- Moving Up the Social Ladder: The Bottom Rung vs. The Top Rung
- Angels in the House?: Victorian Women in Great Expectations
- Subversion of Gender Identity in Great Expectations
- “Saint or Sinner On the Scaffold? Public Shame in Great Expectations, Jane Eyre, and The Scarlet Letter ”
- “Well, Oliver, how do you like it?”: Dickens, Funerals, and Undertakers
- “Education in the Mining Districts” — an article in The Illustrated London News (1855)
- The Illustrated London News, Crime, and Great Expectations
- Life in Nineteenth-Century Prisons as a Context for Great Expectations
- Criminally Self-Conscious: Pip's “Great Expectations"
- Pip Learns to Reject the Goddess of Getting On
- City and Country in In Memoriam and Great Expectations
- "Intimidation and Embarrassment in Conversations of Dickens' novel"
- Food, Famine, and Desire
- Dickens, The Westminster Review, and the Convict Question
- Courtroom Experience in Victorian England at the time of Great Expectations
- "Breach of Promise of Marriage": Miss Havisham and a late-Victorian lawsuit
- Victorian London Theater: Dickens on the Right to Amusement for the Working Class
Related Materials
- Victorian Social History
- Victorian Blacksmiths at Work
- social class
- The Life of the Industrial Worker in Ninteenth-Century England
- The Gentleman
- Occupations: census returns for 1851, 1861 and 1871
Last modified 19 February 2015