Critical Reception and Reputation
Charlotte Brontë
- Food in Brontë and Dickens
- Food as a Metaphor for Deeper Hungers in Pickwick and Jane Eyre
- Institutionalized Corruption in Pickwick and Jane Eyre
- Jane Eyre, Proto-Feminist vs. "The Third Person Man"
- Class Disparities and Linguistic Mannerisms in Gaskell and Dickens
- Marriage in Pickwick, Jane Eyre and North and South
- Narrative Authority in Pickwick and Jane Eyre
- Passion Versus Reason
- Pathetic Fallacy in Pickwick and Jane Eyre
- The Pride of the Servant Class in Pickwick and North and South
- Redemption from Thorns: Hope and Description in Pickwick and Jane Eyre
- Questioning Evangelical Religion in Brontë and Dickens
- The Victorian Reward — Simple Love, and Marriage with God, for a Christian Life of Toil
Thomas Carlyle
Lewis Carroll
Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell
- Challenging Social Hierarchies in Pickwick and North and South
- Empiricism or Faith: Bessy Higgins and the Chancery Prisoner
- The Rebellious Servant in Dickens and Gaskell
- Sexual Imagery in Gaskell and Dickens
- [See Brontë above]
George MacDonald
The Idylls of the King
Last modified 16 June 2017