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.
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.
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.
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. Available at: http://www.jstor.org.chain.kent.ac.uk/stable/30031926?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents.
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, R. and ProQuest (Firm) (2007) Knowing Dickens. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. Available at: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/kentuk/detail.action?docID=3138006.
Bowen, J. and Patten, R.L. (2006) Palgrave advances in Charles Dickens studies. Houndmills, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. Available at: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/kentuk/detail.action?docID=270617.
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. (2009a) Dickens at work: volume 1. [New edition]. London: Routledge. Available at: http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=KentUniv&isbn=9781315888385.
Butt, J. and Tillotson, K. (2009b) Dickens at work: volume 1. [New edition]. London: Routledge. Available at: http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=KentUniv&isbn=9781315888385.
Butt, J. and Tillotson, K. (2009c) Dickens at work: volume 1. [New edition]. London: Routledge. Available at: http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=KentUniv&isbn=9781315888385.
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.
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.
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.
Chandler, James (2013) An archaeology of sympathy: the sentimental mode in literature and cinema. Chicago, Illinois: The University of Chicago Press.
Charles Dickens (2016) Bleak House. Dinslaken, GERMANY: anboco. Available at: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/kentuk/detail.action?docID=4663722.
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.W. (2000) ‘Industrial culture and the Victorian novel’, in The Cambridge Companion to the Victorian Novel. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 77–96. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/CCOL0521641500.005.
Chitwood, B. (2015) ‘ETERNAL RETURNS: A CHRISTMAS CAROL’S GHOSTS OF REPETITION’, Victorian Literature and Culture, 43(04), pp. 675–687. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/S1060150315000200.
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.
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. (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 (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, S. and Connor, S. (1996a) Charles Dickens. London: Longman.
Connor, S. and Connor, S. (1996b) Charles Dickens. London: Longman.
Connor, Steven (1985) Charles Dickens. Oxford: Blackwell.
Cook, Chris (1999) The Longman companion to Britain in the nineteenth century, 1815-1914. London: Longman.
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.
Davis, P. (1990) ‘Chapters 1-3’, in The lives and times of Ebenezer Scrooge. New Haven: Yale University Press.
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, C. (2018) Speeches of Charles Dickens. Createspace Independent Publishing Platform.
Dickens, C. and Pascoe, D. (1997) Selected journalism, 1850-1870. London: Penguin Books.
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, 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 (2001) 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) (1997) Selected Journalism 1850-1870. London: Penguin Classics.
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, J.M.L. (2003) Dickens the journalist. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan. Available at: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/kentuk/detail.action?docID=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.
Dyos, H.J. and Wolff, M. (1973) ‘Dickens and London’, in The Victorian city: images and realities. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
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.
Editions du Sagittaire | Unsettling Dickens : Process, Progress and Change (no date). Available at: http://sagittaire.ca-et-la.fr/unsettling-dickens-process-progress-and-change.
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.
Elaine Freedgood (2017) ‘Response: Strategic Presentism or Partisan Knowledges?’, Victorian Studies, 59(1), pp. 117–121. Available at: http://muse.jhu.edu.chain.kent.ac.uk/article/649961.
Elaine Hadley (2017) ‘Nobody, Somebody, and Everybody’, Victorian Studies, 59(1), pp. 65–86. Available at: http://muse.jhu.edu.chain.kent.ac.uk/article/649952.
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.
Fielding, K.J. (1954) ‘The Battle for Preston’, Dickensian, 50, pp. 159–162.
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, K. (2018) ‘Bleak House’, in R.L. Patten, J.O. Jordan, and C. Waters (eds) The Oxford handbook of Charles Dickens. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Flint, Kate (1986) 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.
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 (2006) The body economic: life, death, and sensation in political economy and the Victorian novel. 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, E. and David, D. (2009a) Contemporary Dickens. Columbus: Ohio State University Press. Available at: http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0824/2008034051.html.
Gillooly, E. and David, D. (2009b) 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.
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.
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.
Hardy, Barbara Nathan (1970) The moral art of Dickens: essays. London: Athlone P.
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.
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 .
Helen Groth (2007) ‘Reading Victorian illusions: Dickens’s Haunted Man and Dr. Pepper’s “Ghost”’, Victorian Studies, 50(1). Available at: http://go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?id=GALE%7CA176775823&v=2.1&u=uokent&it=r&p=LitRC&sw=w&asid=32ee4c3100e4ec7b446ce57035fab63a.
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].
Hofer-Robinson, J. (2018) Dickens and Demolition. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
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.
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, Patricia (2000) Invisible writing and the Victorian novel: readings in language and ideology. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
Jaffe, A. (1994) ‘Spectacular Sympathy: Visuality and Ideology in Dickens’s A Christmas Carol’’, PMLA, 109, pp. 254–265.
James, L. and ebrary, Inc (2006) The Victorian novel. Malden, MA: Blackwell Pub. Available at: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/kentuk/detail.action?docID=243584.
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, 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, J.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://dx.doi.org/10.1017/CCOL0521660165.
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).
Ketabgian, T. (2003) ‘Melancholy Mad Elephants: Affect and the Animal Machine in Hard Times’, Victorian Studies, 45(4), pp. 649–676. Available at: http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?C=victorian studies&s=AC_T_B&V=1.0&L=DF7SM3XP4S&C=&S=SC&N=10.
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.
Kucich, J. and Taylor, J.B. (2012) The nineteenth-century novel, 1820-1880. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Langland, Elizabeth (1995) Nobody’s angels: middle-class women and domestic ideology in Victorian culture. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press.
Larson, J.L. (2008) Dickens and the broken scripture. Athens, Ga: University of Georgia Press.
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. (1970) ‘Chapter 7’, in Dickens: the novelist. London: Chatto & Windus.
Ledger, S. (2010a) Dickens and the popular radical imagination. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Ledger, S. (2010b) Dickens and the popular radical imagination. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Ledger, S. and Furneaux, H. (2011) Charles Dickens in context. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Available at: http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=KentUniv&isbn=9781139069007.
Lester, Valerie Browne (2006) Phiz: the man who drew Dickens. London: Pimlico.
Levine, C. (2015) Forms: whole, rhythm, hierarchy, network. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
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.
Lucas, J. (1992) ‘Little Dorrit: The World’s City’, in Charles Dickens, the major novels. New York: Penguin, pp. 100–123.
Lutman, S.F. (1980) ‘Reading Illustrations’, in Reading the Victorian novel: detail into form. London: Vision.
Mackenzie, H. (2018) ‘Journalism and Correspondence’, in R.L. Patten, J.O. Jordan, and C. Waters (eds) The Oxford handbook of Charles Dickens. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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.
Marcus, Steven (1966) The Other Victorians: a study of sexuality and pornography in mid-nineteenth-century England. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson.
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 .
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McKnight, Natalie (1993) Idiots, Madmen and Other Prisoners in Dickens. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
Menke, R. (2018) ‘Dickens, Industry, and Technology’, in R.L. Patten, J.O. Jordan, and C. Waters (eds) The Oxford handbook of Charles Dickens. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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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, Sylvere (1968) ‘Dickens as Social Novelist’, in Dickens the Novelist. Norman, Okla: University of Oklahoma Press, pp. 444–452.
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Morgentaler, Goldie (2000) Dickens and heredity: when like begets like. Basingstoke: St. Martin’s Press.
Murail, E. and Thornton, S. (eds) (2017) Dickens and the virtual city: urban perception and the production of social space. Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave MacMillan.
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.
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, F. (2002) The Victorian novel. Oxford: Blackwell. Available at: http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=KentUniv&isbn=9780470779859.
Parker, David (2005) Christmas and Charles Dickens. New York: AMS Press.
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, R.L. (2018) The Oxford Handbook of Charles Dickens. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Patten, Robert L. (1992) George Cruikshank’s life, times, and art. London: Lutterworth.
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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.
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Poovey, M. (1989) Uneven developments: the ideological work of gender in mid- Victorian England. London: Virago. Available at: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/kentuk/detail.action?docID=432278.
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Pykett, L. (2002a) Charles Dickens. Basingstoke: Palgrave. Available at: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://lib.myilibrary.com?id=86118.
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Rem, Tore (2002) Dickens, melodrama, and the parodic imagination. New York: AMS Press.
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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.
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Schor, Hilary Margo (1999) Dickens and the daughter of the house. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Available at: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/kentuk/detail.action?docID=144727.
Schor, H.M. (1999) 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.
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Young, A. (1999) ‘The Literary Evolution of the Lower Middle Class: The Natural History of the Gent to Little Dorrit.” ’, in Culture, Class and Gender in the Victorian Novel: Gentlemen, Gents and Working Women. Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan.