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