- Ruth apRoberts on Trollope’s “Situation Ethics”
- Trollope and His Middle-Class Readership
- Sympathy and the central role of women in The Last Chronicle of Barset
- Marriage and politics the two controlling and linked images throughout the Palliser series
- Anti-Semitism in Trollope and Punch
- Gambling in Trollope and Gaskell
- Playthings to Men: Women, Power, and Money in Gaskell and Trollope
- Trollope's Heroes who are not Sexually and Socially Triumphant
- Trollope's crippled, paralyzed and tragic figures
- Trollope's Comfort Romances for Men: Heterosexual Male Heroism in his Work
- Reading Notes
- The Dangers of Playing with Other People's Emotions
- Social Satire in Punch and Trollope: Marriage
- Social Position
- Trollope's Social Satire
- What is Romantic Love? Margaret Hale and Ruby Ruggles Reply
- Church Reform and Trollope's Clergymen of the Church of England
- Realism, Myth, and the Historical Past in Aurora Leigh and The Warden
- Art's Power to Reveal vs. Journalism's Power to Force
- Bearing Witness to Suffering in Morris and Trollope
- Validating the world of the imagination in Ayala's Angel
- Can We Forgive Him? Trollope on America
- Trollope on the novel as teacher of morals
- Trollope on the ugliness of Victorian male dress
- Trollope on the novelist’s need for forethought
- Trollope's defense of Irish emotion in Castle Richmond
- Trollope's analysis of the Irish Famine of 1846-47
- “Do something for a poor crathur [with] five starving childher” — Irish poverty in Castle Richmond
- The deflation of illusion in Ralph the Heir
- Phineas Finn and a world governed by luck rather than reason
- The Eustace Diamonds is Trollope’s most didactic novel
- The conflict between private and public life in Phineas Redux
- Language a generational and social divide between the Duke and his sons in The Duke's Children
Last modified 11 June 2022