[••• = disponible sólo en Inglés. Traducción de Montserrat Martínez García revisada y editada por Asun López-Varela. El diseño HTML, el formato, y los enlaces de George P. Landow.]
Discussions of Nicholas Nickleby (1839)
- Autobiographical elements in the novel: Dickens's mother was the original for the querulous Mrs. Nickleby
- Self-Presentation and Self-Realisation in Dickens's Nicholas Nickleby.
- Roots of the novel in Pantomime
- Setting in the novel
- Smike and death
- Smike unafraid to die
- William Morris alluded to it in a letter to Swinburne
- Yates adaptation for the theater
- Boucicault's 1859 Smike; or, Nicholas Nickelby
Illustrations
- Phiz (Hablot K. Brown)
- Cover for Monthly Parts
- The Country Manager Rehearses a Combat
- The Children at Their Cousin's Grave
- Mr. Ralph Nickleby's First Visit to His Poor Relations
- Nicholas Astonishes Mr. Squeers and Family
- A Sudden Recognition, Unexpected on Both Sides
- The Last Brawl between Sir Mulbery and His Pupil
- Unidentified illustrator for the Co-operative Publication Society's edition of Dicken's works [1912?]
The novel involved close collaboration between the young author and his illustrator, Hablot Knight Browne ("Phiz"), who together visited some notorious Yorkshire schools in January 1838, in particular Bowes Academy in Greta Bridge run by headmaster William Shaw, who in 1823 had been prosecuted for criminal negligence when two of his charges went blind. Wackford Squeers was modelled on Shaw, and Dotheboys Hall on his "Academy."
Modificado por última vez el 10 de agosto de 2011; traducido el 15 de febrero de 2012