[••• = 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.]
Discussons
- •••Oliver untainted by evil
- •••Like Martin Chuzzlewit, it agitates for social reform
- Oliver Twist, the Dickensian abandoned child, and the Blacking Works
- Mary Dickens as a source for Rose Maylie
- Dickens's public readings of Sikes' murder of Nancy caused his physical breakdown
- Historical context of the workhouse in the novel
- Oliver Twist serves notice that Dickens turns from comedy to somber probings of Victorian society
- Oliver Twist, Dickens's love of the fabulous, and Pilgrim's Progress
- Oliver Twist and Dickens's movement away from linear narrative
- Oliver Twist opposes the romanticizing proclivities of Harrison Ainsworth and others "Newgate" writers
- Oliver Twist and the Newgate Novel
- •••Oliver contrasted to Pip
- •••Dostoevsky on Bill Sykes
- •••Oliver Twist: Laughter and the Rhetoric of Attack (chapter in Kincaid's book on Dickens)
- •••Early Biblical Boz: The Case of Oliver Twist (chapter in Larson's book on Dickens)
- •••Oliver Twist and Nicholas Nickleby
- •••Mr. Brownlow and other Dickensian humanitarians
- •••Christian innocents in Oliver Twist and other works
- •••Nancy and Bet in Oliver Twist
- What was the message about prostitution in Oliver Twist and David Copperfield
Adaptations on Stage and Screen
Last modified 30 November 2011