[1]
A Philosophy of Furniture: http://xroads.virginia.edu/~hyper/POE/philfurn.html.
[2]
Bachelard, Gaston and Jolas, Maria 1994. The poetics of space. Beacon Press.
[3]
Baumgarten, M. Homes and Homelessness, In the Victorian Imagination. A.M.S. P.,U.S.
[4]
Blunt, Alison and Dowling, Robyn M. 2005. Home. Routledge.
[5]
Botting, Fred 1996. Gothic. Routledge.
[6]
Bowen, Elizabeth 1998. The last September. Vintage.
[7]
Brontë, Emily and Daiches, David 1965. Wuthering Heights. Penguin.
[8]
Brown, B. 2003. Sense of things : the object matter of American literature. University of Chicago Press.
[9]
Brown, Bill 2004. Things. University of Chicago Press.
[10]
Bryden, I. and Floyd, J. 1999. Domestic space: reading the nineteenth-century interior. Manchester University Press.
[11]
Carpenter, Humphrey 1985. Secret gardens: a study of the golden age of children’s literature. Allen & Unwin.
[12]
Carroll, Jane Suzanne 2011. Landscape in children’s literature. Routledge.
[13]
Cieraad, Irene 2006. At home: an anthropology of domestic space. Syracuse University Press.
[14]
Cieraad, Irene 2006. At home: an anthropology of domestic space. Syracuse University Press.
[15]
Cohen, Monica F 1998. Professional domesticity in the Victorian novel: women, work and home. Cambridge : Cambridge University Press.
[16]
Cooper, Susan 2007. The dark is rising. Puffin.
[17]
Daniel Miller 2001. Home Possessions. Berg Publishers.
[18]
Darcy, J. 1995. The Representation of Nature in The Wind in the Willows and The Secret Garden. The Lion and the Unicorn. 19, 2 (1995), 211–222. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1353/uni.1995.0018.
[19]
Dewan, P. 2004. The house as setting, symbol, and structural motif in children’s literature. Edwin Mellen Press.
[20]
Dickens, Charles and ebrary, Inc 2001. Bleak house. Electric Book Co.
[21]
Dyos, H.J. and Wolff, M. The Victorian city: Vol. 1. Routledge.
[22]
Dyos, H.J. and Wolff, M. 1998. The Victorian city: Vol.2. Routledge.
[23]
Ellis, Kate Ferguson 1989. The contested castle: Gothic novels and the subversion of domestic ideology. University of Illinois Press.
[24]
Flanders, Judith 2006. Inside the Victorian home : a portrait of domestic life in Victorian England. W.W. Norton.
[25]
Flanders, Judith 2004. The Victorian house: domestic life from childbirth to deathbed. Harper Perennial.
[26]
Gender and the Gothic Space | The Gothic Imagination: http://www.gothic.stir.ac.uk/guestblog/gender-and-the-gothic-space/.
[27]
Grahame, Kenneth and Shepard, Ernest H. 2004. The wind in the willows. Egmont.
[28]
Harrison, S. et al. 2004. Patterned ground: entanglements of nature and culture. Reaktion.
[29]
Hemmings, Robert. 2007. A Taste of Nostalgia: Children’s Books from the Golden Age-Carroll, Grahame, and Milne. Children’s Literature. 35, 1 (2007), 54–79. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1353/chl.2007.0011.
[30]
Hoskins, J. 1998. Biographical objects: how things tell the stories of people’s lives. Routledge.
[31]
Kelsall, M. 1993. The great good place: the country house and English literature. Harvester Wheatsheaf.
[32]
Lefebvre, Henri 1991. The production of space. Blackwell.
[33]
Lerer, S. 2009. Style and the Mole: Domestic Aesthetics in The Wind in the Willows. The Journal of Aesthetic Education. 43, 2 (2009), 51–63. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1353/jae.0.0041.
[34]
Miller, D. 2008. The comfort of things. Polity.
[35]
Mitchell, W. J. T. 2002. Landscape and power. University of Chicago Press.
[36]
Muir, Richard 1999. Approaches to landscape. Macmillan.
[37]
Nesbit, E. and Keller, A.I. (Arthur I. 2008. The Red house. Dodo Press.
[38]
O’Donoghue, B. 2011. A poetics of homecoming. Cambridge Scholars Pub.
[39]
Orwell, George 1989. Coming up for air. Penguin in association with Secker & Warburg.
[40]
Pearce, Susan M 1994. Interpreting objects and collections. (1994).
[41]
Ridenhour, J. 2013. In darkest London: the gothic cityscape in Victorian literature. Scarecrow Press, Inc.
[42]
Royle, N. 2003. The uncanny. Manchester University Press.
[43]
Saggini, Francesca and Soccio, Anna Enrichetta 2012. The house of fiction as the house of life: representations of the house from Richardson to Woolf. Cambridge Scholars.
[44]
Sedikides, Constantine; 2008. Nostalgia: Past, Present, and Future. (2008).
[45]
Siddall, Stephen 2009. Landscape and Literature. Cambridge University Press.
[46]
Smyth, G. and Croft, J. 2006. Our house : the representation of domestic space in modern culture. Rodopi.
[47]
Stevenson, Robert Louis and Luckhurst, Roger 2006. Strange case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde and other tales. Oxford University Press.
[48]
Stewart, S. 1993. On longing: narratives of the miniature, the gigantic, the souvenir, the collection. Duke University Press.
[49]
Tatar, Maria M. 1981. The Houses of Fiction: Toward a Definition of the Uncanny. Comparative Literature. 33, 2 (1981), 167–182.
[50]
Thacker, Christopher 1985. The History of Gardens. University of California Press.
[51]
The Uncanny: http://www-rohan.sdsu.edu/~amtower/uncanny.html.
[52]
Tindall, Gillian 2010. Countries of the mind : the meaning of place to writers. Gillian Tindall. Faber.
[53]
Tolkien, J. R. R. 1978. The hobbit, or, There and back again. Allen and Unwin.
[54]
Tuan, Yi-fu 1977. Space and place: the perspective of experience. Edward Arnold.
[55]
Tuan, Yi-fu 1974. Topophilia: a study of environmental perception, attitudes, and values. Prentice-Hall.
[56]
Turkle, Sherry 2007. Evocative objects: things we think with. (2007).
[57]
Vidler, A. 1987. The Architecture of the Uncanny: The Unhomely Houses of the Romantic Sublime. Assemblage. 3 (1987), 6–29.
[58]
Waters, Catherine 2008. Commodity culture in Dicken’s ‘household words’: the social life of goods. Aldershot : Ashgate.
[59]
Watson, J. 2006. Literature and material culture from Balzac to Proust: the collection and consumption of curiosities. Cambridge University Press.
[60]
Waugh, Evelyn 2000. Brideshead revisited: the sacred and profane memories of Captain Charles Ryder. Penguin.
[61]
WOOLF, VIRGINIA. 2014. Death of the Moth. Martino Fine Books.
[62]
2010. Kenneth Grahame’s The Wind in the Willows: A Children’s Classic at 100 (review). Children’s Literature Association Quarterly. 35, 4 (2010), 461–464. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1353/chq.2010.0021.