General
Charlotte Brontë
- Description and Mood in Brontë and Gaskell
- Feminine Conduct and Responsibility in Gaskell and Brontë
- Brontë's Shirley as a Condition-of-England Novel
- The Governess and Class Prejudice
- Jane Eyre and North and South on Social Class
- Charlotte Brontë on Mary Barton
- Mr. Hale's Gentlemanly Conduct
- Strength in Times of Sorrow
- Weather and Mood
Charles Dickens
- Challenging Social Hierarchies in Pickwick and North and South
- The Impact of the Industrial Revolution on Servant-Master Relationships
- The Rebellious Servant in Dickens and Gaskell
- The Pride of the Servant Class in "Pickwick" and "North and South"
- Trudging Through Urban Life: Images of the Working Class in "Pickwick" and "North and South")
- Marriage in "Pickwick," "Jane Eyre," and "North and South"
- The Victorian Reward — Simple Love, and Marriage with God, for a Christian Life of Toil
- Empiricism or Faith: Bessy Higgins and the Chancery Prisoner
- Sexual Imagery in Gaskell and Dickens
- Class Disparities and Linguistic Mannerisms in Gaskell and Dickens
- The Role of the "Fallen Woman" in Three Victorian Novels: George Eliot's Adam Bede, Wilkie Collins's Armadale and Elizabeth Gaskell's Mary Barton
Other authors
Last modified 26 June 2016