearson, Gabriel (no date) Dickens and the twentieth century. London: Routledge and Paul.
Grossman, Jonathan (2012) Charles Dickens’s networks: passenger transport and the novel. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
Guida , F. (2006) ‘A Christmas Carol’ and Its Adaptations: A Critical Examination of Dickens’s Story and Its Productions on Screen and Television. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Co Inc.
Guy, Josephine M. (1996a) The Victorian social-problem novel: the market, the individual and communal life. Basingstoke: Macmillan.
Guy, Josephine M. (1996b) The Victorian social-problem novel: the market, the individual and communal life. Basingstoke: Macmillan.
Guy, Josephine M. (1998) The Victorian Age: an anthology of sources and documents. London: Routledge.
Hack, D. (1999) ‘“Sublimation Strange”: Allegory and Authority in Bleak House’, ELH, 66, pp. 129–156.
Hardy, Barbara Nathan (1970) The moral art of Dickens: essays. London: Athlone P.
Harris, Beth (2005) Famine and fashion: needlewomen in the nineteenth century. Alershot: Ashgate. Available at: http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0417/2004008773.html.
Harris, W.V. (2002) ‘Contextualizing Coram’s Foundling Hospital: Dickens’s Use and Readers’ Interests.’, Reader, 43, pp. 1–19.
Hartley, J. (2002) ‘Little Dorrit in Real Time: The Embedded Text’, Publishing History, 52, pp. 5–18. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=publishing history.
Harvey, John Robert (1970) Victorian novelists and their illustrators. London: Sidgwick & Jackson.
Hays, Michael (1992) ‘Hamlet, Little Dorrit, and the History of Character’, in Critical Conditions: Regarding the Historical Moment. Minneapolis, Minn: University of Minnesota Press, pp. 82–96.
Heather, T. (2007) ‘Sentiment and Vision in Charles Dickens’s A Christmas Carol and The Cricket on the Hearth’,   19: interdisciplinary studies in the long nineteenth century [Preprint]. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=T_W_A&C=  19: interdisciplinary studies in the long nineteenth century .
Hennelly, M.M., Jr. (1997) ‘The Games of the Prison Children’ in Dickens’s Little Dorrit’, Nineteenth-Century Contexts , 20(2), pp. 187–213. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=nineteenth century contexts.
Herbert, C. (2002) ‘Filthy Lucre: Victorian Ideas of Money’, Victorian Studies, 44(2), pp. 185–213. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=victorian studies.
Hochman, B. (no date) ‘On the Bleakness of Bleak House’, Rereading Texts, Rethinking Critical Presuppositions [Preprint].
Hollington, M. (1981) ‘Dickens the Flâneur’, The Dickensian, 77, pp. 71–87.
Hollington, M. (1984) ‘The New Picturesque: Pictures From Italy and Little Dorrit’, in Dickens and the grotesque. London: Croom Helm, pp. 138–152.
Hollington, M. (1992) ‘Physiognomy in Hard Times’, Dickens Quarterly, 9(2), pp. 58–66. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=dickens quarterly.
Holloway, J. (1962) ‘Hard Times: A History and Criticism’, in Dickens and the twentieth century. London: Routledge and Paul, pp. 159–174.
Horton, Susan R. (1981) The reader in the Dickens world: style and response. London: Macmillan.
Houghton, Walter Edwards (1957) The Victorian frame of mind, 1830-1870. New Haven: Published for Wellesley College by Yale University Press.
House, Humphrey (1942) The Dickens world. 2nd ed. London: Oxford University Press.
Houston, Gail Turley (1994) ‘Unmindful of Her Wants’: Dickens’s Little Women and the Accession of Desire in Bleak House and Little Dorrit’, in Consuming Fictions: Gender Class and Hunger in Dickens’ Novels. Carbondale, Ill: Southern Illinois University Press, pp. 123–153.
Humpherys, A. (1996) ‘Louisa Gradgrind’s Secret: Marriage and Divorce in Hard Times’, Dickens Studies Annual, 25, pp. 177–195. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=dickens studies annual.
Ingham, P. (1986) ‘Dialect as “Realism”: Hard Times and the Industrial Novel’, Review of English Studies, 37(148), pp. 518–527. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=review of english studies.
Ingham, P. (1996) ‘Nobody’s Fault: the scope of the negative in Little Dorrit’, in Dickens refigured: bodies, desires, and other histories. Manchester: Manchester University Press, pp. 98–116.
Ingham, Patricia (2000) Invisible writing and the Victorian novel: readings in language and ideology. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
Irwin, M. (1979) Picturing: description and illusion in the nineteenth-century novel. [Place of publication not identified]: Allen & Unwin.
Jaffe, A. (1994) ‘Spectacular Sympathy: Visuality and Ideology in Dickens’s A Christmas Carol’’, PMLA, 109, pp. 254–265.
Jagose, A. (1998) ‘Remembering Miss Wade: Little Dorrit and the Historicizing of Female Perversity’, GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies, 4(3), pp. 423–451.
James, L. (1974) Fiction for the working man 1830-50: a study of the literature produced for the working classes in early Victorian urban England. [Place of publication not identified]: Penguin University Books.
Jefferson, D.W. (1985) ‘Mr. Gradgrind’s Facts’, Essays in Criticism, 35(3), pp. 197–212. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=essays in criticism.
John, J. (2008) ‘Getting Down into the Masses”: Dickens, Journalism and the Personal Mode’, in Shaping Belief: Culture Politics, and Religion in Nineteenth-Century Writing. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, pp. 189–207.
John, J. (ed.) (no date) Dickens and Modernity. [Place of publication not identified]: D.S. Brewer.
John, Juliet (2001) Dickens’ villains: melodrama, character, popular culture. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
John, Juliet (2010) Dickens and mass culture. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Johnson, Edgar (1977) Charles Dickens: his tragedy and triumph. Revised and abridged ed. London: Allen Lane.
Johnson, P.E. (1989) ‘Hard Times and the Structure of Industrialism: The Novel as Factory’, Studies in the Novel, 21(2), pp. 128–137. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=studies in the novel.
Jordan, John O. (2001) The Cambridge companion to Charles Dickens. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Available at: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://cco.cambridge.org/login2%3Fdest%3D%252Fbook%253Fid%253Dccol0521660165_CCOL0521660165.
Jordan, John O. (2010) Supposing Bleak House. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press.
Judith Newton (no date) ‘Historicisms New and Old: “Charles Dickens” Meets Marxism, Feminism, and West Coast Foucault’, Feminist Studies, Vol. 16(No. 3).
Kaplan, Fred (1988) Dickens: a biography. 1st ed. New York: Morrow.
Kearns, K. (1992) ‘A Tropology of Realism in Hard Times’, ELH, 59(4), pp. 857–881.
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Kincaid, James R. (1971) Dickens and the rhetoric of laughter. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Kitton, Frederic George (1975) Dickens and his illustrators: Cruikshank, Seymour, Buss, ‘Phiz’, Cattermole, Leech, Doyle,Stanfield, Machise, Tennier, Frank Stone, Landseer, Palmer, Topham, Marcus Stone, and Luke Fildes. New York: AMS Press.
Klaver, C. (1999) ‘Natural Values and Unnatural Agents: Little Dorrit and the Mid-Victorian Crisis in Agency’, Dickens Studies Annual, 28, pp. 13–43. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=dickens studies annual.
Knezevic, B. (2003) ‘Banking on Sentiments: A Melodramatic Civil Society in Little Dorrit and A Tale of Two Cities’, in Figures of finance capitalism: writing, class, and capital in the age of Dickens. New York: Routledge, pp. 147–188. Available at: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://www.kentuk.eblib.com/patron/FullRecord.aspx?p=182813.
Krueger, Christine L. (2002) ‘Revisiting the Serial Format of Dickens’s Novels; or, Little Dorrit Goes a Long Way’, in Functions of Victorian Culture at the Present Time. Athens: Ohio University Press, pp. 155–168.
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Lapinski, P.P. (1994) ‘Dickens’s Miss Wade and J. S. LeFanu’s Carmilla: The Female Vampire in Little Dorrit’, Dickens Quarterly, 11(2), pp. 81–87. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=dickens quarterly.
Larson, Janet L. (no date) ‘The Seer, the Preacher, and the Living Gospel: Vision and Revision in Little Dorrit’, in Dickens and the Broken Scripture. Illustrated edition. University of Georgia Press, pp. 177–278.
Leary, P. (2005) ‘Googling the Victorians’, Journal of Victorian Culture, 10(1), pp. 72–86. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3366/jvc.2005.10.1.72.
Leavis, F. R. and Leavis, Q. D. (1970) Dickens: the novelist. London: Chatto & Windus.
Leavis, F.R. (1948) ‘Hard Times : An Analytic Note’, in The great tradition, George Eliot, Henry James, Joseph Conrad. [Place of publication not identified]: Chatto & Windus, pp. 227–248.
Leavis, F.R. (1966) ‘Hard Times : An Analytic Note’, in Hard times: an authoritative text, contexts, criticism. 3rd ed. / edited by Fred Kaplan, Sylvère Monod. London: W.W. Norton & Co, pp. 339–359.
Leavis, F.R. (1970) ‘Chapter 7’, in Dickens: the novelist. London: Chatto & Windus.
Ledger, Sally (2007) Dickens and the popular radical imagination. Cambridge: CUP.
Ledger, Sally and Furneaux, Holly (2011) Charles Dickens in context. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Lester, Valerie Browne (2006) Phiz: the man who drew Dickens. London: Pimlico.
Lodge, D. (1966) ‘The Rhetoric of Hard Times’, in Language of fiction: essays in criticism and verbal analysis of the English novel. London: Columbia U.P., pp. 145–163.
Lodge, D. (1981) ‘How Successful is Hard Times’, in Working with structuralism: essays and reviews on nineteenth-and twentieth-century literature. [Place of publication not identified]: Routledge & Kegan Paul, pp. 37–45.
Lougy, R.E. (1972) ‘Dickens’ Hard Times: The Romance as Radical Literature’, Dickens Studies Annual, 2, pp. 237–254. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=dickens studies annual.
Lucas, J. (1992) ‘Little Dorrit: The World’s City’, in Charles Dickens, the major novels. New York: Penguin, pp. 100–123.
Lupton, C. (2003) ‘Walking on Flowers: The Kantian Aesthetics of Hard Times’, ELH, 70(1), pp. 237–254.
Lutman, S.F. (1980) ‘Reading Illustrations’, in Reading the Victorian novel: detail into form. London: Vision.
Malone, C.N. (1989) ‘The Fixed Eye and the Rolling Eye: Surveillance and Discipline in Hard Times’, Studies in the Novel, 21(1), pp. 14–26. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=studies in the novel.
Mancroft, Debra N. & Trela, D.J. (1996) ‘London, Dickens, & the Theatre of Homelessness’, in Victorian Urban Settings. Annotated edition. New York: Taylor & Francis Inc.
Manning, S. (1991) ‘Social Criticism and Textual Subversion in Little Dorrit’, Dickens Studies Annual, 20, pp. 127–147. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=dickens studies annual.
Manning, Sylvia Bank (1984) Hard times: an annotated bibliography. London: Garland Pub.
Marcus, Steven (1966) The Other Victorians: a study of sexuality and pornography in mid-nineteenth-century England. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson.
Marcus, Steven (1985) Dickens from Pickwick to Dombey. London: W.W. Norton.
Markels, J. (2003) ‘Class in Dickens from Hard Times to Little Dorrit’, in The Marxian Imagination: Representing Class in Literature. New York: Monthly Review Press, pp. 31–46.
Marsh, J. (2001) ‘Dickens and Film’, in The Cambridge companion to Charles Dickens. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Available at: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://cco.cambridge.org/login2%3Fdest%3D%252Fbook%253Fid%253Dccol0521660165_CCOL0521660165.
Marsh, J. (2009) ‘Dickensian "Dissolving Views”: The Magic Lantern, Visual Story-telling and the Victorian Technological Imagination’, Comparative Critical Studies , 6, pp. 333–346. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=Comparative Critical Studies .
Marsh, J.L. (1993) ‘Inimitable Double Vision: Dickens, Little Dorrit, Photography, Film.’, Dickens Studies Annual, 22, pp. 239–282. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?C=dickens studies annual&s=AC_T_B&V=1.0&L=DF7SM3XP4S&C=&S=SC&N=10.
McKnight, Natalie (1993) Idiots, Madmen and Other Prisoners in Dickens. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
Metz, N.A. (1989) ‘The Blighted Tree and the Book of Fate: Female Models of Storytelling in Little Dorrit’, Dickens Studies Annual, 18, pp. 221–242. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=dickens studies annual.
Metz, N.A. (1990) ‘Little Dorrit’s London: Babylon Revisited’, Victorian Studies, 33(3), pp. 465–486. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=victorian studies.
Miller, D. A. (1988) The novel and the police. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Miller, D.A. (1983) ‘Discipline in Different Voices: Bureaucracy, Police, Family, and Bleak House.’, Representations, 1, pp. 59–89.
Miller, Hillis.J. (1971) ‘Introduction’, in Bleak House. Harmondsworth: Penguin.
Miller, Hillis.J. (2001) ‘Moments of Decision in Bleak House’, The Cambridge companion to Charles Dickens, Cambridge companions to literature. Available at: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://cco.cambridge.org/login2%3Fdest%3D%252Fbook%253Fid%253Dccol0521660165_CCOL0521660165.
Miller, Joseph H. (1959a) Charles Dickens: the world of his novels. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, pp. 226–227.
Miller, Joseph H. (1959b) Charles Dickens: the world of his novels. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press.
Monod, S. (1968) ‘Dickens at Work on the Text of Hard Times’, Dickensian, 64, pp. 86–99.
Monod, Sylvere (1968a) ‘Dickens as Social Novelist’, in Dickens the Novelist. Norman, Okla: University of Oklahoma Press, pp. 444–452.
Monod, Sylvere (1968b) ‘The Evolution of Dickens’ Art in Hard Times and A Tale of Two Cities’, in Dickens the Novelist. Norman, Okla: University of Oklahoma Press, pp. 456–469.
Moon, S.Y. (2001) ‘Education, Class, and the Ideology of Nationhood in Hard Times’, 19-se’gi-yeong’eo’gwon-munhag = Nineteenth century literature in English (Journal, magazine, 2004) [WorldCat.org], 5, pp. 169–189.
Moore, Grace (2004) Dickens and empire: discourses of class, race and colonialism in the works of Charles Dickens. Aldershot: Ashgate.
Morgentaler, Goldie (2000) Dickens and heredity: when like begets like. Basingstoke: St. Martin’s Press.
Mussell, J. (no date) ‘Ownership, Institutions, and Methodology - Journal of Victorian Culture - Volume 13, Issue 1’. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3366/E1355550208000118.
Nead, Lynda (1988) Myths of sexuality: representations of women in Victorian Britain. Oxford: Blackwell.
Nead, Lynda (2000) Victorian Babylon: people, streets and images in nineteenth-century London. London: Yale University Press.
Newsom, R. (2000) ‘Love and Death’, in Charles Dickens revisited. New York: Twayne Publishers, pp. 131–160.
Nisbet, A. (1971) Dickens centennial essays. [Place of publication not identified]: California U.P.
Novak, D. (1997) ‘If Re-Collecting Were Forgetting: Forged Bodies and Forgotten Labor in Little Dorrit’, Novel: A Forum on Fiction, 31(1), pp. 21–44. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=novel : a forum on fiction.
Nunokawa, J. (1987) ‘Getting and Having: Some Versions of Possession in Little Dorrit’, in Charles Dickens. New York: Chelsea House, pp. 317–336.
Nunokawa, J. (1994) ‘Domestic Securities: Little Dorrit and the Fictions of Property’, in The afterlife of property: domestic security and the Victorian novel. Oxford: Princeton University Press, pp. 15–39.
O’Gorman, Francis (2002) The Victorian novel. Malden, MA: Blackwell Pub.
Page , N. (ed) (1979) Dickens: ‘Hard Times’, ‘Great Expectations’ and ‘Our Mutual Friend’. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
Parker, David (2005) Christmas and Charles Dickens. New York: AMS Press.
Paroissien, D. (1978) ‘Dickens and the Cinema’, Dickens studies annual, 7, pp. 68–80.
Paroissien, D. (2004) ‘Ideology, Pedagogy, and Demonology: The Case Against Industrialized Education in Dickens’s Fiction’, Dickens Studies Annual, 34, pp. 259–282. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=dickens studies annual.
Paroissien, David (2008) A companion to Charles Dickens. Malden, Mass: Blackwell. Available at: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/kentuk/detail.action?docID=350865.
Patten, Robert L. (1992) George Cruikshank’s life, times, and art. London: Lutterworth.
Peck, John (1995) David Copperfield and Hard times: Charles Dickens. Basingstoke: St. Martin’s Press.
Peltason, T. (1992) ‘Esther’s Will’, ELH, 59, pp. 671–691.
Peters, L. (1995) ‘The Histories of Two Self-Tormentors: Orphans and Power in Little Dorrit’, Dickensian, 91(3), pp. 187–96.
Philpotts, T. (1990) ‘To Working Men’ and "The People’: Dickens’s View of Class Relations in the Months Preceding Little Dorrit’, Dickens Quarterly, 7(2), pp. 262–275. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=dickens quarterly.
Philpotts, T. (1991) ‘The Real Marshalsea’, The Dickensian, 87(3), pp. 130–145.
Philpotts, T. (1993) ‘Trevelyan, Treasury, and Circumlocution’, Dickens studies annual, 22, pp. 283–301.
Philpotts, T. (2000) ‘The “Civil Service” and “Administrative Reform”: The Blame Game in Little Dorrit’, Dickens Quarterly, 17(2), pp. 14–21. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?C=dickens quarterly&s=AC_T_B&V=1.0&L=DF7SM3XP4S&C=&S=SC&N=10.
Philpotts, Trey (2003) The companion to Little Dorrit. Mountfield, Roberstbridge, E. Sussex: Helm Information.
Pittock, M. (1998) ‘Taking Dickens to Task: Hard Times Once More’, Cambridge Quarterly, 27(2), pp. 107–128. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_M&C=Cambridge Quarterly .
Poovey, M. (2001) ‘The Structure of Anxiety in Political Economy and Hard Times.’, in Knowing the past: Victorian literature and culture. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, pp. 151–171.
Poovey, Mary (1989) Uneven developments: the ideological work of gender in mid- Victorian England. London: Virago.
Pykett, L. (2002) ‘The Inquest into Contemporary Civilization’, in Charles Dickens. Basingstoke: Palgrave.
Pykett, Lyn (2002) Charles Dickens. Basingstoke: Palgrave.
Rainsford, D. (1995) ‘Flatness and Ethical Responsibility in Little Dorrit’, Victorian Newsletter, 88, pp. 11–18. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=victorian newsletter.
Rem, Tore (2002) Dickens, melodrama, and the parodic imagination. New York: AMS Press.
Retan, K.A. (1994) ‘Lower-Class Angels in the Middle-Class House: The Domestic Woman’s ’, Dickens Studies Annual, 23. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=dickens studies annual.
Retseck, J. (1998) ‘Sexing Miss Wade’, Dickens Quarterly, 15(4), pp. 217–225. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=dickens quarterly.
Robbins, B. (1990) ‘Telescopic Philanthropy: Professionalism and Responsibility in Bleak House’, Nation and narration [Preprint].
Rosenberg, Brian (1996) Little Dorrit’s shadows: character and contradiction in Dickens. Columbia: University of Missouri Press.
Rotkin, C. (1990) ‘The Athenaeum Reviews Little Dorrit’, Victorian periodicals review, 23(1), pp. 25–28.
Ruskin, J. (1990) ‘A Note on Hard Times’, in Hard times: an authoritative text, backgrounds, sources, and contemporary reactions, criticism. 2nd ed. London: Norton.
Sadrin, A. (1994) ‘Nobody’s Fault’ or the inheritance of guilt’, in Parentage and inheritance in the novels of Charles Dickens. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 74–94.
Sadrin, A. (no date) Great Expectations. Routledge.
Sadrin, Anny (1994) Parentage and inheritance in the novels of Charles Dickens. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Sadrin, Anny (1999) Dickens, Europe and the new worlds. Basingstoke: Macmillan.
Sambudha, S. (1998) ‘Bleak House and Little Dorrit: The Radical Heritage’, ELH, 65(4), pp. 945–970.
Samet, E.D. (1998) ‘“When Constabulary Duty’s to Be Done”: Dickens and the Metropolitan Police’, Dickens Studies Annual, 27, pp. 131–143. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=dickens studies annual.
Sanders, Andrew (1999) Dickens and the spirit of the age. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Sanders, Andrew (2003) Charles Dickens. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Sanders, M. (2000) ‘Manufacturing Accident: Industrialism and the Worker’s Body in Early Victorian Fiction’, Victorian Literature and Culture , 28(2), pp. 313–329. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=victorian literature and culture.
Schad, John (1992) The reader in the Dickensian mirrors: some new language. Basingstoke: Macmillan.
Schlicke, Paul (1985a) Dickens and popular entertainment. London: Allen & Unwin.
Schlicke, Paul (1985b) Dickens and popular entertainment. London: Allen & Unwin.
Schlicke, Paul (1999) The Oxford reader’s companion to Dickens. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Available at: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://www.oxfordreference.com/views/BOOK_SEARCH.html?book=t327.
Schor, H. (1999) ‘Amy Dorrit’s Prison Notebooks’, in Dickens and the daughter of the house. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 124–149. Available at: http://www.kentuk.eblib.com/patron/FullRecord.aspx?p=144727.
Schor, H. (2001a) ‘Novels of the 1850s: Hard Times, Little Dorrit, and A Tale of Two Cities’, in The Cambridge companion to Charles Dickens. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 64–77. Available at: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://cco.cambridge.org/login2%3Fdest%3D%252Fbook%253Fid%253Dccol0521660165_CCOL0521660165.
Schor, H. (2001b) ‘Novels of the 1850s: Hard Times, Little Dorrit, and A Tale of Two Cities’, in The Cambridge companion to Charles Dickens. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 64–77. Available at: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://cco.cambridge.org/login2%3Fdest%3D%252Fbook%253Fid%253Dccol0521660165_CCOL0521660165.
Schor, Hilary Margo (1999a) Dickens and the daughter of the house. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Available at: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/kentuk/detail.action?docID=144727.
Schor, Hilary Margo (1999b) Dickens and the daughter of the house. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Available at: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/kentuk/detail.action?docID=144727.
Schwarzbach, F. S. (1979) Dickens and the city. [Atlantic Highlands, N.J.]: distributed by Humanities Press.
Shatto, Susan (1988) The companion to Bleak House. London: Unwin Hyman.
Shaw, G.B. (1961) ‘Hard Times’, in Ford, George H. (ed.) The Dickens critics. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press.
Shklovsky, V. (1992) ‘The Mystery Novel: Dickens’s Little Dorrit’, in Theory into practice: a reader in modern literary criticism. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Macmillan, pp. 43–49.
Showalter, E. (1979) ‘Guilt, Authority, and the Shadows of Little Dorrit’, Nineteenth-Century Fiction, 34, pp. 20–40. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?C=nineteenth century fiction&s=AC_T_B&V=1.0&L=DF7SM3XP4S&C=&S=SC&N=10.
Sicher, E. (2003) ‘Labyrinths & Prisons: Little Dorrit’, in Rereading the city/rereading Dickens: representation, the novel, and urban realism. New York: AMS Press, pp. 267–328.
Sicher, Efraim (2003a) Rereading the city/rereading Dickens: representation, the novel, and urban realism. New York: AMS Press.
Sicher, Efraim (2003b) Rereading the city/rereading Dickens: representation, the novel, and urban realism. New York: AMS Press.
Simpson, M. (1993) ‘Hard Times and Circus Times’, Dickens Quarterly, 10(3), pp. 131–146. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=dickens quarterly.
Simpson, Margaret (1997) The companion to Hard Times. Mountfield: Helm Information Ltd.
Skilton, David (1993) The early and mid-Victorian novel. London: Routledge.
Slater, M. (1983) ‘Dombey and Son’ to ‘Little Dorrit’, in Dickens and women. London: Dent, pp. 243–276.
Slater, M. (1992) ‘Introduction’, in Criticisms & appreciations of the works of Charles Dickens. London: Dent.
Slater, Michael (1983) Dickens and women. London: Dent.
Slater, Michael (1999a) An intelligent person’s guide to Dickens. London: Duckworth.
Slater, Michael (1999b) An intelligent person’s guide to Dickens. London: Duckworth.
Slater, Michael (2009) Charles Dickens. London: Yale University Press.
Smith, A. (2005) ‘Dickens’s Ghosts: Invisible Economies and Christmas’, Victorian review, (31), pp. 36–55.
Smith, Andrew (2012) The ghost story, 1840-1920: a cultural history. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
Smith, G. (1989) ‘Comic Subversion and Hard Times’, Dickens Studies Annual, 18, pp. 145–160. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=dickens studies annual.
Smith, G. (1990) ‘O reason not the need’: King Lear, Hard Times, and Utilitarian Values’, Dickensian, 86(3), pp. 164–170.
Smith, Grahame (1996) Charles Dickens: a literary life. Basingstoke: St. Martin’s Press.
Smith, Grahame (2003) Dickens and the dream of cinema. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
Smith, J. (2000) ‘Darwin’s Barnacles, Dickens’s Little Dorrit, and the Social Uses of Victorian Seaside Studies’, Lit: Literature Interpretation Theory , 10(4), pp. 327–347. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=Lit: Literature Interpretation Theory .
‘Special Issue on A Christmas Carol’ (1993) The Dickensian [Preprint].
Spector, S.J. (1984) ‘Monsters of Metonymy: Hard Times and Knowing the Working Class’, ELH, 51(2), pp. 365–384.
Steig, M. (1978) ‘Bleak House and Little Dorrit: Iconography of Darkness’, in Dickens and Phiz. Bloomington, Ind: Indiana U.P., pp. 131–172.
Steig, Michael (1978) Dickens and Phiz. Bloomington, Ind: Indiana U.P.
Stiltner, B. (2001) ‘Hard Times: The Disciplinary City’, Dickens Studies Annual, 30, pp. 193–215. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=dickens studies annual.
Stone, H. (1980) ‘Giving Nursery Tales a Higher Form’, in Dickens and the invisible world: fairy tales, fantasy, and novel-making. Houndmills: Macmillan.
Stone, H. (no date) The Night Side of Dickens: Cannibalism, Passion, Necessity. Ohio State University Press.
Stone, Harry (1980) Dickens and the invisible world: fairy tales, fantasy, and novel-making. Houndmills: Macmillan.
Storor, D. (1998) ‘Grotesque Storytelling: Dickens’s Articulation of the “Crisis of the Knowable Community” in Bleak House and Little Dorrit’, The Dickensian, 94(1), pp. 25–41.
Suchoff, D. (1994) ‘Dickens: The Radical Novel and Its Public’, in Critical theory and the novel: mass society and cultural criticism in Dickens, Melville, and Kafka. London: University of Wisconsin Press, pp. 40–88.
Tambling, Jeremy (1995a) Dickens, violence and the modern state: dreams of the scaffold. Basingstoke: St. Martin’s.
Tambling, Jeremy (1995b) ‘Finding the Password: Little Dorrit’, in Dickens, violence and the modern state: dreams of the scaffold. Basingstoke: Macmillan, pp. 98–128.
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