English fiction -- 19th century -- History and criticism
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English fiction -- 19th century -- History and criticism
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English fiction
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Incoming Resources
- Subject of37
- Fiction and 'the woman question' from 1850 to 1930, edited by Nicola Darwood, W.R. Owens and Alexis Weedon
- The Indian mutiny and the British imagination, Gautam Chakravarty
- The centre of things, political fiction in Britain from Disraeli to the present, Christopher Harvie
- The marriage of minds, reading sympathy in the Victorian marriage plot, Rachel Ablow
- Sex, politics, and science in the nineteenth-century novel, edited by Ruth Bernard Yeazell
- Fiction, famine, and the rise of economics in Victorian Britain and Ireland, Gordon Bigelow
- The novelty of newspapers, Victorian fiction after the invention of the news, Matthew Rubery
- Literary Darwinism, evolution, human nature, and literature, Joseph Carroll
- The Brontës and education, Marianne Thormählen
- Imperfect histories, the elusive past and the legacy of romantic historicism, Ann Rigney
- London and the making of provincial literature, aesthetics and the transatlantic book trade, 1800-1850, Joseph Rezek
- Moral authority, men of science, and the Victorian novel, Anne DeWitt
- The Gothic body, sexuality, materialism, and degeneration at the fin de siècle, Kelly Hurley
- Dream revisionaries, gender and genre in women's utopian fiction, 1870-1920, Darby Lewes
- The Cambridge companion to the Victorian novel, edited by Deirdre David
- Family likeness, sex, marriage, and incest from Jane Austen to Virginia Woolf, Mary Jean Corbett
- The romantic national tale and the question of Ireland, Ina Ferris
- Manliness and the boys' story paper in Britain, a cultural history, 1855-1940, by Kelly Boyd
- Atonement and self-sacrifice in nineteenth-century narrative, Jan-Melissa Schramm
- After Bakhtin, essays on fiction and criticism, David Lodge
- Women's ghost literature in nineteenth-century Britain, Melissa Edmundson Makala
- Fiction for the working man, 1830-1850, a study of the literature produced for the working classes in early Victorian urban England, Louis James
- Bible and novel, narrative authority and the death of God, Norman Vance
- The fantasy of family, nineteenth-century children's literature and the myth of the domestic ideal, Elizabeth Thiel
- From custom to capital, the English novel and the Industrial Revolution, Igor Webb
- The anti-Jacobin novel, British conservatism and the French Revolution, M.O. Grenby
- Guilty money, the City of London in Victorian and Edwardian culture, 1815-1914, by Ranald C. Michie
- Imperfect histories, the elusive past and the legacy of romantic historicism, Ann Rigney
- Darwin and the novelists, patterns of science in Victorian fiction, George Levine
- Educating women, cultural conflict and Victorian literature, Laura Morgan Green
- The French Revolution debate and the British novel, 1790-1814, the struggle for history's authority, Morgan Rooney
- Utopia Ltd., Ideologies of Social Dreaming in England 1870-1900, Matthew Beaumont
- Caribbean culture and British fiction in the Atlantic world, 1780-1870, Tim Watson
- Telling tales, gender and narrative form in Victorian literature and culture, Elizabeth Langland
- Perils of the night, a feminist study of nineteenth-century Gothic, Eugenia C. DeLamotte
- Changing hands, industry, evolution, and the reconfiguration of the Victorian body, Peter J. Capuano
- How to do things with books in Victorian Britain, Leah Price
Outgoing Resources
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