Domestic Affairs
- Dickens's Anti-Medievalism
- The Class Significance of "The Tuggses at Ramsgate"
- Dickens, Cobbett, and “the ordinary man” The text of "Philadelphia, and its Solitary Prison," Ch. 7 in American Notes
- Dickens and Social Class
- Economic Contexts
- The Evolution of Victorian Capitalism and Great Expectations
- Charles Dickens as Social Commentator and Critic
International Affairs
- The Mysteries of Edwin Drood and the Chinese Opium Wars
- A Tale of Two Cities (1859): A Model of the Integration of History
- Carlyle's Influence upon A Tale of Two Cities
- The Imperial Context of Charles Dickens and Wilkie Collins's "The Perils of Certain English Prisoners" (1857)
- Victorian Political History
Related Materials
- The Social Contexts of Dickens's Writings
- Charles Dickens's Great Expectations — Social and Political Contexts
- Themes in Little Dorrit
Last modified 6 February 2012