[1]
A Library of Essays on Charles Dickens: 6-Volume Set by Catherine Waters: .
[2]
Alberti, S.J.M.M. Morbid Curiosities: Medical Museums in Nineteenth-Century Britain .
[3]
Allen, Walter et al. 1970. Dickens 1970: centenary essays. Chapman & Hall in association with the Dickens Fellowship.
[4]
Amigoni, David 2007. Colonies, cults and evolution: literature, science and culture in nineteenth-century writing. Cambridge University Press.
[5]
Andrews, Malcolm 1994. Dickens and the grown-up child. Macmillan.
[6]
Andrews, Malcolm and ebrary, Inc 2006. Charles Dickens and his performing selves: Dickens and the public readings. Oxford University Press.
[7]
Ariès, Philippe 1962. Centuries of childhood. Jonathan Cape.
[8]
Auerbach, N. Incarnations of the Orphan. English Literary History, Vol. 42, No. 3 (Autumn, 1975), pp. 395-419.
[9]
Auerbach, Nina 1990. Private theatricals: the lives of the Victorians. Harvard University Press.
[10]
Auerbach, Nina 1986. Romantic imprisonment: women and other glorified outcasts. Columbia University Press.
[11]
Boas, George 1990. The cult of childhood. Spring Publications.
[12]
Bowen, John 2000. Other Dickens: Pickwick to Chuzzlewit. Oxford University Press.
[13]
Brantlinger, Patrick 1988. Rule of darkness: British literature and imperialism, 1830-1914. Cornell University Press.
[14]
Buckley, Jerome Hamilton 1974. Season of youth: the Bildungsroman from Dickens to Golding. Harvard University Press.
[15]
Catherine Waters Dickens and the Politics of the Family. Cambridge University Press.
[16]
Charles Dickens 1996. ‘The amusements of the people’ and other papers. J.M. Dent.
[17]
Charles Dickens 2000. The uncommercial traveller and other papers, 1859-70. J.M. Dent.
[18]
Christ, Carol T. and Jordan, John O. 1995. Victorian literature and the Victorian visual imagination. University of California Press.
[19]
Collins, Philip 1964. Dickens and crime. Macmillan.
[20]
Collins, Philip 1965. Dickens and education. Macmillan.
[21]
Connor, S. ‘They’re all in one story’: Public and private narratives in Oliver Twist. The Dickensian. 85.
[22]
Coveney, Peter 1967. The image of childhood: the individual and society : a study of the theme in English literature. Penguin books.
[23]
Dickens, Charles et al. 1986. Charles Dickens: the critical heritage. Routledge.
[24]
Dickens, Charles 1956. Christmas stories. Oxford University Press.
[25]
Dickens, Charles et al. 1970. Dombey and Son. Penguin.
[26]
Dickens, Charles 1957. Sketches by Boz: illustrative of every-day life and every-day people. Oxford University Press.
[27]
Dickens, Charles and ebrary, Inc 2001. Oliver Twist. Electric Book Co.
[28]
Dickens, Charles and ebrary, Inc 1992. Our mutual friend. Modern Library.
[29]
Dickens, Charles and ebrary, Inc 2002. The mystery of Edwin Drood. Penguin.
[30]
Dickens, Charles and Stone, Harry 1987. Dickens’ working notes for his novels. University of Chicago Press.
[31]
Dickens Fellowship Dickensian.
[32]
Dickens Journals Online (DJO) | University of Buckingham: .
[33]
Forster, John and Hoppé, Alfred John 1969. The life of Charles Dickens, by John Forster; in 2 volumes. New ed. with notes and an index by A. J. Hoppé and additional author’s footnotes: Vol.1. Dent.
[34]
Forster, John and Hoppé, Alfred John 1969. The life of Charles Dickens, by John Forster; in 2 volumes. New ed. with notes and an index by A. J. Hoppé and additional author’s footnotes: Vol.1. Dent.
[35]
Foucault, Michel 2001. Madness and civilization: a history of insanity in the Age of Reason. Routledge.
[36]
Foucault, Michel 1990. The history of sexuality. Penguin.
[37]
Foucault, Michel and ebrary, Inc 1995. Discipline and punish: the birth of the prison. Vintage Books.
[38]
Freud, Sigmund et al. 1991. On metapsychology: the theory of psychoanalysis : ‘Beyond the pleasure principle’ ‘The Ego and the id’ and other works. Penguin.
[39]
Furneaux, Holly 2009. Queer Dickens: erotics, families, masculinities. Oxford University Press.
[40]
Green, Martin 1980. Dreams of adventure, deeds of empire. Routledge and Kegan Paul.
[41]
Grylls, David 1978. Guardians and angels: parents and children in nineteenth-century literature. Faber.
[42]
Hardy, Barbara Nathan and ebrary, Inc 1970. The moral art of Dickens: essays. Athlone Press.
[43]
Hartley, J. The Selected Letters of Charles Dickens.
[44]
Hartley, Jenny 2008. Charles Dickens and the house of fallen women. Methuen.
[45]
Hartog, Dirk den 1987. Dickens and romantic psychology: the self in time in nineteenth-century literature. Macmillan.
[46]
Hassam, Andrew 1994. Sailing to Australia: shipboard diaries by nineteenth-century British emigrants. Manchester University Press.
[47]
Herst, Beth F. 1990. The Dickens hero: selfhood and alienation in the Dickens world. Weidenfeld and Nicolson.
[48]
Hollington, Michael 1995. Charles Dickens: critical assessments. Helm.
[49]
Hollington, Michael 1995. Charles Dickens: critical assessments. Helm.
[50]
Hughes, Robert 1996. The fatal shore: a history of the transportation of convicts to Australia, 1787-1868. Harvill.
[51]
Ingham, Patricia 1992. Dickens, women and language. Harvester Wheatsheaf.
[52]
James, Louis 1974. Fiction for the working man, 1830-1850: a study of the literature produced for the working classes in early Victorian urban England. Penguin.
[53]
James, Louis 1976. Print and the people, 1819-1851. Allen Lane.
[54]
Jay, Elisabeth 1986. Faith and doubt in Victorian Britain. Macmillan.
[55]
John, Juliet 2010. Dickens and mass culture. Oxford University Press.
[56]
Lentricchia, Frank 1988. Ariel and the police: Michel Foucault, William James, Wallace Stevens. University of Wisconsin Press.
[57]
Leps, Marie-Christine 1992. Apprehending the criminal: the production of deviance in nineteenth-century discourse. Duke University Press.
[58]
Literature Online database: .
[59]
Marx, Karl et al. 2005. The Communist manifesto: a road map to history’s most important political document. Haymarket Books.
[60]
McKnight, Natalie 1993. Idiots, madmen, and other prisoners in Dickens. St. Martin’s Press.
[61]
Meckier, Jerome 1987. Hidden rivalries in Victorian fiction: Dickens, realism, and revaluation. University Press of Kentucky.
[62]
Miller, D. A. 1988. The novel and the police. University of California Press.
[63]
Morris, R. J. and Economic History Society 1979. Class and class consciousness in the Industrial Revolution, 1780-1850. Macmillan.
[64]
Nayder, Lillian 2002. Unequal partners: Charles Dickens, Wilkie Collins, and Victorian authorship. Cornell University Press.
[65]
O’Gorman, F. The Cambridge Companion to Victorian Culture.
[66]
Pattison, Robert 1978. The child figure in English literature. University of Georgia Press.
[67]
Perera, Suvendrini 1991. Reaches of empire: the English novel from Edgeworth to Dickens. Columbia University Press.
[68]
Perkin, Harold 1972. The origins of modern English society, 1780-1880. Routledge and Kegan Paul.
[69]
Peters, Laura 2013. Dickens and race. Manchester University Press.
[70]
Peters, Laura 2000. Orphan texts: Victorian orphans, culture and empire. Manchester University Press.
[71]
Said, Edward W. 1994. Culture and imperialism. Vintage.
[72]
Said, Edward W. 2003. Orientalism. Penguin.
[73]
Sally Ledger 2011. Charles Dickens in context. Cambridge University Press.
[74]
Sanders, A. Authors in Context: Charles Dickens. Oxford World’s Classics.
[75]
Schad, John 1996. Dickens refigured: bodies, desires and other histories. Manchester University Press.
[76]
Slater, M. Charles Dickens.
[77]
Stone, Harry 1994. The night side of Dickens. Ohio State University Press.
[78]
Suchoff, David 1994. Critical theory and the novel: mass society and cultural criticism in Dickens, Melville and Kafka. University of Wisconsin Press.
[79]
Sutherland, John 2009. The Longman companion to Victorian fiction. Pearson Longman.
[80]
TAMBLING, J. 1986. Prison-bound: Dickens and Foucault. Essays in Criticism. XXXVI, 1 (1986), 11–31. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/eic/XXXVI.1.11.
[81]
Tambling, Jeremy 1995. Dickens, violence and the modern state: dreams of the scaffold. Macmillan.
[82]
Tillotson, Kathleen 1956. Novels of the eighteen-forties. Oxford University Press.
[83]
Walkowitz, Judith R. 1980. Prostitution and Victorian society: women, class and the state. Cambridge University Press.
[84]
Waters, Catherine 2008. Commodity culture in Dickens’s Household words: the social life of goods. Ashgate.
[85]
Williams, Raymond 1958. Culture and society, 1780-1950. Chatto & Windus.
[86]
Williams, Raymond 1984. The English novel from Dickens to Lawrence. Hogarth.
[87]
Wilson, A. 1970. Dickens on Children and Childhood. Dickens 1970: Centenery Essays. Chapman & Hall. 195–227.
[88]
Wirth-Nesher, H. 1986. ‘The Literary Orphan as National hero: Huck and Pip’. Dickens studies annual: essays on Victorian fiction, Vol.15. AMS Press.
[89]
Young, Robert 1995. Colonial desire: hybridity in theory, culture, and race. Routledge.
[90]
Dickens Journalism Volume 3: Gone Astray and Other Papers 1851-59: Gone Astray and Other Papers, 1851-59 Vol 3: Amazon.co.uk: Charles Dickens, Michael Slater: Books.
[91]
Dickens studies annual.
[92]
2011. Oxford History of the Novel in English: Nineteenth-century Novel 1820-1880 v. 3. Oxford University Press.
[93]
Sketches By Boz: Dickens Journalism Volume 1: Sketches by Boz and Other Early Papers, 1833-39 Vol 1 Phoenix Giants: Amazon.co.uk: Charles Dickens, Michael Slater: Books.
[94]
‘The Boys Are Pickpockets, and the Girl Is a Prostitute’: Gender and Juvenile Criminality in Early Victorian England from ‘Oliver Twist to London Labour’New Literary History, Vol. 27, No. 2 (Spring, 1996), pp. 227-249.