Ackroyd, Peter. (1991). Dickens. Minerva.
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Allen, Walter Ernest, Slater, Michael, & Dickens Fellowship (London, England). (1970). Dickens 1970: centenary essays. Chapman & Hall for the Dickens Fellowship.
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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 (pp. 63–90). Princeton University Press.
Anderson, Amanda. (1993). Tainted Souls and Painted Faces: Rhetoric of Fallenness in Victorian Culture. Cornell University Press.
Andrews, M. (2008). Illustrations. In A companion to Charles Dickens: Vol. Blackwell companions to literature and culture. Blackwell. 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, 401–412. http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=victorian studies
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Belcher, D. D. (1985). Dickens’s Mrs. Sparsit and the Politics of Service. Dickens Quarterly, 2, 92–98. http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=dickens quarterly
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Blain, V. (1985). Double Vision and the Double Standard in Bleak House: A Feminist Perspective. Literature and History, 11, 31–46. http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=literature and history
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Bowen, J., & Patten, R. L. (2006). Palgrave advances in Charles Dickens studies: Vol. Palgrave advances. Palgrave Macmillan. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/kentuk/detail.action?docID=270617
Bowen, John & Patten, Robert L. (2006). Palgrave advances in Charles Dickens studies: Vol. Palgrave advances. Palgrave Macmillan. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/kentuk/detail.action?docID=270617
Brake, L. (2012). Half Full                              Half Empty. Journal of Victorian Culture, 17(2), 222–229. https://doi.org/10.1080/13555502.2012.683149
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Butt, J., & Tillotson, K. (2009b). Dickens at work: volume 1: Vol. Routledge library editions. Charles Dickens ([New edition]). Routledge. http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=KentUniv&isbn=9781315888385
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Buzard, James. (2005). Anywhere’s Nowhere: Bleak House as Metropolitan Autoethnography. In Disorienting Fiction: The Autoethnographic Work of Nineteenth-Century British Novels (pp. 105–156). Princeton University Press. http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://www.kentuk.eblib.com/patron/FullRecord.aspx?p=445460
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Carlisle, J. (1982). Little Dorrit: Necessary Fictions. In The sense of an audience: Dickens, Thackeray and George Eliot at mid-century (pp. 195–214). Harvester Press.
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Childers, J. (2006). Politicized Dickens: The Journalism of the 1850s. In Palgrave advances in Charles Dickens studies: Vol. Palgrave advances (pp. 198–215). Palgrave Macmillan. http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://www.kentuk.eblib.com/patron/FullRecord.aspx?p=270617
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Christ, Carol T. & Jordan, John O. (1995). Victorian literature and the Victorian visual imagination. University of California Press.
Cohen, Jane R. (1980). Charles Dickens and his original illustrators. Ohio State University Press.
Coles, N. (1986). The Politics of Hard Times: Dickens the Novelist Versus Dickens the Reformer. Dickens Studies Annual, 15, 145–179. 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, 651–673. 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: Vol. The critical heritage series. Routledge. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/kentuk/detail.action?docID=168688
Collins, Philip Arthur William. (1981). Dickens, interviews and recollections (1st ed). Macmillan.
Collins, Philip Arthur William. (1994). Dickens and crime (3rd ed). Macmillan.
Connor, S. (1985). Deconstructing Dickens: Bleak House. In Charles Dickens: Vol. Rereading literature (pp. 59–88). Blackwell.
Connor, S. (1995). Deconstructing Dickens: Hard Times. In David Copperfield and Hard times: Charles Dickens: Vol. New casebooks (pp. 155–170). Macmillan.
Connor, S., & Connor, S. (1996a). Charles Dickens. Longman.
Connor, S., & Connor, S. (1996b). Charles Dickens. Longman.
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Cronin, M. (1999). Henry Gowan, William Makepeace Thackeray, and ‘The Dignity of Literature’ Controversy. Dickens Quarterly, 16(2), 104–145. http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=dickens quarterly
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Dickens, C. (2018). Speeches of Charles Dickens. Createspace Independent Publishing Platform.
Dickens, C., & Pascoe, D. (1997). Selected journalism, 1850-1870. Penguin Books.
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Dickens, Charles, Ford, George Harry, & Monod, Sylvère. (1977). Bleak house: an authoritative and annotated text, illustrations, a note on the text, genesis and composition, backgrounds, criticism: Vol. A Norton critical edition (1st ed). Norton.
Dickens, Charles, House, Madeline, Storey, Graham, & British Academy. (1965). The letters of Charles Dickens (Pilgrim ed). Clarendon Press.
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Dickens, Charles & Leech, John. (1946). A Christmas carol: in prose ; being a ghost story of Christmas. Penguin.
Dickens, Charles (Pascoe, D. ed). (1997). Selected Journalism 1850-1870. Penguin Classics.
Douglas-Fairhurst, R. (2009). Dickens: Going Astray’. In The Cambridge companion to English novelists: Vol. Cambridge companions. Cambridge University Press.
Douglas-Fairhurst, Robert. (2011). Becoming Dickens: the invention of a novelist. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.
Drew, J. M. L. (2003). Dickens the journalist. Palgrave Macmillan. 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, 151–177. http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=dickens studies annual
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Editions du Sagittaire | Unsettling Dickens : Process, Progress and Change. (n.d.). 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, 217–237. 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. University of California Press.
Elaine Freedgood. (2017). Response: Strategic Presentism or Partisan Knowledges? Victorian Studies, 59(1), 117–121. http://muse.jhu.edu.chain.kent.ac.uk/article/649961
Elaine Hadley. (2017). Nobody, Somebody, and Everybody. Victorian Studies, 59(1), 65–86. 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 (pp. 157–177). Manchester University Press.
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Fielding, K. J., & Smith, A. (1970). Hard Times and the Factory Controversy: Dickens vs. Harriet Martineau. Nineteenth-Century Fiction , 24(4), 404–427. http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=Nineteenth-Century Fiction
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Ford, George Harry. (1974). Dickens and his readers: aspects of novel-criticism since 1836. Gordian Press.
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Furniss, Harry & Cordery, Gareth. (2005). An Edwardian’s view of Dickens and his illustrators: Harry Furniss’s ‘A sketch of Boz’ (Vols 1880-1920 british authors series). ELT Press, English Dpt., University of North Carolina.
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Gallagher, Catherine. (2006). The body economic: life, death, and sensation in political economy and the Victorian novel. Princeton University Press. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/kentuk/detail.action?docID=457799
Gallagher, Catherine & Greenblatt, Stephen. (2000). Practicing new historicism. University of Chicago Press.
Garis, Robert. (1965). The Dickens theatre: a reassessment of the novels. Clarendon Press.
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Gillooly, E., & David, D. (2009b). Contemporary Dickens. 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, 207–224.
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Gribble, J. (2004). Why the Good Samaritan was a Bad Economist: Dickens. Literature & Theology , 18(4), 427–441. http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=literature and theology
Gross, John J. & Pearson, Gabriel. (n.d.). Dickens and the twentieth century. Routledge and Paul.
Grossman, Jonathan. (2012). Charles Dickens’s networks: passenger transport and the novel. Oxford University Press.
Guy, Josephine M. (1996a). The Victorian social-problem novel: the market, the individual and communal life. Macmillan.
Guy, Josephine M. (1996b). The Victorian social-problem novel: the market, the individual and communal life. Macmillan.
Guy, Josephine M. (1998). The Victorian Age: an anthology of sources and documents. Routledge.
Hardy, Barbara Nathan. (1970). The moral art of Dickens: essays. Athlone P.
Hartley, J. (2002). Little Dorrit in Real Time: The Embedded Text. Publishing History, 52, 5–18. 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. 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 . 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). 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), 187–213. 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), 185–213. http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=victorian studies
Hochman, B. (n.d.). On the Bleakness of Bleak House. Rereading Texts, Rethinking Critical Presuppositions.
Hofer-Robinson, J. (2018). Dickens and Demolition. Edinburgh University Press.
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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 (pp. 123–153). Southern Illinois University Press.
Humpherys, A. (1996). Louisa Gradgrind’s Secret: Marriage and Divorce in Hard Times. Dickens Studies Annual, 25, 177–195. 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), 518–527. 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 University Press.
Jaffe, A. (1994). Spectacular Sympathy: Visuality and Ideology in Dickens’s A Christmas Carol’. PMLA, 109, 254–265.
James, L. & ebrary, Inc. (2006). The Victorian novel: Vol. Blackwell guides to literature. Blackwell Pub. 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: Vol. Liverpool English Texts and Studies  v. 52 (pp. 189–207). Liverpool University Press.
John, J. (ed.). (n.d.). Dickens and Modernity: Vol. Essays and Studies  v. 65. D.S. Brewer.
John, Juliet. (2001). Dickens’ villains: melodrama, character, popular culture. Oxford University Press.
John, Juliet. (2010). Dickens and mass culture. Oxford University Press.
Johnson, P. E. (1989). Hard Times and the Structure of Industrialism: The Novel as Factory. Studies in the Novel, 21(2), 128–137. 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: Vol. Cambridge Companions to Literature. Cambridge University Press. 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: Vol. Cambridge companions to literature. Cambridge University Press. 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: Vol. Victorian literature and culture series. University of Virginia Press.
Judith Newton. (n.d.). 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), 649–676. 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. 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. AMS Press.
Klaver, C. (1999). Natural Values and Unnatural Agents: Little Dorrit and the Mid-Victorian Crisis in Agency. Dickens Studies Annual, 28, 13–43. http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=dickens studies annual
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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 (pp. 155–168). Ohio University Press.
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Marcus, Steven. (1966). The Other Victorians: a study of sexuality and pornography in mid-nineteenth-century England: Vol. Studies in sex and society. Weidenfeld and Nicolson.
Marsh, J. (2009). Dickensian "Dissolving Views”: The Magic Lantern, Visual Story-telling and the Victorian Technological Imagination. Comparative Critical Studies , 6, 333–346. http://df7sm3xp4s.search.serialssolutions.com/?V=1.0&N=100&L=DF7SM3XP4S&S=AC_T_B&C=Comparative Critical Studies
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Miller, Joseph H. (1959a). Charles Dickens: the world of his novels (pp. 226–227). Harvard University Press.
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Patten, R. L. (2018). The Oxford Handbook of Charles Dickens. Oxford University Press.
Patten, Robert L. (1992). George Cruikshank’s life, times, and art. Lutterworth.
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Poovey, M. (2001). The Structure of Anxiety in Political Economy and Hard Times. In Knowing the past: Victorian literature and culture (pp. 151–171). Cornell University Press.
Pykett, L. (2002a). Charles Dickens: Vol. Critical issues. Palgrave. http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://lib.myilibrary.com?id=86118
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