- Class Attitudes in The Westminster Review and Jane Eyre
- Contextualizing Racialized Interpretations of Bertha Mason's Character
- Nature and Religion, Nature or Religion
- Fantasy, Realism, and Narrative in Jane Eyre and Alice in Wonderland.
- "[S]he bit me . . . like a tigress": Charlotte Bronte's construction of the Other in Jane Eyre
- Fairy Tales in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Jane Eyre
- Dreams in Jane Eyre
- Mesmerism, Madness and Witchcraft in Jane Eyre
- Fighting Back
- Angry Angels: Repression, Containment, and Deviance, in Jane Eyre
- Jane Eyre and Through the Looking-Glass as Coming-of-Age Stories
- Love and Death inJane Eyreand Tennyson's "Tithonus"
- Nature in Tennyson's In Memoriam and Jane Eyre
- Passion, Dreams, and the Supernatural in Jane Eyre
- Conflict between Emotion and Passion in Jane Eyre and Through the Looking Glass
- Passion versus Judgement in Jane Eyre
- The Fated Modernist Heroine: Female Protagonists in Jane Eyre and Wide Sargasso Sea
- Pride and Self-Delusion in Tennyson's "Tithonus" (1833) and Jane Eyre
- Snobbery in Through the Looking-Glass and Jane Eyre
- Food and Famine in Victorian Literature: Hunger in Jane Eyre
- Rochester Should Say "I am the Walrus"
- Spiritual Revelation in Jane Eyre
- Questioning Evangelical Religion in Brontë and Dickens
- Strength in Times of Sorrow
- The Passion of True Love
- Thomas Carlyle's attacks on the Wealthy in "Hudson's Statue" (1851) and Punch
- The Mind-Body Connection in Jane Eyre
- Transformation of Fantasy into reality in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Jane Eyre
- Introduction: Angel or Vampire — the Portrayal of Women's Morality and Sensuality in Jane Eyre
- "An Interior Confronting": Death in Jane Eyre and Dombey and Son
- Rochester vs. St. John Rivers: or Why Jane Eyre Preferred a Cynical Sinner to a Religious Zealot
- Food as a Metaphor for Deeper Hungers in Pickwick and Jane Eyre
- Shades of Yellow: Representations of Change and Decay in Jane Eyre
- The Tension between Reason and Passion in Jane Eyre
- Law, Insanity and Self-Respect in Jane Eyre
- Review of Marianne Thormählen’s The Brontës in Context (2012)
- "Pain in Charlotte Brontë's Novels, and its Critical Reception"
- Teaching Jane Eyre
Last modified 1 January 2015