1.
British Cartoon Archive, University of Kent.
2.
Darwin Correspondence Project.
3.
House of Commons: Parliamentary Papers.
4.
Letters of Charles Dickens.
5.
Project Gutenberg.
6.
The Times Digital Archive.
7.
19th Century British Library Newspapers.
8.
19th Century UK Periodicals.
9.
Locating London’s Past.
10.
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
11.
Oxford English Dictionary.
12.
Oxford Reference Online.
13.
Beales, D. From Castlereagh to Gladstone 1815-1885. [Place of publication not identified]: Nelson;
14.
Bentley, M. Politics without democracy, 1815-1914: perception and preoccupation in British government. [Place of publication not identified]: Fontana; 1984.
15.
Briggs, Asa. The age of improvement, 1783-1867. 2nd ed. Harlow: Longman; 2000.
16.
Brown, Richard. Society and economy in modern Britain 1700-1850. London: Routledge; 1991.
17.
Brown, Richard. Church and state in modern Britain, 1700-1850. London: Routledge; 1991.
18.
Cain, P. J., Hopkins, A. G. British imperialism, 1688-2000. 2nd ed. Harlow: Longman; 2002.
19.
Clarke, Peter. Hope and glory: Britain, 1900-1990. London: Allen Lane; 1996.
20.
Cunningham, Hugh. The challenge of democracy: Britain 1832-1918. Harlow: Longman; 2001.
21.
Evans, Eric John. The forging of the modern state: early industrial Britain 1783-1870. London: Longman; 1983.
22.
Gash, Norman. Aristocracy and people: Britain 1815-1865. London: Edward Arnold; 1979.
23.
Halévy, Élie. A history of the English people in the nineteenth century. [2d rev. ed.]. London: E. Benn; 52 AD.
24.
Hoppen, K. Theodore. The mid-Victorian generation, 1846-1886. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 1998.
25.
Hilton, Boyd. A mad, bad, and dangerous people?: England, 1783-1846. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 2006.
26.
James, R R. The British revolution: British politics 1880-1939. [Place of publication not identified]: Methuen; 1978.
27.
McCord, Norman, Purdue, A. W., McCord, Norman. British history, 1815-1914 [Internet]. 2nd ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2007. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/kentuk/detail.action?docID=415135
28.
Matthew, H. C. G. The nineteenth century: the British Isles 1815-1901. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2000.
29.
O’Gorman, Frank. The long eighteenth century: British political and social history, 1688-1832. London: Arnold; 1997.
30.
Perkin, Harold James. The origins of modern English society 1780-1880. London: Routledge & K. Paul; 1969.
31.
Louis, William Roger, Porter, A. N., Low, Alaine M. The Oxford history of the British Empire: Vol. 3: The nineteenth century ; Andrew Porter, editor ; Alaine Low, associate editor. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 1999.
32.
Porter, Bernard. Britannia’s burden: the political evolution of modern Britain, 1851-1990. London: E. Arnold; 1994.
33.
Pugh, Martin. The making of modern British politics, 1867-1939. 2nd ed. Cambridge, MA: Blackwell; 1993.
34.
Read, Donald. The age of urban democracy: England 1868-1914. Rev. ed. London: Longman; 1994.
35.
Robbins, Keith. The eclipse of a great power: modern Britain, 1870-1992. 2nd ed. London: Longman; 1994.
36.
Rubinstein, W. D. Britain’s century: a political and social history, 1815-1905. London: Arnold; 1998.
37.
Searle, G. R. A new England?: peace and war, 1886-1918. New York: Oxford University Press; 2004.
38.
Shannon, Richard T. The crisis of imperialism, 1865-1915. London: Hart-Davis, MacGibbon; 1974.
39.
Price, Richard. British society, 1680-1880: dynamism, containment, and change. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1999.
40.
Stone, Lawrence. An imperial state at war: Britain from 1689 to 1815. London: Routledge; 1994.
41.
Woodward, L. The age of reform, 1815-1870. 2nd ed. Oxford : Clarendon Press: [publisher not identified]; 1972.
42.
Young, G M. Portrait of an age: Victorian England. [Place of publication not identified]: O.U.P.; 1977.
43.
Biagini, Eugenio F. Citizenship and community: liberals, radicals, and collective identities in the British Isles, 1865-1931. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1996.
44.
Biagini, Eugenio F., Reid, Alastair J. Currents of radicalism: popular radicalism, organized labour, and party politics in Britain, 1850-1914. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1991.
45.
Blake, Robert Blake, Blake, Robert Blake. The Conservative Party from Peel to Major. Rev. ed. London: Heinemann; 1997.
46.
Butler, R A B. The Conservatives: a history from their origins to 1965; ed R A B Butler. [Place of publication not identified]: Allen & Unwin; 1977.
47.
Clark, J.C.D. A general theory of party, opposition, government 1688-1832. Historical journal. Cambridge: C.U.P.; 1980;
48.
Coleman, Bruce. Conservatism and the Conservative Party in nineteenth-century Britain. London: Arnold; 1988.
49.
Foord, Archibald S., American Council of Learned Societies. His Majesty’s Opposition, 1714-1830 [Internet]. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1964. Available from: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://name.umdl.umich.edu/HEB00143
50.
Gunn, J.A.W. Influence, parties, constitution: changing attitudes, 1783-1832. Historical journal. Cambridge: C.U.P.; 1974;
51.
Hill, B.W. Executive monarchy and the challenge of parties, 1689-1832. Historical journal. Cambridge: C.U.P.; 1970;
52.
Hill, B W. British Parliamentary parties 1742-1830: from the fall of Walpole to the First Reform Act. [Place of publication not identified]: Allen & Unwin; 1985.
53.
Large, D.C. The decline of ‘the party of the crown’ and the rise of parties in the House of Lords, 1783-1837. English historical review. London: Longmans; 1963;
54.
Lawrence, Jon. Speaking for the people: party, language, and popular politics in England, 1867-1914. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1998.
55.
Lawrence, Jon, Taylor, Miles. Party, state, and society: electoral behaviour in Britain since 1820. Aldershot: Ashgate Pub. Co; 1997.
56.
O’Gorman, Frank. Voters, patrons, and parties: the unreformed electoral system of Hanoverian England, 1734-1832. New York: Oxford University Press; 1989.
57.
O’Gorman, F. The emergence of the British two-party system, 1760-1832. [Place of publication not identified]: Arnold; 1982.
58.
Parry JP. The rise and fall of liberal government in Victorian Britain. London: Yale University Press; 1993.
59.
Pelling, Henry, Reid, Alastair J. A short history of the Labour Party. 11th ed. Basingstoke: Macmillan; 1996.
60.
Pelling, Henry. Social geography of British elections, 1885-1910. London: Macmillan; 1967.
61.
Pugh, Martin. The making of modern British politics, 1867-1939. 2nd ed. Cambridge, MA: Blackwell; 1993.
62.
Southgate, D. The passing of the Whigs, 1832-1886. [Place of publication not identified]: Macmillan; 1962.
63.
Southgate, Donald George. The Conservative leadership, 1832-1932. London]: Macmillan;
64.
Vernon, James. Politics and the people: a study in English political culture, c. 1815-1867. Cambridge: C.U.P.; 1993.
65.
Biagini, Eugenio F. Citizenship and community: liberals, radicals, and collective identities in the British Isles, 1865-1931. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1996.
66.
Boyce, G., Curran, J., Wingate, P. Newspaper history from the seventeenth century to the present day. Beverly Hills, Calif. Sage Publications: Constable; 1978.
67.
Brewer, John. The pleasures of the imagination: English culture in the eighteenth century. London: HarperCollins; 1997.
68.
Britain, I. Fabianism and culture: a study of British socialism and the arts, c1884-1918. [Place of publication not identified]: C.U.P.; 1982.
69.
Brown, L M. Victorian news and newspapers. [Place of publication not identified]: Clarendon Press; 1985.
70.
Cranfield, G A. The development of the provincial newspaper 1700-1760. [Place of publication not identified]: Clarendon Press; 1962.
71.
Dean, David, Jones, Clyve, Parliamentary History Yearbook Trust. Parliament and locality, 1660-1939. Edinburgh: Edinburgh U.P., for Parliamentary History Yearbook Trust; 1998.
72.
Downie, J. A. Robert Harley and the press: propaganda and public opinion in the age of Swift and Defoe. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2008.
73.
Everett, Nigel, Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art. The Tory view of landscape. London: Yale University Press for the Paul Mellon Centre; 1994.
74.
Fahrmeir, Andreas. Citizenship: the rise and fall of a modern concept. London: Yale University Press; 2007.
75.
Hoffmann, Stefan-Ludwig. Civil society, 1750-1914. Houndmills, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan; 2006.
76.
Hynes, Samuel Lynn. The Edwardian turn of mind. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press; 1968.
77.
Jones, Aled. Powers of the press: newspapers, power and the public in nineteenth-century England. Aldershot: Scolar Press; 1996.
78.
Koss, S E. The rise and fall of the political press in Britain. [Place of publication not identified]: Hamish Hamilton; 1981.
79.
Langford, Paul. Englishness identified: manners and character, 1650-1850. New York: Oxford University Press; 2000.
80.
Lee, A J. The origins of the popular press in England 1855-1914. [Place of publication not identified]: Croom Helm; 1976.
81.
Mandler, Peter. The fall and rise of the stately home. London: Yale University Press; 1997.
82.
Pemble, John. The Mediterranean passion: Victorians and Edwardians in the South. New York: O.U.P.; 1988.
83.
Read, D. Press and people 1790-1850: opinion in three English cities. [Place of publication not identified]: Arnold;
84.
Read, Donald. The power of news: the history of Reuters. 2nd ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 1999.
85.
Roberts, M. Constructing a Tory world-view: popular politics and the Conservative press in late-Victorian Leeds. Historical Research. London: [publisher not identified]; 2006;79.
86.
Thompson, J. ‘Pictorial lies’? Posters and politics in Britain, c.1880-1914. Past and present. London: Morris; 2007;197.
87.
Vernon, James. Politics and the people: a study in English political culture, c. 1815-1867. Cambridge: C.U.P.; 1993.
88.
Wiener, Martin J. English culture and the decline of the industrial spirit: 1850-1980. Harmondsworth: Penguin; 1985.
89.
Bushaway, B. By rite: custom, ceremony and community in England, 1700-1800. [Place of publication not identified]: Junction Books; 1982.
90.
Lawrence, Jon. Speaking for the people: party, language, and popular politics in England, 1867-1914. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1998.
91.
Quinault, R., Stevenson, John. Popular protest and public order: six studies in British history, 1790-1920. London: Allen & Unwin; 1974.
92.
Roberts, M. Constructing a Tory world-view: popular politics and the Conservative press in late-Victorian Leeds. Historical Research. London: [publisher not identified]; 2006;79.
93.
Royle, Edward, Walvin, James. English radicals and reformers, 1760-1848. Lexington (Ky): University Press of Kentucky; 1982.
94.
Royle, Edward. Revolutionary Britannia?: reflections on the threat of revolution in Britain, 1789-1848. Manchester: Manchester University Press; 2000.
95.
Stevenson, J. Popular disturbances in England 1700-1870. [Place of publication not identified]: Longman; 1979.
96.
Vernon, James. Politics and the people: a study in English political culture, c. 1815-1867. Cambridge: C.U.P.; 1993.
97.
Bayly, C. A. Imperial meridian: the British empire and the world, 1780-1830. London: Longman; 1989.
98.
Bayly, C. A. The birth of the modern world, 1780-1914: global connections and comparisons. Malden, Mass: Blackwell Pub; 2004.
99.
Bourne, Kenneth. The foreign policy of Victorian England, 1830-1902. Oxford: Clarendon P.; 1970.
100.
Cain, P. J., Hopkins, A. G. British imperialism, 1688-2000. 2nd ed. Harlow: Longman; 2002.
101.
Chamberlain, Muriel Evelyn. ‘Pax Britannica’?: British foreign policy 1789-1914. London: Longman; 1988.
102.
Colley, Linda. Captives: Britain, Empire and the world, 1600-1850. London: Jonathan Cape; 2002.
103.
Hyam, Ronald. Britain’s imperial century, 1815-1914: a study of empire and expansion. 2nd ed. Lanham, MD: Barnes & Noble; 1993.
104.
Kennedy, Paul Michael. The realities behind diplomacy: background influences on British external policy, 1865-1980. London: Allen & Unwin; 1981.
105.
Porter, B. Britain, Europe and the world, 1850-1986: delusions of grandeur. [Place of publication not identified]: Allen & Unwin; 1987.
106.
Porter, Bernard. The absent-minded imperialists: empire, society, and culture in Britain. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2004.
107.
Reynolds, David. Britannia overruled: British policy and world power in the twentieth century. London: Longman; 1991.
108.
Thompson, Andrew S. The empire strikes back?: the impact of imperialism on Britain from the mid-nineteenth century. 1st ed. Harlow: Pearson Longman; 2005.
109.
Checkland, S G. British public policy 1776-1939: an economic, social and political perspective. [Place of publication not identified]: C.U.P.; 1983.
110.
Daunton, M. J. Progress and poverty: an economic and social history of Britain, 1700-1850. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 1995.
111.
Daunton, M. J. Wealth and welfare: an economic and social history of Britain, 1851-1951. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2007.
112.
Fraser, Derek. The evolution of the British welfare state: a history of social policy since the Industrial Revolution. 2nd ed. Basingstoke: Macmillan; 1984.
113.
Harling, Philip. The modern British state: an historical introduction. Cambridge: Polity; 2001.
114.
Harris, José. Private lives, public spirit: a social history of Britain, 1870-1914. New York: Oxford University Press; 1993.
115.
Harrison, B. Peaceable kingdom: stability and change in modern Britain. [Place of publication not identified]: Clarendon Press; 1982.
116.
Howe, Anthony. Free trade and liberal England, 1846-1946. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1997.
117.
Joyce, Patrick. Visions of the people: industrial England and the question of class, 1848-1914. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1991.
118.
McKibbin, Ross. The ideologies of class: social relations in Britain, 1880-1950. New York: Clarendon Press; 1990.
119.
Mandler, Peter. The fall and rise of the stately home. London: Yale University Press; 1997.
120.
Pelling, Henry. Popular politics and society in late Victorian Britain: essays. 2d ed. London: Macmillan; 1979.
121.
Perkin, Harold James. The origins of modern English society 1780-1880. London: University of Toronto P.; 1969.
122.
Perkin, Harold James. The rise of professional society: England since 1880. London: Routledge; 1989.
123.
Perkin, H. Reconstruction of elites in British society since 1800. Journal of social history. New Brunswick: Rutgers University; 1979;
124.
Rubinstein, W D. Men of property: the very wealthy in Britain since the Industrial Revolution. [Place of publication not identified]: Croom Helm; 1981.
125.
Rubinstein, W. D. Britain’s century: a political and social history, 1815-1905. London: Arnold; 1998.
126.
Thompson, Francis Michael Longstreth. English landed society in the nineteenth century. London: Routledge & K. Paul;
127.
Thompson, F. M. L. The rise of respectable society: a social history of Victorian Britain 1830-1900. London: Fontana; 1988.
128.
Thompson, F. M. L. The Cambridge social history of Britain 1750-1950: Vol.1: Regions and communities. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1990.
129.
Thompson, F. M. L. The Cambridge social history of Britain 1750-1950: Vol.2: People and their environment. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1990.
130.
Thompson, F. M. L. The Cambridge social history of Britain 1750-1950: Vol. 3: Social agencies and institutions. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1990.
131.
Winch, Donald, O’Brien, Patrick, British Academy. The political economy of British historical experience, 1688-1914. Oxford: Published for The British Academy by Oxford University Press; 2002.
132.
Clark, J. C. D. The language of liberty, 1660-1832: political discourse and social dynamics in the Anglo-American world. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1994.
133.
Colley, L. Britishness and Otherness. Journal of British studies. Hartford,Conn: Conference on British studies; 1992;
134.
Colley, Linda, American Council of Learned Societies. Britons: forging the nation, 1707-1837 [Internet]. London: Yale University Press; 1992. Available from: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://name.umdl.umich.edu/HEB01683
135.
Colley, L. Whose nation? Class and national consciousness 1750-1830. Past and present. London: Morris; 1986;
136.
Collini, Stefan. Public moralists: political thought and intellectual life in Britain, [1850-1930]. New York: Clarendon Press; 1991.
137.
Collini, S. That noble science of politics: a study in nineteenth-century intellectual history. [Place of publication not identified]: C.U.P.; 1983.
138.
Cowling, M. Religion and public doctrine in modern England. [Place of publication not identified]: C.U.P.; 1980.
139.
Cunningham, H. The language of patriotism. Patriotism:the making and unmaking of British national identity. London: Routledge; 1989.
140.
Hall, Catherine. Civilising subjects: metropole and colony in the English imagination, 1830-1867. Cambridge: Polity Press; 2002.
141.
Halévy, Élie. The growth of philosophic radicalism. New ed. London: Faber & Faber; 1934.
142.
Hilton, Boyd. The age of atonement: the influence of Evangelicalism on social and economic thought, 1795-1865. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1988.
143.
Kitson Clark, George Sidney Roberts. Churchmen and the condition of England, 1832-1885: a study in the development of social ideas and practice from the Old Regime to the Modern State. London]: Methuen;
144.
Kramnick, Isaac. Republicanism and bourgeois radicalism: political ideology in late eighteenth-century England and America. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press; 1990.
145.
Kumar, Krishan. The making of English national identity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2003.
146.
Newsome, David. The Victorian world picture: perceptions and introspections in an age of change. London: John Murray; 1997.
147.
Newman, G. The rise of English nationalism: a cultural history, 1740-1830. [Place of publication not identified]: Weidenfeld and Nicolson; 1987.
148.
Norman, E R. Church and society in England 1770-1970: a historical study. [Place of publication not identified]: Clarendon Press; 1976.
149.
Pocock, J G A. Virtue, commerce and history: essays of political thought and history, chiefly of the eighteenth century. [Place of publication not identified]: C.U.P.; 1985.
150.
Pocock, J. G. A. Barbarism and religion. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1999.
151.
Romani, Roberto. National character and public spirit in Britain and France, 1750-1914. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2006.
152.
Secord, James A. Victorian sensation: the extraordinary publication, reception, and secret authorship of Vestiges of the natural history of creation. Chicago: University of Chicago Press; 2000.
153.
Taylor, M. John Bull and the iconography of public opinion in England, c.1712-1929. Past and present. London: Morris; 1992;
154.
Williams, Raymond. The country and the city. London: Chatto and Windus; 1973.
155.
Williams, Raymond. The long revolution. Harmondsworth: Penguin; 1965.
156.
Winter, Alison. Mesmerized: powers of mind in Victorian Britain. Chicago: University of Chicago Press; 1998.
157.
Wolffe, John. God and Greater Britain: religion and national life in Britain and Ireland, 1843-1945. London: Routledge; 1994.
158.
Wolffe, John, British Academy. Great deaths: grieving, religion, and nationhood in Victorian and Edwardian Britain. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2000.
159.
Alderman, Geoffrey. The Jewish community in British politics. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1983.
160.
Bebbington, D. W. Evangelicalism in modern Britain: a history from the 1730s to the 1980s. Winchester, MA, USA: Allen & Unwin; 1988.
161.
Bebbington, D W. The Nonconformist conscience. [Place of publication not identified]: Allen & Unwin; 1982.
162.
Best, G. Popular protestantism. Ideas and institutions of Victorian Britain: essays in honour of George Kitson Clark; ed RRobson. [Place of publication not identified]: Bell; 1967.
163.
Binfield, C. So down to prayers: studies in English nonconformity 1780-1920. [Place of publication not identified]: Dent; 1977.
164.
Brose, O J. Church and Parliament; the reshaping of the Church of England, 1828-1860. [Place of publication not identified]: Stanford U.P; 1959.
165.
Chadwick, Owen. The Victorian church. 2nd ed. London: Black; 1970.
166.
Coleman, B. I. The Church of England in the mid-nineteenth century: a social geography. London: The Historical Association; 1980.
167.
Currie, R. Churches and churchgoers: patterns of church growth in the British Isles since 1700; [by] R Currie, A Gilbert, L Horsley. [Place of publication not identified]: Clarendon Press; 1977.
168.
Floyd, Richard D. Church, chapel and party: religious dissent and political modernization in nineteenth-century England. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan; 2008.
169.
Gilbert, Alan D. Religion and society in industrial England: church, chapel, and social change, 1740-1914. London: Longman; 1976.
170.
Hempton, D. Methodism and politics in British society, 1750-1850. [Place of publication not identified]: Hutchinson; 1984.
171.
Holmes, J D. More Roman than Rome. [Place of publication not identified]: Burns & Oates; 1978.
172.
Inglis, K. S. Churches and the working classes in Victorian England. London: Routledge and K. Paul;
173.
Isichei, E. Victorian Quakers. [Place of publication not identified]: O.U.P; 1970.
174.
Knight, Frances. The nineteenth-century Church and English society. Cambridge [England]: Cambridge University Press; 1995.
175.
Larsen, Timothy. Friends of religious equality: nonconformist politics in mid-Victorian England. Woodbridge: Boydell; 1999.
176.
Machin, G I T. Politics and the Churches in Great Britain, 1832 to 1868. [Place of publication not identified]: Clarendon; 1977.
177.
Machin, George Ian Thom. Politics and the churches in Great Britain, 1869 to 1921. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1987.
178.
McLeod, H. Class and religion in the late Victorian city. [Place of publication not identified]: Croom Helm; 1974.
179.
Nockles, Peter Benedict. The Oxford Movement in context: Anglican high churchmanship, 1760-1857. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1994.
180.
Norman, E R. Church and society in England 1770-1970: a historical study. [Place of publication not identified]: Clarendon Press; 1976.
181.
Norman, E R. The English Catholic Church in the nineteenth century. [Place of publication not identified]: Clarendon Press; 1984.
182.
Norman, E R. Anti-Catholicism in Victorian England. London: Allen & Unwin;
183.
Rutz, M.A. The politicizing of evangelical dissent, 1811-13. Parliamentary history. Gloucester: Sutton; 2001;
184.
Spring, D. Aristocracy, social structure and religion. Victorian studies: a quarterly journal of the humanities, arts and sciences. Bloomington: [publisher not identified]; 1962;
185.
Turner, Frank M. John Henry Newman: the challenge to evangelical religion. New Haven, Conn: Yale University Press; 2002.
186.
Walsh, John, Haydon, Colin, Taylor, Stephen. The Church of England c.1689-c.1833: from toleration to Tractarianism. New York: Cambridge University Press; 1993.
187.
Davidoff, Leonore, Hall, Catherine. Family fortunes: men and women of the English middle class, 1780-1850. London: Hutchinson; 1987.
188.
Fulcher, J. The loyalist response to the Queen Caroline agitations. Journal of British studies. Hartford,Conn: Conference on British studies; 1995;
189.
Hall, Catherine. White, male and middle-class: explorations in feminism and history. Cambridge: Polity; 1992.
190.
Hunt, T.L. Morality and monarchy in the Queen Caroline affair. Albion. Boone,N.C.: Appalachian State University; 1991;
191.
Laqueur, T.W. The Queen Caroline affair: politics and art in the reign of George IV. Journal of modern history. Illinois: Chicago U.P.; 1982;
192.
Lewis, Jane. Women in England 1870-1950: sexual divisions and social change. Brighton: Wheatsheaf; 1984.
193.
Mason, Michael. The making of Victorian sexuality. Oxford: O.U.P.; 1994.
194.
Mason, Michael. The making of Victorian sexual attitudes. Oxford: O.U.P.; 1994.
195.
Perkin, Joan. Victorian women. London: John Murray; 1993.
196.
Poovey, Mary. Uneven developments: the ideological work of gender in mid- Victorian England. London: Virago; 1989.
197.
Porter, Roy, Teich, Mikulás. Sexual knowledge, sexual science: the history of attitudes to sexuality. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1994.
198.
Porter, Roy, Hall, Lesley A. The facts of life: the creation of sexual knowledge in Britain, 1650-1950. London: Yale University Press; 1995.
199.
Rendall, Jane. The origins of modern feminism: women in Britain, France and the United States, 1780-1860. London: Macmillan; 1985.
200.
Rendall, J. Equal or different: women’s politics 1800-1914; edited by J Rendall. [Place of publication not identified]: Blackwell; 1987.
201.
Reynolds, K. D. Aristocratic women and political society in Victorian Britain. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1998.
202.
Scott, J.S. Women in history: the modern period. Past and present. London: Morris; 1983;
203.
Shoemaker, Robert B. Gender in English society, 1650-1850: the emergence of separate spheres? London: Longman; 1998.
204.
Staves, Susan. Married women’s separate property in England, 1660-1833. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press; 1990.
205.
Taylor, Barbara. Eve and the New Jerusalem: socialism and feminism in the nineteenth century. London: Virago; 1983.
206.
Tillyard, S. K. Aristocrats: Caroline, Emily, Louisa and Sarah Lennox, 1740-1832. London: Vintage; 1995.
207.
Vicinus, M. A widening sphere: changing roles of Victorian women; edited by M Vicinus. [Place of publication not identified]: Methuen; 1980.