Victorian Studies

Title Publication Date Language Citations
Why the Notion of Victorian Britain Does Make Sense2006/01/01English5
Class Discourse and Popular Agency in Bleak House2004/01/01English4
Defining Habits: Dickens and the Psychology of Repetition2000/01/01English4
The Soundproof Study: Victorian Professionals, Work Space, and Urban Noise2000/01/01English3
The Absent-Minded Imperialists: What the British Really Thought About Empire (review)2005/01/01English3
Victorian Studies and the Two Modernities2005/01/01English3
Addressed to the Nines: The Victorian Archive and the Disappearance of the Book2006/01/01English3
Idleness and Aesthetic Consciousness, 1815-1900, by Richard Adelman2020/06/01English2
Why "Victorian"?: Response2005/01/01English2
In Another Country: Colonialism, Culture, and the English Novel in India (review)2003/01/01English2
Fair Enterprise or Extravagant Speculation: Investment, Speculation, and Gambling in Victorian England2002/01/01English2
Liberalism and Empire: A Study in Nineteenth-Century Political Thought and Practice (review)2001/01/01English2
An Emigrant and a Gentleman: Imperial Masculinity, British Magazines, and the Colony That Got Away2000/01/01English2
Agencies of the Letter: The Foreign Office and the Ruins of Central America2004/01/01English2
"Melancholy Mad Elephants": Affect and the Animal Machine in Hard Times2003/01/01English2
International Whiggery2003/01/01English2
The Beard Movement in Victorian Britain2005/01/01English1
A Unique and Glorious Mission: Women and Presbyterianism in Scotland, 1830-1930 (review)2003/01/01English1
Comments & Queries2003/01/01English1
Unauthorized Pleasures: Accounts of Victorian Erotic Experience (review)2004/01/01English1
News from Nowhere and the Here and Now: Reification and the Representation of the Present in Utopian Fiction2004/01/01English1
Gods and Mysteries: The Revival of Paganism and the Remaking of Mythography through the Nineteenth Century2005/01/01English1
Comments & Queries2005/01/01English1
"How Far am I Responsible?": Women and Morphinomania in Late-Nineteenth-Century Britain2005/01/01English1
The State of the World2005/01/01English1
The Long Nineteenth Century Is Too Short2005/01/01English1
Affect Theory’s Colonial Sources2023/02/01English1
Writing Place: Mimesis, Subjectivity and Imagination in the Works of George Gissing, by Rebecca Hutcheon2019/09/01English1
Eugene Lee-Hamilton’s Sonnets of the Wingless Hours: Baudelaire, Neurasthenia, and Poetic Recovery2021/12/01English1
Sara Ahmed’s Politics of Citation and Student Scholarship: Uncovering Indigenous Co-authors of British Folklore Collections2022/07/01English1