Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-94fs2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-05T01:44:15.318Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 February 2024

Pamela K. Gilbert
Affiliation:
University of Florida
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Primary Sources

[Akers, Paul (Benjamin)]. “Our Artists in Italy: William Page”. The Atlantic Monthly 7.40 (Feb. 1861): 129–37.Google Scholar
Anonymous. “Great Expectations”. The Atlantic Monthly 8.47 (Sept. 1861): 380–82.Google Scholar
Anonymous. “The Phonautograms of Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville”. First Sounds. www.firstsounds.org/. 18 Aug. 2022.Google Scholar
Bagehot, Walter. “The English Constitution”. Fortnightly Review 1 (1865): 123.Google Scholar
Bain, Alexander. “Prefatory Words”. Mind 1.1 (Jan. 1876): 16.Google Scholar
Barthes, Roland. The Rustle of Language. Translated by Richard Howard. University of California Press, 1989.Google Scholar
Baudelaire, Charles. “The Modern Public and Photography”. In Classic Essays on Photography, edited by Trachtenberg, Alan (Leete’s Island Books, 1980): 8390.Google Scholar
Brilmyer, S. Pearl. The Science of Human Character: Human Objecthood and the Ends of Realism. University of Chicago Press, 2021.Google Scholar
Brooks, Peter. Realist Vision. Yale University Press, 2005.Google Scholar
Christ, Carol T. and Jordan, John O., eds. Victorian Literature and the Victorian Visual Imagination. University of California Press, 1995.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dallas, E. S.Adam Bede”. The Times 12 (Apr. 1859): 5.Google Scholar
Dallas, E. S. The Gay Science. Vol. 1. Chapman and Hall, 1866.Google Scholar
Daston, Lorraine. “British Responses to Psycho-Physiology, 1860–1900”. Isis 69.2 (1978): 192208.Google Scholar
Eliot, George. The Mill on the Floss. Oxford University Press, 2015.Google Scholar
Eliot, George. The Spanish Gypsy. Ticknor and Fields, 1868.Google Scholar
Ermarth, Elizabeth Deeds. Realism and Consensus in the English Novel. Edinburgh University Press, 1983.Google Scholar
Fechner, Gustav Theodor. Elements of Psychophysics. Thoemmes Press, 1999.Google Scholar
Flanders, Judith. The Invention of Murder: How the Victorians Revelled in Death and Detection and Created Modern Crime. Harper Collins, 2011.Google Scholar
Freedgood, Elaine. Worlds Enough: The Invention of Realism in the Victorian Novel. Princeton University Press, 2019.Google Scholar
Garratt, Peter. Victorian Empiricism: Self, Knowledge, and Reality in Ruskin, Bain, Lewes, Spencer, and George Eliot. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2010.Google Scholar
Gilbert, Pamela K.Sensation Fiction and the Medical Context”. In The Cambridge Companion to Sensation Fiction, edited by Mangham, Andrew (Cambridge University Press, 2013): 182–95.Google Scholar
Hatfield, Gary. “Helmholtz and Classicism: The Science of Aesthetics and the Aesthetics of Science”. In Hermann von Helmholtz and the Foundations of Nineteenth-Century Science, edited by Cahan, David (University of California Press, 1993): 522–59.Google Scholar
Henderson, Andrea. “Atomic Individuals: Representing ‘ultimate particles’ in Nineteenth-Century Britain”. Representations 159.1 (2022): 122–50.Google Scholar
Herschel, John. “On Atoms”. Fortnightly Review 1 (1865): 8185.Google Scholar
Hughes, Winifred. “E.S. Dallas: Victorian Poetics in Transition”. Victorian Poetry 23.1 (1985): 121.Google Scholar
Hume, David. An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding. Oxford University Press, 2007.Google Scholar
Hume, David. A Treatise of Human Nature. Clarendon, 1896.Google Scholar
Huxley, Thomas H.Nature: Aphorisms by Goethe”. Nature 1.4 (Nov. 1869): 911.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
James, William. “Are We Automata?Mind 4.13 (Jan. 1879): 122.Google Scholar
Jenkins, Alice. Space and the ‘March of the Mind’: Literature and the Physical Sciences in Britain, 1815–1850. Oxford University Press, 2007.Google Scholar
Kreilkamp, Ivan. “The 1850s”. In A Companion to the English Novel, edited by Arata, Stephen, Haley, Madigan, Hunter, J. Paul, and Wicke, Jennifer (Wiley Blackwell, 2015): 3448.Google Scholar
Lewes, George Henry. “The Principles of Success in Literature: The Principle of Vision”. Fortnightly Review 1 (1865): 185–96.Google Scholar
Lindsay, Thomas M.Psychology in Holland”. Mind 1.1 (Jan. 1876): 144–45.Google Scholar
Lukács, Georg. Studies in European Realism. Translated by Edith Bone. Grosset & Dunlap, 1974.Google Scholar
Oliphant, Margaret. “Sensation Novels”. Blackwood’s Magazine 91 (1862): 564–84.Google Scholar
Shteir, Ann and Lightman, Bernard, eds. Figuring It Out: Science, Gender and Visual Culture. Dartmouth, 2006.Google Scholar
Stewart, Dugald. Elements of the Philosophy of the Human Mind. Vol. 1. Thoemmes Press, 1994.Google Scholar
Stiles, Anne. Popular Fiction and Brain Science in the Late Nineteenth Century. Cambridge University Press, 2012.Google Scholar
Taylor, Jenny Bourne and Shuttleworth, Sally, eds. Embodied Selves: An Anthology of Texts, 1830–1890. Clarendon Press, 1998.Google Scholar
Tett, Sam. “‘Going Home When It Was Not Home’: Jamais Vu in Nineteenth-Century British Fiction”. Journal of Victorian Culture 27.33 (2022): 507–25.Google Scholar
Teukolsky, Rachel. The Literate Eye: Victorian Art Writing and Modernist Aesthetics. Oxford University Press, 2013.Google Scholar
“The Fortnightly Review”. The Athenæum no. 1952 (Mar. 1865): 436.Google Scholar
Wack, Daniel. “Artistic Medium”. The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, https://iep.utm.edu/. 2 Sept. 2022.Google Scholar
Whipple, Edwin Percy. Character and Characteristic Men. Ticknor and Fields, 1866.Google Scholar

Secondary Sources

Anonymous. “A Mere Visitor on the Academy”. The Spectator, 23 May, 1868.Google Scholar
Bagneris, Mia L.Miscegenation in Marble: John Bell’s Octoroon”. The Art Bulletin 102.2 (2020): 6490.Google Scholar
Braddon, M.E. Lady Audley’s Secret. Edited by Skilton, David. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1992.Google Scholar
Braddon, M.E. The Octoroon. Hastings: Sensation Press, 1999.Google Scholar
Brooks, Peter. The Melodramatic Imagination: Balzac, Henry James, Melodrama and the Mode of Excess. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1995.Google Scholar
Carnell, Jennifer, ed. “Introduction”. In The Octoroon, by M.E Braddon (Hastings: Sensation Press, 1999): xiii–xviii.Google Scholar
Colfax, Richard H. Evidence against the Views of the Abolitionists, Consisting of Physical and Moral Proofs, of the Natural Inferiority of the Negroes. New York: James T.M. Bleakley, 1833.Google Scholar
Collins, Wilkie. Armadale. Edited by Sutherland, John. London: Penguin, 1995.Google Scholar
Collins, Wilkie. The Moonstone. Edited by Stewart, J. I. M.. London: Penguin, 1966.Google Scholar
Dickens, Charles. “The Niger Expedition”. The Examiner, 19 August 1848.Google Scholar
Dickens, Charles. “The Noble Savage”. Household Words, 7 (11 June 1853): 337–39.Google Scholar
Garland-Thomson, Rosemarie. Extraordinary Bodies: Figuring Disability in American Culture and Literature. New York: Columbia University Press, 1997.Google Scholar
Gilman, Sander L. Difference and Pathology: Stereotypes of Sexuality, Race and Madness. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1985.Google Scholar
Hall, Catherine. Civilizing Subjects: Metropole and Colony in the English Imagination 1830–1867. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2002.Google Scholar
Halliday, Sir A. A General View of the Present State of Lunatics and Lunatic Asylums, in Great Britain and Ireland, and in Some Other Kingdoms. London: Thomas and George Underwood, 1828. Quoted in Leonard Smith. Insanity, Race and Colonialism: Managing Mental Disorder in the Post-emancipation British Caribbean 1838–1914. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014.Google Scholar
Holmes, Martha Stoddard. Fictions of Affliction: Physical Disability in Victorian Culture. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2009.Google Scholar
Holmes, Martha Stoddard and Mossman, Mark. “Disability in Victorian Sensation Fiction”. In A Companion to Sensation Fiction, edited by Pamela K. Gilbert (Oxford: Blackwell, 2011): 493506.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hunt, James. “On the Negro’s Place in Nature”. In Publications of the Anthropological Society of London: Memoirs Read before the Society, 1863–4 Volume the First (London: Trubner and Co., 1865): 1–64.Google Scholar
John, Juliet. Dickens’s Villains: Melodrama, Character, Popular Culture. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.Google Scholar
Jung, Carl. Archetypes of the Collective Unconscious, 2nd edition. Translated by R. F. C. Hull. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1990.Google Scholar
Knox, Robert. The Races of Men: A Fragment. Philadelphia: Lea and Blanchard, 1850.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Logan, Heidi. Sensational Deviance: Disability in Nineteenth-Century Sensation Fiction. New York and London: Taylor and Francis, 2019.Google Scholar
Lowe, Tony B.Nineteenth Century Review of Mental Health Care for African Americans: A Legacy of Service and Policy Barriers”. The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare 33.4 (2006): 2950.Google Scholar
Manganelli, Kimberly Snyder. Transatlantic Spectacles of Race: The Tragic Mulatta and the Tragic Muse. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2012.Google Scholar
Mangham, Andrew. Violent Women and Sensation Fiction: Crime, Medicine and Victorian Popular Culture. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007.Google Scholar
Mattison, H., Reverend. Louisa Picquet: The Octoroon: A Tale of Southern Life. New York, 1861. Reprinted by CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2009.Google Scholar
Mitchell, David T. and Snyder, Sharon. Narrative Prosthesis: Disability and the Dependencies of Discourse. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2000.Google Scholar
Mondal, Sharleen. “Racing Desire and the New Man of the House in Wilkie Collins’s The Moonstone”. Nineteenth-Century Gender Studies 5.1 (2009): np.Google Scholar
Mossman, Mark. “Representations of the Abnormal Body in ‘The Moonstone’”. Victorian Literature and Culture 37.2 (2009): 483500.Google Scholar
New Adelphi Theatre”. Lloyd’s Weekly London Newspaper, 24 November 1861. Quoted in Mia L. Bagneris, “Miscegenation in Marble: John Bell’s Octoroon”. The Art Bulletin 102.2 (2020): 64–90.Google Scholar
Om, Donghee. “‘The Fire That Lights Those Big Black Eyes of His Is Not an Easy Fire’: (IR)Rationalizing Blackness in Armadale and The Guilty River”. CEA Critic 83.3 (November 2021): 255–68.Google Scholar
Quayson, Ato. Aesthetic Nervousness: Disability and the Crisis of Representation. New York: Columbia University Press, 2007.Google Scholar
Roach, Joseph. “The Octoroon by John Bell”. Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide 15.2 (Summer 2016). www.19thc-artworldwide.org/summer16/roach-on-the-octoroon-by-john-bell.Google Scholar
Scull, Andrew. Hysteria. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009.Google Scholar
Steverson, Delia. “Deniably Disabled: The Constitutive Relationship between Race and Disability in African American Literature – A Black Critical Disabilities Studies Approach”. Doctor of Philosophy in English Literature Dissertation, The University of Alabama, 2017.Google Scholar
Tosh, John. Manliness and Masculinity in Nineteenth Century Britain: Essays on Gender, Family, and Empire. Harlow: Pearson, 2005.Google Scholar
Walker-Gore, Claire. Plotting Disability in the Nineteenth-Century Novel. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2020.Google Scholar
Walters, Alisha. “Racial Hybridity and Victorian Nationalism: 1850–1901”. PhD Dissertation, University of Toronto, 2004.Google Scholar
Waters, Hazel. Racism on the Victorian Stage: Representation of Slavery and the Black Character. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007.Google Scholar
Banim, John. John Doe Volume III of Tales by the O’Hara Family. London: W. Simpkin and R. Marshall, 1831.Google Scholar
Banim, Michael. “Notes to Peep O’Day”. In The Peep O’Day and The Billhook by The O’Hara Family (Dublin: James Duffy, 1865): 181–7.Google Scholar
Bisceglia, Louis R.The Fenian Funeral of Terence Bellew McManus”. Éire-Ireland 14.3 (1979): 4564.Google Scholar
Boucicault, Dion. “Arrah na Pogue; or, The Wicklow Wedding”. In Dolmen Boucicault, edited by Krause, David (Dublin: Dolmen Press, 1964): 111172.Google Scholar
Boucicault, Dion. “The Shaughraun: An Original Drama”. In Dolmen Boucicault, edited by Krause, David (Dublin: Dolmen Press, 1964): 173238.Google Scholar
“Christmas Amusements. The Theatres, & co.”. The Morning Post (27 December 1861): 2.Google Scholar
Comerford, R. V. The Fenians in Context: Irish Politics and Society, 1848–82. Dublin: Wolfhound Press, 1998.Google Scholar
Daly, Nicholas. Sensation and Modernity in the 1860s. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009.Google Scholar
English, Richard. Irish Freedom: The History of Nationalism in Ireland. Paperback ed. London: Pan-Macmillan, 2007.Google Scholar
Falconer, Edmund. Peep O’ Day; or, Savourneen Dheelish. New York: Robert M. De Witt [n.d. post 1870].Google Scholar
Falconer, Edmund. Peep O’ Day: or Savourneen Deelish. New York: Samuel French [n.d. post 1868].Google Scholar
Flaherty, Martin. “Review of Michael Beames, Peasants and Power: The Whiteboy Movements and Their Control in Pre-famine Ireland (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1982)”. International Labor and Working-Class History 27 (Spring 1985): 118–22.Google Scholar
Foster, R. F. Modern Ireland: 1600–1972. Paperback ed. London: Penguin, 1989.Google Scholar
Gilligan, David. “Natural Indignation in the Native Voice: The Fiction of the Banim Brothers”. In Anglo-Irish and Irish Literature: Aspects of Language and Culture, edited by Bromsbach, Bridget and Croghan, Martin J. (Uppsala: Arnqvist and Wiksell, 1988): 7791.Google Scholar
Hogan, Robert. Dion Boucicault. New York: Twayne, 1969.Google Scholar
“Home”. The Examiner (16 November 1861).Google Scholar
Huggins, Michael. “Whiteboys and Ribbonmen: What’s in a Name?” In Violence and the Irish in the Nineteenth Century Crime, edited by Hughes, Kyle and MacRaild, Donald (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2017): 2127.Google Scholar
“Ireland”. The Times (12 November 1861).Google Scholar
Krause, David. “The Theatre of Dion Boucicault: A Short View of His Life and Art”. In The Dolmen Boucicault, edited by Krause, David (Dublin: Dolmen Press, 1964): 947.Google Scholar
“London Gossip of the Week”. The Hereford Journal (15 November, 1861): 8.Google Scholar
Lubbers, Klaus. “Author and Audience in the Early Nineteenth Century”. In Literature and the Changing Ireland, edited by Connolly, Peter (Gerrards Cross: Smythe, 1982): 2535.Google Scholar
Maunder, Andrew, ed. Varieties of Women’s Sensation Fiction. Volume 1, Sensationalism and the Sensation Debate, edited by Maunder, Andrew. London: Pickering and Chatto, 2004.Google Scholar
Mayer, III, David. Harlequin in His Element: The English Pantomime, 1806–1836. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1969.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McFeely, Deidre. Dion Boucicault: Irish Identity on Stage. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012.Google Scholar
McWilliam, Rohan. London’s West End: Creating the Pleasure District, 1800–1914. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meer, Sarah. “Adaptation, Originality and Law: Dion Boucicault and Charles Reade”. Journal of Nineteenth-Century Theatre and Film 14.1 (2016): 2238Google Scholar
Miller, David W. Peep O’ Day Boys and Defenders: Selected Documents on the County Armagh Disturbances, 1784–96. Belfast: Public Record Office Northern Ireland, 1990.Google Scholar
Miller, Derek. Copyright and the Value of Performance, 1770–1911. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2018.Google Scholar
Moraghan, Seán. Days of the Blackthorn: Faction Fighters of Kerry. Cork: Mercier Press, 2020.Google Scholar
Murphy, James H. Ireland: A Social, Cultural and Literary History, 1791–1891. Dublin: Four Courts, 2003.Google Scholar
Murphy, Willa. “‘English, Irished’: Union and Violence in the Fiction of John and Michael Banim”. In Irish Literature in Transition, 1780–1830, edited by Connolly, Claire (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020): 273–91.Google Scholar
Newey, Katherine. “Sensation Melodramas”. In Theatre and Drama Criticism, volume II of Literary and Cultural Criticism from the Nineteenth Century, edited by Shattock, Joanne, Wilkes, Joanne, Newey, Katherine, and Sanders, Valerie (London: Routledge, 2021): 297301.Google Scholar
O’Connell, Helen. “Reconciliation and Emancipation: The Banims and Carleton”. In Companion to Irish Literature, edited by Wright, Julia M. (Chichester: John Wiley, 2010): Chapter 25, ebook (ProQuest), 411–26.Google Scholar
O’Donnell, Patrick. The Irish Faction Fighters of the Nineteenth Century. Dublin: Anvil Books, 1975.Google Scholar
Phelan, Mark. “The Advent of Modern Irish Drama and the Abjection of Peasant Popular Culture: Folklore, Fairs and Faction Fighting”. Kritika Kultura 15 (2010): 149–69.Google Scholar
“Princess’s Theatre”. The Times (10 September 1870).Google Scholar
Ramon, Marta. “‘A Local Habitation and a Name’: The Dublin Mechanics’ Institute and the Evolution of Dublin’s Public Sphere, 1824–1904”. Irish Economic and Social History 46.1 (2019): 2245.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roberts, Paul E. W.Caravats and Shanavests: Whiteboyism and Faction Fighting in East Munster, 1802–11”. In Irish Peasants: Violence and Political Unrest, 1780–1914, edited by Clark, Samuel and Donnelly Jr, James S.. (Madison, Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press, 1983): 64101.Google Scholar
Schuyler, Susan. “Crowds, Fenianism and the Victorian Stage”. Journal of Victorian Culture 16.2 (2011): 169–86.Google Scholar
“Surrey Theatre” and “Victoria Theatre”. Advertisements, The Era (2 February 1862).Google Scholar
“Terence Bellew M’Manus”. The Times (12 November 1861).Google Scholar
“Theatres”. Orchestra (24 November 1866): 133. Quoted in Schuyler, Susan. “Crowds, Fenianism and the Victorian Stage”. Journal of Victorian Culture 16.2 (2011): 169–86.Google Scholar
“The Theatres, & co”. The Era (9 February, No Year).Google Scholar
“The Theatres, & co”. The Era (19 January 1862).Google Scholar
“The Theatres, & co”. The Era (24 November 1861).Google Scholar
“The Theatre Royal”. Bristol Mercury (29 March 1862).Google Scholar
“The Theatre Royal”. Glasgow Daily Herald (4 March 1862).Google Scholar
“Theatrical Examiner”. The Examiner (16 November 1861).Google Scholar
Trotter, Mary. Ireland’s National Theaters: Political Performance and the Origins of the Irish Dramatic Movement. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 2001.Google Scholar
“Victoria Theatre. NOTICE”. Advertisements, The Era (9 February 1862).Google Scholar
Watt, Stephen. Joyce, O’Casey, and the Irish Popular Theater. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 1991.Google Scholar
A.M. “The New Golden Treasury”. The Bookman (Nov 1897): 47.Google Scholar
Altick, Richard D. The English Common Reader. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1957.Google Scholar
Anonymous. “An Authority in Poetical Criticism”. The Saturday Review (Sept 19, 1896): 311–12.Google Scholar
Anonymous. “Christmas Presents”. The Saturday Review (Jan 4, 1862): 10–11.Google Scholar
Anonymous. “Gift Books”. The Examiner (Nov 16, 1861): 728.Google Scholar
Anonymous. “Short Notices”. The Literary Gazette (Aug 17, 1861): 159–60.Google Scholar
Beeching, H. C. “Review of The Golden Treasury, Revised and Enlarged edition”. The Academy (Nov 7, 1891): 401.Google Scholar
Christ, Carol. Victorian and Modern Poetics. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 1984.Google Scholar
Clausen, Christopher. “The Palgrave Version”. Georgia Review 34 (1980): 273–89.Google Scholar
Collins, Churton. “An Appreciation of Professor Palgrave”. The Saturday Review (Nov 6, 1897): 486–7.Google Scholar
Curran, Stuart. Poetic Form and British Romanticism. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1990.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dixon, W. Macneile. “Finality in Literary Judgment”. The Westminster Review (Jan 1895): 401–12.Google Scholar
Donne, John. The Complete Poems, edited by Patrides, C. A.. London: Everyman, 1985.Google Scholar
Ferry, Anne. “Palgrave’s Symphony”. Victorian Poetry 37.2 (1999): 145–62.Google Scholar
“Francis Turner Palgrave”. The Saturday Review (Oct 30, 1897): 457.Google Scholar
“Francis Turner Palgrave”. The Saturday Review (1899): 372–3.Google Scholar
Gosse, Edmund. “Mr Hardy’s Lyrical Poems”. Edinburgh Review (April 1918): 273–4.Google Scholar
Lentricchia, Frank. “Lyric in the Culture of Capitalism”. American Literary History 1.1 (1989): 6388.Google Scholar
Lethbridge, Stefanie. “Wars and ‘Little’ Heroes: Historical Topics in Popular Poetry Anthologies from the Nineteenth Century to the Present”. In Popular History Now and Then: International Perspectives, edited by Korte, Barbara and Palestschek, Sylvia (Transaction Publishers: New Brunswick and London, 2012): 123–48.Google Scholar
Lewis, Naomi. “Palgrave and His Golden Treasury”. The Listener (Jan 4, 1962): 23.Google Scholar
“Mr F. T. Palgrave”. The Athenæum (Oct 30, 1897): 600.Google Scholar
Müller, Klaus Peter. “Victorian Values and Cultural Contexts in Francis Turner Palgrave’s The Golden Treasury”. In Anthologies of British Poetry: Critical Perspectives from Literary and Cultural Studies, edited by Korte, Barbara, Schneider, Ralf, and Lethbridge, Stefanie (Amsterdam: Brill/Rodopi, 2000): 125–46.Google Scholar
Nelson, Megan Jane. “Francis Turner Palgrave and The Golden Treasury”. PhD diss., The University of British Columbia, 1985.Google Scholar
Palgrave, Francis Turner, ed. The Golden Treasury of the Best Songs and Lyrical Poems in the English Language. Cambridge and London: Macmillan and Co., 1861.Google Scholar
Palgrave, Gwenllian F. Francis Turner Palgrave: His Journals and Memories of His Life. New York and Bombay: Longmans, Green, and Co., 1899.Google Scholar
Perloff, Marjorie. The Dance of the Intellect. Chicago: Northwestern University Press, 1996.Google Scholar
Pound, Ezra. “How to Read”. In Literary Essays, edited by Eliot, T.S. (New York: New Directions, 1968): 1540; First published in 1931 by Harmsworth.Google Scholar
Price, Leah. How to Do Things with Books in Victorian Britain. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2012.Google Scholar
“Review of Gwenllian F. Palgrave’s Francis Turner Palgrave: His Journals and Memories of His Life”. The Saturday Review (March 25, 1899): 372–3.Google Scholar
“Review of The Golden Treasury”. The Saturday Review (Aug 17, 1861): 175–6.Google Scholar
Robson, Catherine. Heart Beats: Everyday Life and the Memorized Poem. New Haven: Princeton University Press, 2015.Google Scholar
Spevack, Marvin. “The Golden Treasury: 150 Years On”. Electronic British Library Journal (2012): 117.Google Scholar
Swinburne, A. C. Poems and Ballads; First Series. London: John Camden Hotten, 1866.Google Scholar
Symons, Arthur. “Javanese Dancers”. In Silhouettes, Second edition, revised and enlarged (London: Leonard Smithers, 1896): 33.Google Scholar
Taylor, Dennis. “Hardy’s Copy of The Golden Treasury”. Victorian Poetry 37.2 (1999): 165–91.Google Scholar
Thain, Marion. The Lyric Poem and Aestheticism: Forms of Modernity. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2016.Google Scholar
“The Golden Treasury of the Best Songs and Lyrical Poems in the English Language (Edited with additional Notes by Peter Peterson, M.A., Ed. Dip. Bombay: Bombay, 1880 [with the permission of Messrs. Macmillan and Co.])”. Calcutta Review (April 1881): iii–iv.Google Scholar
“The Golden Treasury” (review of the Second Series). The Athenæum (Oct 23, 1897): 555.Google Scholar
Trench, R. C., Archbishop. “Poem CXXXII”. In The Golden Treasury; Second Series, edited by Palgrave, Francis T. (London: Macmillan, 1897): 183–4.Google Scholar
Tucker, Herbert. “Dramatic Monologue and the Overhearing of Lyric”. In Lyric Poetry: Beyond New Criticism, edited by Hošek, Chaviva and Parker, Patricia (Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press, 1985): 226–45.Google Scholar
Untermeyer, Louis, ed. Palgrave’s The Golden Treasury with the Unabridged Text of The Rubáiyát of Omar Kayyám. New York: Random House, 1944.Google Scholar
Belloc, Hilaire. “The Microbe”. Cautionary Verses, Illustrated Album edition with the original pictures by B.T.B. and Nicolas Bentley (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1962): 247–48.Google Scholar
[Burrows, Mrs. E]. Our Eastern Empire. London: Griffith and Farran, 1857.Google Scholar
Carroll, Lewis. Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. New York and London: Penguin Classics, 2003.Google Scholar
Csikszentmihalyi, Mihaly. Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience. New York: Harper & Row Publishers, 1990.Google Scholar
Darwin, Charles. On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life. A New Edition, Revised and Augmented by the Author. New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1861.Google Scholar
Falmouth, Viscountess, Baroness Le Despencer. Conversations on Geography. Or, The Child’s First Introduction to Where He Is, What He Is, and What Else There Is Besides. London: Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans, 1854.Google Scholar
“Ground”. In Oxford English Dictionary. “To ground,” III 8f. www.oed.com/view/Entry/81805?rskey=k03iwU&result=1#eid2543612.Google Scholar
Keary, Anne and Eliza. Early Egyptian History for the Young, with Descriptions of the Tombs and Monuments. Cambridge: Macmillan and Co, 1861.Google Scholar
Kingsley, Charles. The Water-Babies: A Fairy Tale for a Land Baby. Penguin Classics, 2008.Google Scholar
Mortimer, Favell Lee. Far-Off, Part II; or, Oceania, Africa and America Described, Second and Corrected Edition. London: Hatchards, 1885.Google Scholar
Myers, Mitzi. “‘Anecdotes from the Nursery’ in Maria Edgeworth’s Practical Education (1798); Learning from Children ‘Abroad and at Home’”. Princeton University Library Chronicle 60.2 (Winter 1999): 220–50Google Scholar
Ploszajska, Teresa. Geographical Education, Empire and Citizenship: Geographical Teaching and Learning in English Schools, 1870–1944. [England: Historical Geography Research Series, No. 35.] Department of Environmental and Biological Studies, Liverpool Hope University College, Hope Park, Liverpool, 1999.Google Scholar
Rossetti, Christina. “Goblin Market”. In Christina Rossetti: The Complete Poems, edited by Crump, R.W. (New York and London: Penguin, 2005): 520.Google Scholar
Wakefield, Priscilla. The Traveller in Asia; or a Visit to the Most Celebrated Parts of the East Indies and China. With an Account of the Manners of the Inhabitants, Natural Productions, and Curiosities. For the Instruction and Entertainment of Young Persons. London: Darton, Harvey, and Darton, 1817.Google Scholar
Ward, Mrs. R. [NUC – Fanny Ward, Osborne – Fanny Umphelby, attribs incl Eliza Robbins]. Child’s Guide to Knowledge; Being a Collection of Useful and Familiar Questions and Answers on Every-Day Subjects, Adapted for Young Persons, and Arranged in the Most Simple and Easy Language. By a Lady, 59th edition. London: Simpkin, Marshall, & Co. 1898. [earlier editions to 1835]Google Scholar
Bassett, Troy J. “At the Circulating Library”. At the Circulating Library: A Database of Victorian Fiction, 1837–1901”. Last modified December 15, 2022, www.victorianresearch.org/atcl/.Google Scholar
Bassett, Troy J. The Rise and Fall of the Three-Volume Novel. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2020.Google Scholar
Braddon, Mary Elizabeth. “A Letter from Miss M.E. Braddon [dated 30 July]”. (New York) Round Table (25 August 1866): 57.Google Scholar
Braddon, Mary Elizabeth. “A Protest”. Athenæum (19 August 1871): 234.Google Scholar
Braddon, Mary Elizabeth. The Doctor’s Wife. 3 volumes. London: Maxwell, 1864.Google Scholar
Braddon, Mary Elizabeth. The Lady’s Mile. 3 volumes. London: Ward, Lock & Tyler, 1866.Google Scholar
Brantlinger, Patrick. The Reading Lesson: The Threat of Mass Literacy in Nineteenth-Century British Fiction. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1998.Google Scholar
Brickdale, M.I.F.The Queen’s English”. Edinburgh Review 120 (1864): 3957.Google Scholar
Carnell, Jennifer. The Literary Lives of Mary Elizabeth Braddon. Hastings: Sensation Press, 2000.Google Scholar
Carnell, Jennifer and Law, Graham. “‘Our Author’: Braddon in the Provincial Weeklies”. In Beyond Sensation: Mary Elizabeth Braddon in Context, edited by Tromp, Marlene et al. (Albany, NY: SUNY Press, 2000): 127–63.Google Scholar
Dallas, E. S. “Great Expectations”. The Times (17 October 1861): 5.Google Scholar
Dallas, E. S. “Lady Audley’s Secret”. The Times (18 November 1862): 4.Google Scholar
Dallas, E. S. “Popular Literature: The Periodical Press I”. Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine 85 (January 1859): 96112.Google Scholar
Darnton, Robert. “What is the History of Books?Daedalus 111.3 (Summer 1982): 6583.Google Scholar
“Digital Collections”. Library of Congress. Accessed March 1, 2023, www.loc.gov/collections/.Google Scholar
“Electronic Resources”. Center for Research Libraries: Global Resources Network. Accessed March 1, 2023, www.crl.edu/electronic-resources/.Google Scholar
“Explore the British Library”. British Library. Accessed March 1, 2023, http://explore.bl.uk/.Google Scholar
GALE. Accessed March 1, 2023, www.gale.com/.Google Scholar
Google Books. Accessed March 1, 2023, https://books.google.com/.Google Scholar
Hathi Trust Digital Library. Accessed March 1, 2023, www.hathitrust.org/.Google Scholar
Hewitt, Martin. The Dawn of the Cheap Press in Victorian Britain: The End of the “Taxes on Knowledge” 1849–69. London: Bloomsbury, 2014.Google Scholar
“Home”. NCSE: Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition. Accessed March 1, 2023, https://ncse.ac.uk/.Google Scholar
Internet Archive. Accessed March 1, 2023, https://archive.org/details/texts/.Google Scholar
James, Louis. Fiction for the Working Man, 1830–1850. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1974.Google Scholar
Law, Graham. Serializing Fiction in the Victorian Press. New York: Palgrave, 2000.Google Scholar
Lucas, Samuel. “East Lynne”. The Times (25 January 1862): 6.Google Scholar
Mansel, H.L.Sensation Novels”. Quarterly Review 113 (1863): 482514.Google Scholar
Maunder, Andrew. Sensationalism and the Sensation Debate. London: Chatto & Pickering, 2004.Google Scholar
Moretti, Franco. Distant Reading. London: Verso, 2013.Google Scholar
Oliphant, Margaret. “The Byways of Literature: Reading for the Million”. Blackwood’s Magazine 84 (August 1858): 200202.Google Scholar
ProQuest. Accessed March 1, 2023, www.proquest.com/.Google Scholar
Rae, W. Fraser. “Sensation Novelists: Miss Braddon”. North British Review 43 (1865): 180204.Google Scholar
St. Clair, William. The Reading Nation in the Romantic Period. Cambridge University Press, 2004.Google Scholar
Summers, Montague. “‘The Black Band’ Scandal”. Times Literary Supplement (17 February 1945): 84.Google Scholar
The Online Books Page. Accessed March 1, 2023, http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/.Google Scholar
Unsigned. “A Novel by Miss Braddon”. (New York) Round Table (14 July 1866): 436–37.Google Scholar
Unsigned. “Nebulae”. (New York) Galaxy (15 August 1869): 747–48.Google Scholar
Unsigned. “Our Weekly Gossip”. Athenæum (11 August 1866): 180.Google Scholar
Unsigned. “The Manufacture of Novels”. Athenæum (16 February 1867): 221–22.Google Scholar
Victorian Fiction Research Guides. Accessed March 1, 2023, https://victorianfictionresearchguides.org/.Google Scholar
Waseda E-Resource Portal. Accessed March 1, 2023, https://waseda-jp.libguides.com/imas-e/.Google Scholar
Wise, J. R.Belles Lettres”. Westminster Review 86 (1866): 268–80.Google Scholar
Wolff, Robert Lee. “Devoted Disciple: The Letters of Mary Elizabeth Braddon to Sir Edward Bulwer Lytton, 1862–1873”. Harvard Library Bulletin 22 (1974): 535, 129–61.Google Scholar
Wolff, Robert Lee. Nineteenth-Century Fiction: A Bibliographical Catalogue. 5 volumes. New York: Garland, 1981–1986.Google Scholar
Wolff, Robert Lee. Sensational Victorian: The Life and Fiction of Mary Elizabeth Braddon. New York: Garland, 1979.Google Scholar
“Anonyma”. Anonyma: Or, Fair but Frail. A Romance of West-End Life, Manners, and ‘Captivating’ People. London: George Vickers, 1863.Google Scholar
“Anonyma”. Skittles: A Biography of a Fascinating Woman. London: George Vickers, 1864.Google Scholar
Altholz, Joseph. The Religious Press in Britain, 1760–1900. Westport: Greenwood Press, 1989.Google Scholar
Bassett, Troy. The Rise and Fall of the Victorian Three-Volume Novel. London: Palgrave, 2020.Google Scholar
Beetham, Margaret. “Abel Heywood”. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2004). https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/47364.Google Scholar
Bull, Sarah. “Managing the ‘Obscene M.D.’: Medical Publishing, the Medical Profession, and the Changing Definition of Obscenity in Mid-Victorian England”. Bulletin of the History of Medicine 91.4 (Winter 2017): 713–43.Google Scholar
Buurma, Rachel Sagner. “Anonyma’s Author”. Studies in English Literature 48.4 (Autumn 2008): 839–48.Google Scholar
Carter, Harry. “Thomas Routledge and the Introduction of Esparto in Papermaking”. In Seventh International Congress of Paper Historians, edited by Simmons, J.S.G. (Oxford: Trinity College, 1967): 201–10.Google Scholar
Colclough, Stephen. “Distribution”. In The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain Volume 6 1830–1914, edited by McKitterick, David (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009): 238–80.Google Scholar
Darnton, Robert. “What is the History of Books?” In The Book History Reader, edited by Finkelstein, David and McCleery, Alistair (London and New York: Routledge, 2003): 926.Google Scholar
DeVinne, Theodore Lowe. Printing in the Nineteenth Century. New York: Lead Mould Electrotype Foundry, 1924.Google Scholar
Dooley, Allan C. Author and Printer in Victorian England. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1992.Google Scholar
Edward Lloyd website: www.edwardlloyd.org/esparto.php (accessed 15 May 2022).Google Scholar
Feather, John. A History of British Publishing. 2nd edition. London: Routledge, 2006.Google Scholar
Fox Bourne, Henry R. English Newspapers: Chapters in the History of Journalism, 2 vols. London: Chatto and Windus, 1887.Google Scholar
Fraser, Hilary, Green, Stephanie, and Johnston, Judith. Gender and the Victorian Periodical. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003.Google Scholar
Griest, Guinevere. Mudie’s Circulating Library and the Victorian Novel. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1970.Google Scholar
Hale, Ann M. Business Matters: Legal Structures, Roles, People, and Places of the Nineteenth-Century Press. A Case Study of George Newnes Limited. PhD diss., University of Greenwich, 2019.Google Scholar
Harris, Ron. “The Private Origins of the Private Company: Britain 1862–1907”. Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 33.2 (Summer 2013): 339–78.Google Scholar
[Helps, Arthur] A British Author. “International Copyright between Britain and America: A Letter to Charles Eliot Norton, Esq”. Macmillan’s Magazine (20 June 1869): 89–95.Google Scholar
Hewitt, Martin. The Dawn of the Cheap Press in Victorian Britain: The End of the ‘Taxes on Knowledge’, 1849–1869. London: Bloomsbury, 2015.Google Scholar
Howe, Ellic and Waite, Harold E.. The London Society of Compositors, A Centenary History. London: Cassell & Co., 1948.Google Scholar
Howsam, Leslie. Past into Print: The Publishing of History in Britain 1850–1950. London: British Library, 2009.Google Scholar
Hunter, Dard. Papermaking, the History and Technique of an Ancient Craft, 2nd edition. New York: Knopff, 1947.Google Scholar
Jackson, A.A.Suburbs and Railways”. In The Oxford Companion to British Railway History: From 1603 to the 1990s, edited by Simmons, Jack and Biddle, Gordon (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997): 485–86.Google Scholar
Jones, Aled. Press, Politics and Society: A History of Journalism in Wales. Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 1993.Google Scholar
Joseph, Marissa. Victorian Literary Businesses: The Management and Practices of the British Publishing Industry. London: Palgrave, 2019.Google Scholar
King, Andrew. “‘Killing Time,’ or; Mrs Braby’s Peppermints. The Double Economy of the Family Herald and the Family Herald Supplements”. Victorian Periodicals Review 43.2 (Summer 2010): 149–73.Google Scholar
King, Andrew. “Publishing and Marketing”. In The Cambridge Handbook of Literary Authorship, edited by Berensmeyer, Ingo, Buelens, Gert, and Demoor, Marysa (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019): 415–28.Google Scholar
King, Andrew. The London Journal 1845–1883: Periodicals, Production and Gender. London: Routledge, 2004.Google Scholar
King, Andrew. “Victorian Popular Fictions Today: ‘feel these words as mama does!’Victorian Popular Fictions 1.1 (2019): 634. https://doi.org/10.46911/XXNZ2610.Google Scholar
King, Andrew and Plunkett, John. Victorian Print Media. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005.Google Scholar
Leary, Patrick. The Punch Brotherhood: Table Talk and Print Culture in Mid-Victorian Britain. London: British Library, 2010.Google Scholar
[Linton, Eliza Lynn] “The Girl of the Period”. Saturday Review, 25 (14 March 1868): 339–40.Google Scholar
Marston, Edward. After Work: Fragments from the Workshop of an Old Publisher. London: Heinemann, 1904.Google Scholar
McKitterick, David, ed. The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain. Volume 6: 1830–1914. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009.Google Scholar
McLean, Ruari. Victorian Book Design and Colour Printing. London: Faber & Faber, 1963.Google Scholar
Moruzi, K.Fast and Fashionable: The Girls of The Girl of the Period Miscellany”. Australasian Journal of Victorian Studies 14.1 (2009): 928.Google Scholar
Mudie, Charles Edward. “Mr Mudie’s Library”. Athenæum, no. 1719 (6 October 1860): 451.Google Scholar
Phegley, Jennifer. “John Maxwell’s Copyright Disputes: Manufacturing Cheap Fiction in the Welcome Guest and the Shilling Volume Library”. Victorian Popular Fictions 4.1 (Spring 2022): 2241.Google Scholar
Robbins, Michael. “London”. In The Oxford Companion to British Railway History: From 1603 to the 1990s, edited by Simmons, Jack and Biddle, Gordon (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997): 277–81.Google Scholar
Rogers, Everett M. Diffusion of Innovations, 5th edition. New York: Free Press, 2003.Google Scholar
Sampson, Henry. A History of Advertising from the Earliest Times. London: Chatto & Windus, 1875.Google Scholar
Seville, Catherine. The Internationalisation of Copyright Law: Books, Buccaneers and the Black Flag in the Nineteenth Century. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006.Google Scholar
Simmons, Jack and Biddle, Gordon. The Oxford Companion to British Railway History: From 1603 to the 1990s. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997.Google Scholar
Smartt, Ursula. Media and Entertainment Law, 4th edition. Abingdon: Routledge, 2020.Google Scholar
Smith, William. Advertise. How? When? Where? London: Routledge, Warne and Routledge, 1863.Google Scholar
Steinberg, S.H. Five Hundred Years of Printing, 2nd edition. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1962.Google Scholar
Stephens, John Russell. The Censorship of English Drama 1824–1901. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010.Google Scholar
Sutherland, John. Victorian Novelists and Publishers. London: Athlone Press, 1976.Google Scholar
Tinsley, William. Random Recollections of an Old Publisher. London: Simkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent, and Co, 1900.Google Scholar
Topp, Chester W. Victorian Yellowbacks & Paperbacks, 1849–1905, 9 vols. Denver, Colorado: Hermitage Antiquarian Bookshop, 1993–2003.Google Scholar
Weedon, Alexis. Victorian Publishing: The Economics of Book Production for a Mass Market, 1836–1916. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2003.Google Scholar
Wilson, Charles. First with the News: The History of W.H. Smith 1792–1972. London: Jonathan Cape, 1985.Google Scholar
Wynter, Andrew. “Mudie’s Circulating Library”. In Subtle Brains and Lissom Fingers. (London: Robert Hardwick, 1863): 165–72.Google Scholar
Alaya, Flavia. “The Ring, the Rescue, and the Risorgimento: Reunifying the Brownings’ Italy”. In Donaldson, Sandra, ed., Critical Essays on Elizabeth Barrett Browning (New York: G. K. Hall & Co, 1999): 4270.Google Scholar
Avery, Simon. “Mapping Political History: Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Nineteenth-Century Historiography”. Victorian Review 33.2 (2007): 1733.Google Scholar
Bayly, C. A. and Biagini, Eugenio F., eds. Giuseppe Mazzini and the Globalisation of Democratic Nationalism 1830–1920. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008.Google Scholar
Beer, Gillian. “Rhyming as Resurrection”. In Campbell, Matthew, Labbe, Jacqueline M., and Shuttleworth, Sally, eds., Memory and Memorials, 1789–1914: Literary and Cultural Perspectives (London and New York: Routledge, 2000): 189207.Google Scholar
Blair, Kirstie. Form and Faith in Victorian Poetry and Religion. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012.Google Scholar
Blair, Kirstie. Victorian Poetry and the Culture of the Heart. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2006.Google Scholar
Brophy, Sarah. “Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s ‘The Runaway Slave at Pilgrim’s Point’ and the Politics of Interpretation”. Victorian Poetry 36.3 (1998): 273–88.Google Scholar
Browning, Elizabeth Barrett. “Garibaldi”. In Donaldson, Sandra, Patteson, Rita, Stone, Marjorie, and Taylor, Beverly, eds., Works of Elizabeth Barrett Browning, vol. 5 (London and New York: Routledge, 2010): 8386.Google Scholar
Browning, Elizabeth Barrett. “The King’s Gift”. In Donaldson, Sandra, Patteson, Rita, Stone, Marjorie, and Taylor, Beverly, eds., Works of Elizabeth Barrett Browning, vol. 5, (London and New York: Routledge, 2010): 9495.Google Scholar
Browning, Elizabeth Barrett. “The Sword of Castruccio Castracani”. In Donaldson, Sandra, Patteson, Rita, Stone, Marjorie, and Taylor, Beverly, eds., Works of Elizabeth Barrett Browning, vol. 5 (London and New York: Routledge, 2010): 7072.Google Scholar
Campbell, Duncan Andrew. English Public Opinion and the American Civil War. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell Press, 2003.Google Scholar
Carter, Nick, ed. Britain, Ireland, and the Italian Risorgimento. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015.Google Scholar
Chapman, Alison. Networking the Nation: British and American Women’s Poetry and Italy, 1840–1870. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015.Google Scholar
Cove, Patricia. Italian Politics and Nineteenth-Century British Literature and Culture. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2019.Google Scholar
Dal Lago, Enrico. “‘We Cherished the Same Hostility to Every Form of Tyranny’: Transatlantic Parallels and Contacts between William Lloyd Garrison and Giuseppe Mazzini, 1846–1872”. American Nineteenth Century History 13.3 (2012): 293319.Google Scholar
Daniels, Elizabeth Adams. Jessie White Mario: Risorgimento Revolutionary. Athens: Ohio University Press, 1972.Google Scholar
Donaldson, Sandra, Patteson, Rita, Stone, Marjorie, and Taylor, Beverly, eds. Works of Elizabeth Barrett Browning, vol. 5. London and New York: Routledge, 2010.Google Scholar
Dyck, Denae and Stone, Marjorie. “The ‘Sensation’ of Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s Poems before Congress (1860): Events, Politics, Reception”. In Dino Franco Felluga, ed., BRANCH: Britain, Representation and Nineteenth-Century History. www.branchcollective.org/?ps_articles=denae-dyck-and-marjorie-stone-the-sensation-of-elizabeth-barrett-brownings-poems-before-congress-1860-events-politics-reception.Google Scholar
Hair, Donald S. Fresh Strange Music: Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s Language. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2015.Google Scholar
Kerrigan, John. Archipelagic English: Literature, History, and Politics 1603–1707. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008.Google Scholar
Kucich, Greg. “Romanticism and the Re-Engendering of Historical Memory”. In Campbell, Matthew, Labbe, Jacqueline M., and Shuttleworth, Sally, eds., Memory and Memorials, 1789–1914: Literary and Cultural Perspectives (London and New York: Routledge, 2000): 1529.Google Scholar
Leighton, Angela. Victorian Women Poets: Writing against the Heart. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1992.Google Scholar
Levine, Caroline. “Rhyme, Rhythm, Violence: Elizabeth Barrett Browning on Slavery”. In Bevis, Matthew, ed., Oxford Handbook of Victorian Poetry (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013): 309–22.Google Scholar
Marwil, Jonathan. Visiting Modern War in Risorgimento Italy. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010.Google Scholar
Matthews, Samantha. “Entombing the Woman Poet: Tributes to Elizabeth Barrett Browning”. Studies in Browning and His Circle 24 (2001): 3153.Google Scholar
Matthews, Samantha. Poetical Remains: Poets’ Graves, Bodies, and Books in the Nineteenth Century. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004.Google Scholar
Mazzini, Giuseppe. Italy, Austria, and the Pope. A Letter to Sir James Graham, Bart. London, 1845. Accessed at https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=chi.20663718&view=1up&seq=9.Google Scholar
Mazzini, Giuseppe. Joseph Mazzini: His Life, Writings, and Political Principles. With an Introduction by William Lloyd Garrison. New York, 1872. Accessed https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044082219429.Google Scholar
O’Connor, Maura. The Romance of Italy and the English Political Imagination. New York: St. Martin’s, 1998.Google Scholar
Prins, Yopie. “Victorian Meters”. In Bristow, Joseph, ed., Cambridge Companion to Victorian Poetry (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000): 89113.Google Scholar
Riall, Lucy. Garibaldi: Invention of a Hero. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2007.Google Scholar
Roberts, Timothy M.The Relevance of Giuseppe Mazzini’s Ideas of Insurgency to the American Slavery Crisis of the 1850s”. In Bayly, C. A. and Biagini, Eugenio F., eds., Giuseppe Mazzini and the Globalisation of Democratic Nationalism 1830–1920 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008): 311–22.Google Scholar
Saville, Julia F. Victorian Soul-Talk: Poetry, Democracy, and the Body Politic. Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017.Google Scholar
Stewart-Steinberg, Suzanne. The Pinocchio Effect: On Making Italians (1860–1920). Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 2007.Google Scholar
Stone, Marjorie. “Elizabeth Barrett Browning and the Garrisonians: ‘The Runaway Slave at Pilgrim’s Point,’ the Boston Female Anti-Slavery Society, and Abolitionist Discourse in the Liberty Bell”. In Chapman, Alison, ed., Victorian Women Poets (Woodbridge, Suffolk: D. S. Brewer, 2003): 3355.Google Scholar
Advert. Examiner, 4 January 1862, 16.Google Scholar
Aguirre, Robert. Mobility and Modernity: Panama in the Nineteenth-Century Anglo-American Imagination. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 2017.Google Scholar
Alder, Stephanie. “‘A Mirror of Mid-Victorian Attitudes to Fiction’? Rethinking Censorship and Geraldine Jewsbury”. Victorian Periodicals Review 54.3 (Fall 2021): 445–62.Google Scholar
Anonymous. “Anthropology at the British Association”. The Anthropological Review 1.3 (November 1863): 294335.Google Scholar
Belzer, Allison Scardino. “Three Generations of Unconventional Family Values: A Case Study of the Ashursts”. Journal of Victorian Culture 20.1 (2015): 119.Google Scholar
Biggs, Elizabeth Ashurst. White and Black: A Story of the Southern States, 3 volumes. London: Hurst and Blackett, 1862.Google Scholar
Blackett, R. J. M. Divided Hearts: Britain and the American Civil War. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2001.Google Scholar
Blair, Kirstie. “Dialect, Region, Class, Work”. In The Cambridge Companion to Victorian Women’s Poetry, edited by Hughes, Linda K. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019): 129–44.Google Scholar
Boos, Florence S.Janet Hamilton: Working-class Memoirist and Commentator”. In The Edinburgh Companion to Scottish Women’s Writing, edited by Norquay, Glenda (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2012): 6374Google Scholar
Boos, Florence S. Working-Class Women Poets in Victorian Britain: An Anthology. Peterborough: Broadview Press, 2008.Google Scholar
Browning, Elizabeth Barrett. Poems Before Congress. London: Chapman and Hall, 1860.Google Scholar
Browning, Elizabeth Barrett. Selected Poems, edited by Stone, Marjorie and Taylor, Beverly. Peterborough: Broadview Press, 2009.Google Scholar
Buzard, James. “Portable Boundaries: Trollope, Race, and Travel”. Nineteenth-Century Contexts 32.1 (2010): 518.Google Scholar
Chorley, Henry Fothergill. “Review of Poems before Congress”. Athenæum, 17 March 1860.Google Scholar
Cowper, William. “The Negro’s Complaint”. In Transatlantic Anglophone Literatures, 1776–1920: An Anthology, edited by Hughes, Linda K., Robbins, Sarah R., and Taylor, Andrew with Associate Editors Heidi Hakimi-Hood and Adam Nemmers (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2022): 1819.Google Scholar
Craft, William and Craft, Ellen. Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom: The Escape of William and Ellen Craft from Slavery, edited by McCaskill, Barbara. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1999.Google Scholar
“Darwin Correspondence Project”. University of Cambridge. Accessed February 7, 2023, www.darwinproject.ac.uk/.Google Scholar
Douglass, Frederick. “The Slave’s Appeal to Great Britain”. Daily News, 26 November 1862, 5.Google Scholar
Evening Mail (London), 22 August 1862.Google Scholar
Hamilton, Janet. Poems and Essays. Glasgow: Thomas Murray and Son, 1863.Google Scholar
Jewsbury, Geraldine. “Review of White and Black”. Athenæum, (28 December 1861): 877–78.Google Scholar
Jones, Susan. “The Athenaeum Index of Reviews and Reviewers, 1830–1870”. Last modified October 2001, https://athenaeum.city.ac.uk/reviews/home.html.Google Scholar
Mill, John Stuart “The Slave Power”. Westminster Review 22 (October 1862): 489–510.Google Scholar
Mill, John Stuart. “The Contest in America”. Fraser’s Magazine, 65 (February 1862): 258–68.Google Scholar
Murray, Hannah-Rose. Advocates of Freedom: African American Transatlantic Abolitionism in the British Isles. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020.Google Scholar
Paley, Morton D.John Camden Hotten and the First British Editions of Walt Whitman – ‘A Nice Milky Cocoa-Nut’”. Publishing History 6 (1979): 2728.Google Scholar
Palmer, Beth. “Mary Elizabeth Braddon’s and Dion Boucicault’s Sensational Re-writings across Media: The Octoroon”. Victoriographies 12.3 (2022): 288306.Google Scholar
“Review of Poems”. Examiner (18 April 1868): 245–46.Google Scholar
Rossetti, W. M.Prefatory Notice”. In Walt Whitman, Poems, edited by Rossetti, William Michael (London: John Camden Hotten, 1868): 127.Google Scholar
Takaki, Ronald. “The Movement to Reopen the African Slave Trade in South Carolina”. South Carolina Historical Magazine 66.1 (1965): 3854.Google Scholar
“The Slaveholder’s War”. Minor Victorian Poets and Authors. Accessed February 7, 2023, https://minorvictorianwriters.org.uk/jones/c_slaveholder%27s_war.htm.Google Scholar
Trollope, Anthony. North America. 2 volumes. London: Chapman and Hall, 1862.Google Scholar
Varouxakis, Georgios. “‘Negrophilist’ Crusader: John Stuart Mill on the American Civil War and Reconstruction”. History of European Ideas 39.5 (2013): 729–54.Google Scholar
Waters, Hazel. Racism on the Victorian Stage: Representation of Slavery and the Black Character. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007.Google Scholar
Weinberg, Adelaide. John Elliot Cairnes and the American Civil War. London: Kingswood Press, 1970.Google Scholar
Whitman, Walt. Poems, edited by Rossetti, William Michael. London: John Camden Hotten, 1868.Google Scholar
Aguirre, Robert D. Mobility and Modernity: Panama in the Nineteenth-Century Anglo-American Imagination. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 2017.Google Scholar
Birmingham Daily Gazette, 30 November 1865, 7–8.Google Scholar
Brantlinger, Patrick. “Class and Race in Sensation Fiction”. In A Companion to Sensation Fiction, edited by Pamela K. Gilbert (Oxford: Blackwell Publishing, 2011): 430–11.Google Scholar
Callanan, Laura. Deciphering Race: White Anxiety, Racial Conflict, and the Turn to Fiction in Mid-Victorian English Prose. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 2006.Google Scholar
Collins, Wilkie. Armadale. New York: Dover Publications, 1977.Google Scholar
Constantini, Mariaconcetta. “Introduction”. In Armadale: Wilkie Collins and the Dark Threads of Life, edited by Constantini, Mariaconcetta (Rome: Arcane Editrice, 2009): 719.Google Scholar
Constantini, Mariaconcetta. “Wo/Men of Letters: Writing and Identity in Armadale. In Armadale: Wilkie Collins and the Dark Threads of Life, edited by Constantini, Mariaconcetta (Rome: Arcane Editrice, 2009): 2149.Google Scholar
Heuman, Gad. The Killing Time’: The Morant Bay Rebellion in Jamaica. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1994.Google Scholar
“Jamaica”. The Sun (London), 2 March 1866, 2.Google Scholar
“Jamaica: Examination of Governor Eyre”. Sheffield and Rotherham Independent, 5 March 1866, 3.Google Scholar
Levien, Sidney. “Personal Narrative”. The County Union and Anglo-Jamaican Advertiser, 29 December, 1865, 23 & 19 January 1866, 1–2.Google Scholar
“Literary Gossip”. Home News for India, China and the Colonies, 18 June 1866, 18.Google Scholar
“Literature of the Month”. Birmingham Daily Gazette, December 5, 1865, 7.Google Scholar
“Monthly Periodicals”. The Sun (London), 2 March 1866, 18.Google Scholar
Nayder, Lillian. Wilkie Collins. New York: Twayne Publishers, 1997.Google Scholar
Nottingham Journal, 30 November 1865, 3.Google Scholar
Om, Donghee. “‘The fire that lights those big black eyes of his is not an easy fire’: (Ir)rationalizing Blackness in Armadale and The Guilty River”. The CEA Critic 83.3 (2021): 255–68.Google Scholar
“Our Fatal Inflection”. The Sheffield Independent, 12 January 1866, 4.Google Scholar
Perkins, Anna Kasaki. “Mr Gordon Met His Fate in the Religious Spirit”. Cultural Dynamics 13.3 (2019): 224–44.Google Scholar
Pykett, Lyn. Wilkie Collins. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005.Google Scholar
Reitz, Caroline. “Colonial ‘Gwilt’: In and Around Wilkie Collins’s Armadale”. Victorian Periodicals Review 33.1 (2000): 92103.Google Scholar
Reports from Commissioners: Twenty-Two Volumes (14th volume), Jamaica. George Edward Eyre and William Spottiswoode, Printers to the Queen’s Most Excellent Majesty, 1866. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00069060/00001.Google Scholar
Semmel, Bernard. Jamaican Blood and Victorian Conscience. Cambridge: The Riverside Press, 1963.Google Scholar
Smith, Matthew J. Liberty, Fraternity, Exile: Haiti and Jamaica after Emancipation. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2014.Google Scholar
Underhill, Edward Bean. A Letter Addressed to the Rt. Honourable E. Cardwell. London: Arthur Miall, 1866.Google Scholar
Walters, Alisha. “Racial Hybridity and Victorian Nationalism: 1850–1901”. PhD diss., University of Toronto, 2014.Google Scholar
Watson, Tim. “Jamaica, Genealogy, George Eliot: Inheriting the Empire After Morant Bay”. Jouvert 1.1 (1997). https://legacy.chass.ncsu.edu/jouvert/v1i1/WATSON.HTM.Google Scholar
Western Daily Press (Bristol), 30 November 1865, 3.Google Scholar
Bandopadhyay, Asit. History of Modern Bengali Literature. Calcutta: Modern Book Agency, 1986.Google Scholar
Banerjee, Sukanya. “Transimperial”. Victorian Literature and Culture 46.3/4 (Fall/Winter 2018): 925–28.Google Scholar
Banerjee, Sumanta. The Parlour and the Streets: Elite and Popular Culture in Nineteenth Calcutta. Calcutta: Seagull Books, 1989.Google Scholar
Basu, Priyanka. “The Observant Owl: Sensory Worlds of Colonial Calcutta in Hutom’s Vignettes”. South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies 44.5 (2021): 948–65.Google Scholar
Chakravarty, Gautam. The Indian Mutiny and the British Imagination. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005.Google Scholar
Cohn, Elisha. Still Life: Suspended Development in the Victorian Novel. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016.Google Scholar
Currie, Mark. The Unexpected: Narrative Temporality and the Philosophy of Surprise. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2013.Google Scholar
Garcha, Amanpal. From Sketch to Novel: The Development of Victorian Fiction. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009.Google Scholar
Guha, Ranajit. “A Colonial City and its Time(s)”. The Indian Economic and Social History Review 45.3 (2008): 329–51.Google Scholar
Hamilton, Kristie. America’s Sketchbook: The Cultural Life of a Nineteenth-Century Literary Genre. Athens: Ohio University Press, 1998.Google Scholar
Harder, Hans. “The Modern Babu and the Metropolis: Reassessing Early Bengali Narrative Prose (1821–62)”. In India’s Literary History: Essays on the Nineteenth Century, edited by Stuart Blackburn and Dalmia, Vasudha (Delhi: Permanent Black, 2004): 358401.Google Scholar
Jain, Jyotindra. Kalighat Painting: Images from a Changing World. Ahmedabad: Mapin Publishing, 1999.Google Scholar
Metcalf, Thomas. Ideologies of the Raj. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994.Google Scholar
Randall, Bryony. “A Day’s Time: The One-Day Novel and the Temporality of the Everyday”. New Literary History 47.4 (Autumn 2016): 591610.Google Scholar
Sayeau, Martin. Against the Event: The Everyday and the Evolution of Modernist Narrative. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013.Google Scholar
Sen, Sambudha. “Re-visioning the Colonial City: Local Autonomy Versus the Aesthetics of Intermixtures in the Age of Circulating Print Cultures”. Literature Compass 11:1 (2014): 2635.Google Scholar
Sinha, Kaliprasanna. Observant Owl: Kaliprasanna Sinha’s Hootum Pyanchar Naksha. Edited by Roy, Swarup. Ranikhet: Permanent Black, 2008.Google Scholar
Sinha, Kaliprasanna. Satik Hutoma Pyanchar Naksha: Tika o Pathabheda Samyojana Ebam Mula Patha Sampadana. Edited by Nag, Arun. Calcutta: Subarnarekha, 1991.Google Scholar
Zhang, Dora. Strange Likeness: Description and the Modernist Novel. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2021.Google Scholar
Arnold, Matthew. Culture and Anarchy: An Essay in Political and Social Criticism. London: Smith, Elder and Co, 1869.Google Scholar
Arnold, Matthew. “Sonnets: Rachel III”. In Arnold, Matthew, ed., New Poems. (London: Macmillan, 1867): 110.Google Scholar
Arnold, Matthew. “The Functions of Criticism at the Present Time”. The National Review 19 (1864): 241.Google Scholar
Barczewski, Stephanie L. Myth and National Identity in Nineteenth-Century Britain. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000.Google Scholar
Baring-Gould, Sabine. Curious Myths of the Middle Ages, 2nd ed. London: Rivingtons, 1868.Google Scholar
Boos, Florence. History and Poetics in the Early Writings of William Morris, 1855–70. Columbus: The Ohio State University Press, 2015.Google Scholar
Colenso, John. The Pentateuch and Book of Joshua Critically Examined. London: Longman, 1862.Google Scholar
[Collins, William Lucas]. “King Arthur and His Round Table”. Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine 88 (1860): 311–37.Google Scholar
Conybeare, Edward, ed. Morte D’Arthur: The History of King Arthur, Abridged and Revised. London: Moxon, 1868.Google Scholar
“Court Circular”. Punch. Volume 51.4 (July 7, 1866).Google Scholar
Dowson, Thomas. The Late Prince Consort and His Illustrious Ancestors, A Poem. London: Whittaker, 1867.Google Scholar
Fiske, Shanyn. Heretical Hellensim: Women Writers, Ancient Greece, and the Victorian Popular Imagination. Athens, OH: Ohio University Press, 2008.Google Scholar
Furnivall, F. J., ed. Arthur – E.E.T.S. 2. Oxford: Early English Text Society, 1869.Google Scholar
Kingsley, Charles. “Froude’s History of England, Vols. VII and VIII”. Macmillan’s Magazine 9 (December 1864): 211–24.Google Scholar
Kingsley, Charles. The Roman and the Teuton. Cambridge: Macmillan, 1864.Google Scholar
Macaulay, Thomas Babington, Lord. History of England 1848–60. (London: Dent, 1906): 1–12.Google Scholar
Maine, Henry Sumner. The Effects of Observation of India on Modern European Thought. London: John Murray, 1874.Google Scholar
Morris, William. The Earthly Paradise. Edited by Boos, Florence, 2 vols. New York: Routledge, 2002.Google Scholar
Morris, William. The Life and Death of Jason (1867). Edited by Maxwell, E.. Oxford: Clarendon, 1914.Google Scholar
Müller, F. Max. “Comparative Mythology”. Lecture delivered in 1856. In Chips from a German Workshop 2. (London: Longmans, 1867): 1–143.Google Scholar
Müller, F. Max. Lectures on the Science of Language Delivered at the Royal Institution of Great Britain in 1861 and 1863. New York: Charles Scribner, 1884.Google Scholar
“Origin of the Wassail Bowl”. Illustrated London News (Dec. 23, 1865): 619–21.Google Scholar
Oxford English Dictionary Online, s.v. “legend, n.”, https://doi.org/10.1093/OED/3105254236.Google Scholar
Oxford English Dictionary Online, s.v. “myth, n.”, https://doi.org/10.1093/OED/5411360879. Google Scholar
Palmerston, Lord. “Affairs of Greece”. Hansard’s Parliamentary Debates, 3rd series v.112 (June 20, 1850): 444.Google Scholar
Pater, Walter. “Coleridge’s Writings”. Westminster Review 85 (January 1866): 4860.Google Scholar
Pater, Walter. “Notes on Leonardo da Vinci”. Fortnightly Review 12 (November 1869): 494508.Google Scholar
Pater, Walter. “Poems by William Morris”. Westminster Review 90 (October 1868): 300–12.Google Scholar
Ricks, Christopher, ed. The Poems of Tennyson. London: Longman, 1969.Google Scholar
Swinburne, Algernon Charles. “Hymn to Proserpine”. In Collected Poetical Works, 2 vols. (London: William Heinemann, 1924); 1: 6773.Google Scholar
Swinburne, Algernon Charles. “Morris’s The Life and Death of Jason” (1867). Reprinted in Essays and Studies. (London: Chatto and Windus, 1875): 110–22.Google Scholar
Tennyson, Alfred. The Works of Tennyson, Annotated. Edited by Tennyson, Hallam, 9 vols. London: Macmillan, 1907–09.Google Scholar
Tennyson, Hallam. Tennyson, A Memoir. London: Macmillan, 1897.Google Scholar
Turner, Frank. The Greek Heritage in Victorian Britain. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1981.Google Scholar
Vance, Norman. The Victorians and Ancient Rome. Oxford: Blackwell, 1997.Google Scholar
Westwood, T. The Quest of the Sancgreall, The Sword of Kingship, and Other Poems. London: John Russell Smith, 1868.Google Scholar
Westwood, T. The Sword of Kingship: A Legend of the ‘Mort D’Arthur’. London: Printed for Author, 1866.Google Scholar
Anderson, Amanda. The Powers of Distance: Cosmopolitanism and the Cultivation of Detachment. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2001.Google Scholar
Anderson, Amanda. “Trollope’s Modernity”. ELH 74.3 (2007): 509–34.Google Scholar
Arnold, Matthew. Culture and Anarchy in Culture and Anarchy and Other Writings. Edited by Collini, Stefan. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993.Google Scholar
Briggs, Asa. Victorian People: A Reassessment of Persons and Themes, 1851–1867. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1972.Google Scholar
Bright, John. Speeches of John Bright, Esq., M.P., Delivered in Birmingham in October and November, 1868. London: Hamilton, Adams, & Co., 1868.Google Scholar
Cash, Bill. John Bright: Statesman, Orator, Agitator. London: I. B. Tauris, 2012.Google Scholar
Craig, David M.Advanced Conservative Liberalism: Party and Principle in Trollope’s Parliamentary Novels”. Victorian Literature and Culture 38.2 (2010): 355–71.Google Scholar
Daugherty, Sarah B.James and the Representation of Women: Some Lessons of the Master(’)s”. In Questioning the Master: Gender and Sexuality in Henry James’s Writings, edited by McCormack, Peggy (Newark: University of Delaware Press, 2000): 3753.Google Scholar
Earle, Bo. “Policing and Performing Liberal Individuality in Anthony Trollope’s The Warden”. Nineteenth-Century Literature 61.1 (2006): 131.Google Scholar
Gilmour, Robin. “The Novel in the Age of Equipoise”. In The Victorian Novel, edited by Bloom, Harold (New York: Chelsea House, 2004): 103–146.Google Scholar
Goodlad, Lauren M. E., and Dam, Frederik Van. “Trollope and Politics”. In The Routledge Research Companion to Anthony Trollope, edited by Morse, Deborah Denenholz, Markwick, Margaret, and Turner, Mark W. (Abingdon: Routledge, 2017): 1534.Google Scholar
Hadley, Elaine. Living Liberalism: Practical Citizenship in Mid-Victorian Britain. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2010.Google Scholar
Hagan, John. “The Divided Mind of Anthony Trollope”. Nineteenth-Century Fiction 14.1 (1959): 126.Google Scholar
Hall, Catherine, McClelland, Keith, and Rendall, Jane, eds. “Introduction”. In Defining the Victorian Nation: Class, Race, Gender and the Reform Act of 1867, edited by Hall, Catherine, McClelland, Keith, Rendall, Jane (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000): 176.Google Scholar
Halperin, John. Trollope and Politics: A Study of the Pallisers and Others. London: Macmillan, 1977Google Scholar
Hare, Thomas. A Treatise on the Election of Representatives: Parliamentary and Municipal. London: Longman, Brown, Green, Longmans, & Roberts, 1859.Google Scholar
Lowe, Lisa. The Intimacies of Four Continents. Durham: Duke University Press, 2015.Google Scholar
McGann, Tara. “Literary Realism in the Wake of Business Cycle Theory: The Way We Live Now (1875)”. In Victorian Literature and Finance, edited by O’Gorman, Francis (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007): 133–56.Google Scholar
McMaster, Juliet. Trollope’s Palliser Novels: Theme and Pattern. New York: Oxford University Press, 1978.Google Scholar
Mill, John Stuart. Autobiography. In Autobiography and Literary Essays, edited by Robson, J. M. and Stillinger, J., volume 1 of The Collected Works of John Stuart Mill, edited by J. M. Robson (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1981): 1290.Google Scholar
Mill, John Stuart. “Coleridge”. In Essays on Ethics, Religion, and Society, volume 10 of The Collected Works of John Stuart Mill, edited by Robson, J. M. (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1969): 117–63.Google Scholar
Mill, John Stuart. “Considerations on Representative Government”. In Essays on Politics and Society [Part 2], volume 19 of The Collected Works of John Stuart Mill, edited by Robson, J. M. (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1977): 371577.Google Scholar
Mill, John Stuart. “Thoughts on Parliamentary Reform”. In Essays on Politics and Society [Part 2], volume 19 of The Collected Works of John Stuart Mill, edited by Robson, J. M. (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1977): 311–40.Google Scholar
Mill, John Stuart. “To John Chapman”. In The Later Letters of John Stuart Mill, 1849–1873, edited by Mineka, F. E. and Lindley, D. N., volume 14 of The Collected Works of John Stuart Mill, edited by J. M. Robson (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1972): 67–9.Google Scholar
Morrison, Kevin A. The Provincial Fiction of Mitford, Gaskell, and Eliot. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2023.Google Scholar
“Parliamentary Intelligence”. The Times (12 May 1864).Google Scholar
Thomas, David Wayne. Cultivating Victorians: Liberal Culture and the Aesthetic. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2004.Google Scholar
Tracy, Robert. Trollope’s Later Novels. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1978.Google Scholar
Trollope, Anthony. Can You Forgive Her? Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999.Google Scholar
Trollope, Anthony. He Knew He Was Right. London: Penguin, 2004.Google Scholar
Trollope, Anthony. North America. 2 vols. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012.Google Scholar
Trollope, Anthony. Phineas Finn. 2 vols. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999.Google Scholar
Vernon, James. Politics and the People: A Study in English Political Culture, c. 1815–1867. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993.Google Scholar
Ward, Ian. Writing the Victorian Constitution. Cham: Palgrave, 2018.Google Scholar
Albritton, Vicky and Albritton Jonsson, Fredrik. Green Victorians: The Simple Life in John Ruskin’s Lake District. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2016.Google Scholar
Anonymous. “Review of Principles of Political Economy, with Some of the Applications to Social Philosophy by John Stuart Mill”. Westminster Review 28:1 (July 1865): 106–33.Google Scholar
Bate, Jonathan. Romantic Ecology: Wordsworth and the Environmental Tradition. New York: Routledge, 1991.Google Scholar
Bentley, Colene. “Democratic Citizenship in Felix Holt”. Nineteenth-Century Contexts 24:3 (2002): 271–89.Google Scholar
Best, Beverley. Marx and the Dynamic of Capital Formulation: An Aesthetics of Political Economy. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010.Google Scholar
Biagini, Eugenio F.British Trade Unions and Popular Political Economy, 1860–80”. The Historical Journal 30:4 (1987): 811–40.Google Scholar
Bowden, Mary. “Night Soil and Nation Building: Trollope’s The Prime Minister, the Guano Economy, and Victorian Sustainability”. Victorian Review 47:1 (2021): 7996.Google Scholar
Burkett, Paul. John Bellamy Foster, Brett Clark, and Richard York, The Ecological Rift: Capitalism’s War on the Earth. New York: Monthly Review Press, 2019.Google Scholar
Burkett, Paul. Marx and Nature: A Red and Green Perspective. Chicago: Haymarket Books, 2014.Google Scholar
Eliot, George. Felix Holt: The Radical. Edited by Mugglestone, Lynda. New York: Penguin, 1995.Google Scholar
Foster, John Bellamy. Marx’s Ecology: Materialism and Nature. New York: Monthly Review Press, 2000.Google Scholar
Foster, John Bellamy. “Marx’s Theory of Metabolic Rift: Classical Foundations for Environmental Sociology”. American Journal of Sociology 105:2 (1999): 366405.Google Scholar
Frost, Mark. “Reading Nature: John Ruskin, Environment, and the Ecological Impulse”. In Victorian Writers and the Environment: Ecocritical Perspectives, edited by Laurence W. Mazzeno and Ronald D. Morrison (London: Routledge, 2016): 2136.Google Scholar
Gallagher, Catherine. “The Politics of Culture and the Debate Over Representation”. Representations 5 (1984): 115–47.Google Scholar
Hobsbawm, E. J. The Age of Capital 1848–1875. London: Abacus, 1992.Google Scholar
Jameson, Fredric. Marxism and Form: 20th-Century Dialectical Theories of Literature. New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1974.Google Scholar
Kinsley, Lesley. “Guano, Science, and Victorian High Farming: An Agro-Ecological Perspective”. In Victorian Sustainability in Literature and Culture, edited by Wendy Parkins (New York: Routledge, 2018): 126–45.Google Scholar
Kreisel, Deanna K.‘Form against Force’: Sustainability and Organicism in the Work of John Ruskin”. In Ecological Form: System and Aesthetics in the Age of Empire, edited by Nathan K. Hensley and Philip Steer (New York: Fordham University Press, 2018): 101–20.Google Scholar
Lesjak, Carolyn. “A Modern Odyssey: Realism, the Masses, and Nationalism in George Eliot’s ‘Felix Holt’”. NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction 30:1 (1996): 7897.Google Scholar
Lesjak, Carolyn. The Afterlife of Enclosure: British Realism, Character, and the Commons. Redwood City, CA: Stanford University Press, 2021.Google Scholar
Lipkes, Jeff. Politics, Religion and Classical Political Economy in Britain: John Stuart Mill and His Followers. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1999.Google Scholar
Marx, Karl. Capital: A Critique of Political Economy. Vol. 1, trans. Ben Fowkes. New York: Penguin, 1990.Google Scholar
McIntosh, Robert P. The Background of Ecology: Concept and Theory. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985.Google Scholar
Moore, Jason W.Metabolic Rift or Metabolic Shift? Dialectics, Nature, and the World-Historical Method”. Theory and Society 46 (2017): 285318.Google Scholar
Mugglestone, Lynda. “Notes”. In George Eliot’s Felix Holt: The Radical, edited by Lynda Mugglestone (New York: Penguin, 1995): 545.Google Scholar
Paterson, David. “Radical Politics in the 1860s: The Writing of Felix Holt”. The George Eliot Review 48 (2017): 2332.Google Scholar
Rader, Melvin. Marx’s Interpretation of History. New York: Oxford University Press, 1979.Google Scholar
Ruskin, John. Unto This Last and Other Writings. Edited by Wilmer, Clive. New York: Penguin, 1997.Google Scholar
Thompson, F. M. L.The Second Agricultural Revolution: 1815–1880”. The Economic History Review 21:1 (1968): 6277.Google Scholar
Trollope, Anthony. Orley Farm. Edited by Skilton, David. New York: Oxford University Press, 1991.Google Scholar
Winstanley, Michael. “Agriculture and Rural Society”. In A Companion to Nineteenth-Century Britain, edited by Chris Williams (Malden, MA: Blackwell, 2004): 205–22.Google Scholar
Wong, Daniel. “Toward a Postsecular Economy: John Ruskin’s Unto This Last”. Nineteenth-Century Contexts 34:3 (2012): 217–35.Google Scholar
Wood, Ellen Meiksins. “The Separation of the Economic and the Political in Capitalism”. New Left Review 127 (1981): 6695.Google Scholar
Arnold, Matthew. Culture and Anarchy and Other Writings. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993.Google Scholar
Amatya, Alok and Dawson, Ashley. “Literature in an Age of Extraction: An Introduction”. Modern Fiction Studies 66.1 (Spring 2020): 119.Google Scholar
Badowska, Eve. “On the Track of Things: Sensation and Modernity in Mary Elizabeth Braddon’s Lady Audley’s Secret”. Victorian Literature and Culture 37.1 (2009): 157–75.Google Scholar
Bakhtin, M. M. The Dialogic Imagination: Four Essays. Edited by Holquist, Michael, translated by Caryl Emerson and Michael Holquist. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1981.Google Scholar
Braddon, Mary Elizabeth. Lady Audley’s Secret. Peterborough: Broadview, 2003.Google Scholar
“Burradon Colliery”. Durham Mining Museum. Last Updated 31 December 2022. www.dmm.org.uk/colliery/b013.htm.Google Scholar
Daggett, Cara New. The Birth of Energy: Fossil Fuels, Thermodynamics, and the Politics of Work. Durham: Duke University Press, 2019.Google Scholar
“Disasters – Names (Hetton Coal Co.)”. Durham Mining Museum. Last Updated 31 December 2022. www.dmm.org.uk/uknames/u1860-01.htm.Google Scholar
“Frightful Colliery Accident”. Sheffield and Rotherham Independent (20 January 1862): 4.Google Scholar
Ghosh, Amitav. The Great Derangement: Climate Change and the Unthinkable. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2016.Google Scholar
Ghosh, Amitav. The Nutmeg’s Curse: Parables for a Planet in Crisis. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2021.Google Scholar
Goodwin, Craufurd D.British Economists and Australian Gold”. Journal of Economic History 30.2 (1970): 405–26.Google Scholar
Grundy, James. Report of the Inspection of Mines in India, for the Year Ending the 31st December 1896. Calcutta: Office of the Superintendent of Government Printing, India, 1897.Google Scholar
Guerlac, Henry. Lavoisier – The Crucial Year: The Background and Origin of His First Experiments on Combustion in 1772. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1961.Google Scholar
Jevons, W. Stanley. A Serious Fall in the Value of Gold Ascertained, and Its Social Effects Set Forth (London: Edward Stanford, 1863): 67. Quoted in Craufurd D. Goodwin. “British Economists and Australian Gold”. Journal of Economic History 30.2 (1970): 405–26.Google Scholar
Jevons, W. Stanley. The Coal Question: An Inquiry Concerning the Progress of the Nation, and the Probable Exhaustion of Our Coal-Mines. London: Macmillan, 1865.Google Scholar
Jevons, W. Stanley. The Coal Question: An Inquiry Concerning the Progress of the Nation, and the Probable Exhaustion of Our Coal-Mines, 2nd edition, revised. London: Macmillan, 1866.Google Scholar
Kinsey, Danielle C.Koh-i-Noor: Empire, Diamonds, and the Performance of British Material Culture”. Journal of British Studies 48 (April 2009): 391419.Google Scholar
Manavalli, Krishna. “Collins, Colonial Crime, and the Brahmin Sublime: The Orientalist Vision of a Hindu-Brahmin India in The Moonstone”. Comparative Critical Studies 4.1 (2007): 6786.Google Scholar
Markovits, Stefanie. “Form Things: Looking at Genre through Victorian Diamonds”. Victorian Studies 52.4 (2010): 591619.Google Scholar
Martin, Daniel. “Railway Fatigue and the Coming-of-Age Narrative in Lady Audley’s Secret”. Victorian Review 34.1 (2008): 131–53.Google Scholar
McCutcheon, John Elliott. The Hartley Colliery Disaster, 1862. Seaham: E. McCutcheon, 1963.Google Scholar
Miller, Elizabeth Carolyn. Extraction Ecologies and the Literature of the Long Exhaustion. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2021.Google Scholar
Munich, Adrienne. Empire of Diamonds: Victorian Gems in Imperial Settings. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2020.Google Scholar
Newell, Peter. “Race and the Politics of Energy Transitions”. Energy Research and Social Science 71 (2021): 15.Google Scholar
Nixon, Rob. Slow Violence and the Environmentalism of the Poor. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2011.Google Scholar
Oglethorpe, Miles K.Mines, Quarries, and Mineral Works”. In Scotland’s Buildings, edited by Stell, Geoffrey, Shaw, John, and Storrier, Susan (East Linton, Scotland: Tuckwell, 2003): 551–70.Google Scholar
Reunert, Theodore. Industrial Prospects in the Union of South Africa: A Country of Growing Possibilities. Pretoria: Government Printing and Stationery Office, 1923.Google Scholar
Reunert, Theodore. Reunert’s Diamond Mines of South Africa. London: Sampson Low, 1892.Google Scholar
Scott, Heidi V.Colonialism, Landscape and the Subterranean”. Geography Compass 2.6 (2008): 1853–69.Google Scholar
Simonin, Louis. Mines and Miners; or, Underground Life. London: William Mackenzie, 1868.Google Scholar
Steer, Philip. “Gold and Greater Britain: Jevons, Trollope, and Settler Colonialism”. Victorian Studies 58.3 (2016): 436–63.Google Scholar
Steer, Philip. Settler Colonialism in Victorian Literature: Economics and Political Identity in the Networks of Empire. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020.Google Scholar
Tait, Adrian. “The Manifold Ecologies of Lady Audley’s Secret”. In New Materialist Interpretations of Women Writers in the Long Nineteenth Century, edited by Dewey, W. Hall and Murphy, Jillmarie (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2020): 97115.Google Scholar
“The Hartley Colliery Disaster: Discovery of the Bodies”. Leeds Mercury (24 January 1862): 3.Google Scholar
The Times (2 December 1851): 3. Quoted in Goodwin, Craufurd D.. “British Economists and Australian Gold”. Journal of Economic History 30.2 (1970): 405–26.Google Scholar
Webb, Sidney. The Story of the Durham Miners (1662–1921). London: Fabian Society, 1921.Google Scholar
Beer, Gillian. Darwin’s Plots: Evolutionary Narrative in Darwin, George Eliot, and Nineteenth-Century Fiction, 3rd edition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009.Google Scholar
Bernstein, Susan. “Ape Anxiety: Sensation Fiction, Evolution, and the Genre Question”. Journal of Victorian Culture 6.2 (2001): 250–71.Google Scholar
Buckland, Adelene. Novel Science: Fiction and the Invention of Nineteenth-Century Geology. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2013.Google Scholar
Darwin, Charles. On the Origin of Species. London: Murray, 1859. Darwin Online, http://darwin-online.org.uk/converted/pdf/1859_Origin_F373.pdf. Accessed 24 Feb. 2022.Google Scholar
Darwin, Charles. On the Origin of Species, 2nd ed. London: Murray, 1860. Darwin Online, http://darwin-online.org.uk/converted/pdf/1860_Origin_F376.pdf. Accessed 26 Feb. 2022.Google Scholar
Darwin, Charles. The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex, Vol. 2. London: Murray, 1871. Darwin Online, http://darwin-online.org.uk/converted/pdf/1871_Descent_F937.2.pdf. Accessed 8 Apr. 2022.Google Scholar
Dawson, Gowan. Darwin, Literature, and Victorian Respectability. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007.Google Scholar
Desmond, Adrian and Moore, James. Darwin’s Sacred Cause: How a Hatred of Slavery Shaped Darwin’s Views on Human Evolution. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin, Harcourt, 2009.Google Scholar
Dickens, Charles. “Great Expectations”. All the Year Round 4.84 (1 Dec. 1860). Dickens Journals Online, www.djo.org.uk/all-the-year-round/volume-iv/page-169.html. Accessed 5 Mar. 2022.Google Scholar
Hunt, James. On the Negro’s Place in Nature. London: Trübner, 1863. HathiTrust Digital Library, https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015010356478. Accessed 3 Mar. 2022.Google Scholar
Huxley, Thomas H. Evidence as to Man’s Place in Nature. London: Williams and Norgate, 1863. Biodiversity Heritage Library, https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.45796.Google Scholar
[James, Henry]. “Review of Middlemarch, by George Eliot”. The Galaxy 15.3 (1873). HathiTrust Digital Library, https://hdl.handle.net/2027/nyp.33433104889443. Accessed 6 Apr. 2022.Google Scholar
King, Amy. The Divine in the Commonplace: Reverent Natural History and the Novel in Britain. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019.Google Scholar
Kingsley, Charles. The Water-Babies: A Fairy Tale for a Land Baby. London: Macmillan, 1863. Biodiversity Heritage Library, https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.152721. Accessed 14 Mar. 2022.Google Scholar
Kingsley, Charles. “To Charles Darwin”. 18 Nov. 1859. Darwin Correspondence Project, Letter no. 2534. www.darwinproject.ac.uk/letter/?docId=letters/DCP-LETT-2534.xml. Accessed 9 Mar. 2022.Google Scholar
Levine, George. Darwin and the Novelists: Patterns of Science in Victorian Fiction. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1988.Google Scholar
Lightman, Bernard. Victorian Popularizers of Science: Designing Nature for New Audiences. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2007.Google Scholar
Lubbock, John. Pre-historic Times: As Illustrated by Ancient Remains, and the Manners and Customs of Modern Savages. London: Williams and Norgate, 1865. HathiTrust Digital Library, https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015010798331. Accessed 28 Feb. 2022.Google Scholar
Mivart, St. George Jackson. On the Genesis of Species. London: Macmillan, 1871.Google Scholar
[Mivart, St. George Jackson]. “Review of The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex, by Charles Darwin”. Quarterly Review 131.261 (1871). HathiTrust Digital Library, https://hdl.handle.net/2027/uc1.$b201586. Accessed 24 Mar. 2022.Google Scholar
Meredith, George. Evan Harrington, or He Would Be a Gentleman, 3 vols. London: Bradbury and Evans, 1861. Digital Library, https://hdl.handle.net/2027/uiuo.ark:/13960/t6c25n460. Accessed 7 Mar. 2022.Google Scholar
“Natural Selection”. All the Year Round 3.63 (7 July 1860). Dickens Journals Online, www.djo.org.uk/all-the-year-round/volume-iii/page-297.html. Accessed 5 Mar. 2022.Google Scholar
O’Connor, Ralph. The Earth on Show: Fossils and the Poetics of Popular Science, 1802–1856. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2007.Google Scholar
“Occasional Notes”. Pall Mall Gazette (29 Oct. 1866). British Library Newspapers, www.gale.com/apps/doc/BB3200291299/BNCN?u=lom_umichdearb&sid=bookmark-BNCN&xid=233bde42. Accessed 4 Mar. 2022.Google Scholar
Richards, Evelleen. Darwin and the Making of Sexual Selection. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2017.Google Scholar
Secord, James A. Victorian Sensation: The Extraordinary Publication, Reception, and Secret Authorship of Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000.Google Scholar
Spencer, Herbert. First Principles. London: Williams and Norgate, 1862. Google Books, www.google.com/books/edition/First_Principles/BBoRAAAAYAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PR3&printsec=frontcover. Accessed 1 Mar. 2022.Google Scholar
Spencer, Herbert. “Progress: Its Law and Cause”. Westminster and Foreign Quarterly Review 11 (Apr. 1857): 446–47. HathiTrust Digital Library, https://hdl.handle.net/2027/njp.32101064467200. Accessed 12 Apr. 2022.Google Scholar
Spencer, Herbert. The Principles of Biology, Vol. 1. London: Williams and Norgate, 1864. HathiTrust Digital Library, https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044009912734. Accessed 1 Mar. 2022.Google Scholar
Alfred, Tennyson. “In Memoriam, A. H. H”. In Tennyson: A Selected Edition, revised edition, edited by Christopher Ricks (Milton Park and New York: Routledge, 2014): 331–484.Google Scholar
Tylor, Edward B. Primitive Culture, Vol. 1. London: Murray, 1871. HathiTrust Digital Library, https://hdl.handle.net/2027/aeu.ark:/13960/t2j68673g. Accessed 28 Feb. 2022.Google Scholar
Tylor, Edward B. Researches into the Early History of Mankind and the Development of Civilization. London: Murray, 1865. HathiTrust Digital Library, https://hdl.handle.net/2027/uc2.ark:/13960/t9h41sz17. Accessed 1 Mar. 2022.Google Scholar
Wollaston, T. Vernon. On the Variation of Species, with Especial Reference to the Insecta. London: Van Voorst, 1856. Biodiversity Heritage Library, https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.49961. Accessed 11 Apr. 2022.Google Scholar
[Wollaston, T. Vernon]. “Review of On the Origin of Species, by Charles Darwin”. Annals and Magazine of Natural History 5.26 (1860): 132–43. Biodiversity Heritage Library, www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/18658478. Accessed 24 Feb. 2022.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • Edited by Pamela K. Gilbert, University of Florida
  • Book: Nineteenth-Century Literature in Transition: The 1860s
  • Online publication: 01 February 2024
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009053051.018
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • Edited by Pamela K. Gilbert, University of Florida
  • Book: Nineteenth-Century Literature in Transition: The 1860s
  • Online publication: 01 February 2024
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009053051.018
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • Edited by Pamela K. Gilbert, University of Florida
  • Book: Nineteenth-Century Literature in Transition: The 1860s
  • Online publication: 01 February 2024
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009053051.018
Available formats
×