Social History
- The Social Context of Dickens's Novels — Chapter 2 of E. D. H. Johnson's Charles Dickens: An Introduction to His Novels
- Charles Dickens as Social Commentator and Critic
- The Class Significance of "The Tuggses at Ramsgate"
- The text of "Philadelphia, and its Solitary Prison," Ch. 7 in American Notes
- Child Labor
- Dickens and Social Class
- Economic Contexts
- The Evolution of Victorian Capitalism and Great Expectations
- Melodrama as Theatricalized Dissent in Oliver Twist
- Charles Dickens and Two Kinds of Punch
- Dickens "the man who invented Christmas"
- Fathering Christmas: Charles Dickens and the (Re)Birth of Christmas
- Dickens and Urania Cottage, the Home for Fallen Women
- Dickens's London: An annotated map from David Persue's Charles Dickens Page
- Victorian London Theater: Dickens on the Right to Amusement for the Working Class
- Charles Dickens and “the Big Stink”
- Melodrama as Theatricalized Dissent in Oliver Twist
Related Materials
- Dickens and Political History, Nation and International
- Charles Dickens's Great Expectations — Social and Political Contexts
- Themes in Little Dorrit
Last modified 6 February 2012