- Mechanical Dehumanization: Loss of the Dynamic in "Signs of the Times:
- Signs of the Times but Hope for the Man
- Carlyle on the Proper Place of the Machine in Society
- The Sage and the Public: Carlyle's Position in "Signs of the Times"
- Society's Mechanisms and the Sudden Irrelevance of the Invisible
- Carlyle's Credibility and His Relationship to His Audience
- Carlyle’s Implicit Prophecies
- Age of the Machine
- Nature and Revolution in “Signs of the Times”
- Speaking to the Masses: Thomas Carlyle's "Signs of the Times"
- Between plausibility and overstatement: Thomas Carlyle's appeal to the reader's sensibility in "Signs of the Times"
- Christianity's Relation to Dynamic Thinking
- The Intellectual Heroes of "Signs of the Times"
- Carlyle: Mechanization of Writing and Society
- Rage and Nostalgia: Questions of Style and Emotion in "Signs of the Times"
- Creation of Mechanical Men
- Crimes of the Times: Carlyle's Critique of Modernity
- The Sage in Society: Carlyle's Position in "Signs of the Times"
- Qualitative Language in "Signs of the Times"
- The Loss of Magic and Rise of Logic
- Carlyle's Invisible
- Carlyle's Specifics in "Signs of the Times"
- Machines That Make Machines
- Prophecy in "Signs of the Times"
- Form vs. Content: Linguistic Vagueness in Carlyle's "Signs of the Times"
- Carlyle's Attack on the Mechanization of Literature in "Sign of the Times"
- Irreconcilable claims in Carlyle's "Signs of the Times"
- Carlyle's Audience in "Signs of the Times"
- Thomas Carlyle: Scientist at Heart
- Carlyle's Cultural Criticism in "Signs of the Times"
- A Struggle between Mechanics and Dynamics in Carlyle's "Signs of the Times"
- Man a Product of Society or Society a Product of Man
- Religion's Relation to the Mechanical World
- Carlyle's Slow but Steady Seduction of the Reader in "Signs of the Times"
- The Mechanical and Dynamic Elements of Carlyle's Style in "Signs of the Times"
- Carlyle and Sentence Construction in "Signs of the Times"
Last modified 27 February 2011