General
- Introduction to Neo-Victorianism
- Authors of Neo-Victorian Fiction
- The Postimperial British Debate over History versus Heritage
- History, Heritage, and Secondary School National Curriculum in the United Kingdom, 1970-2000
- One Explanation for Neo-Victorian Fiction: Jasper Fforde on the End of Narrative Originality
- Mystery, Detective Stories, and Neo-Victorian Fiction
- Steampunk as Neo-Victorian
Looking Back on the Victorians
- Victorians and Victorianism — an Introduction
- Victorianism as a Fusion of Neoclassical and Romantic Ideas and Attitudes
- The Complex Realities of Victorianism
- Main Currents in Victorian Intellectual History — Some Handy Oversimplifications
- Forgetting Obvious Things: The Legacy of the Victorians?
- Stained Glass and Gaslight — Darkness, Smog, and a Little Light in Victorian Cities
- The fundamental conflicts of Victorian poetry
- The Difficulties of Victorian Poetry — Browning, Hopkins, Swinburne, Tennyson
- What Was Victorian Taste, Really?
- Victorian Earnestness
- The Victorian Gentleman
- Crisis of Organized Religion
Stage and Screen
- The Young Victoria — A Neo-Victorian Take on the Queen
- Adaptations of Victorian Fiction in Drama, Cinema, and Television
- David Lean’s Neo-Victorianism: Oliver Twist in the Twenty-First Century
- David Copperfield Takes to the Boards, the Big Screen, and the Tube; or, the Strange Theatrical, Cinematic, and TV Afterlife of Dickens's Favourite Child.
- Cinematic Adaptations of A Christmas Carol
- The Invisible Woman (2014) — A film about Charles Dickens and Nell Ternan
- The Most Haunting Characters in Adaptations of Victorian Fiction in Drama, Cinema, and Television
- Films and Plays from A Tale of Two Cities
- A Review of Valérie V. Hazette's Wuthering Heights on Film and Television: A Journey across Time and Cultures
- Adapting a Victorian Classic: Roman Polanski’s Tess and Hardy’s Tess of the D’Urbervilles
- Jack Clayton's Adaptation of The Turn of the Screw in The Innocents: A Critical Discussion and Evaluation
- Visualizing the Anglo-Zulu War in Illustration, Painting, Photography and Film
- Review of the Television Series, The Terror, about the Lost Franklin Expedition
- Some Thoughts on Mike Leigh's Mr Turner
- More Book and Film Reviews
Web Resources
- Neo-Victorian Studies (peer-reviewed online scholarly journal)
Last modified 20 January 2026