Forms of the Novel and Short Story (original) (raw)
General
Bildungsroman
Children's Literature
The Condition-of-England Novel
- Introduction
- Thomas Carlyle and the Origin of the “Condition of England Question”
- Benjamin Disraeli and the Two Nation Divide
- Shirley As a Condition-of-England Novel
The Detective Novel
The Epistolary Novel
- Trollope's use of letters
- Subjective response to letters in nineteenth-century fictions
- Letters and dialogue in drama
- Epistolary novels and psychological action
- Epistolary fiction — a bibliographical note
The Fantasy Novel and Short Story
- Lewis Carroll
- Lord Dunsany
- William Hope Hodgson
- Charles Kingsley
- George MacDonald
- George Meredith
- William Morris
- John Ruskin
- Bram Stoker
- The Invented World in the Works of William Morris
- Realism in High Fantasy
- The Novel, Fantastic Fiction, and the Inner World
Ghost stories
Gothic Fiction
Nautical Fiction
The Political Novel
- The Genre of the Political Novel
- Didacticism and the Political Novel
- Morris Edmund Speare on Inclusiveness in the Political Novel
- American vs. British Political Novels
- The Victorian Novel of Inter-class Romance
- The Victorian Social Novel as Genre
- Structure and Technique in the Victorian Political Novel
Science Fiction
The Sensation Novel
The Silver Fork School
The Slum Novel
The Utopian Novel
- Homesick in Utopia: State Capitalism and Pathology in Novels of the 1880s and 1890s
- Science and Technology in Victorian Utopias
The Victorian Governess Novel
- Introduction
- Characteristics of the Genre
- The Victorian Governess: A Bibliography
- Punch and Brontë on Training the Ideal Governess
The New Woman Novel
The Novels of the Eighteen-forties: Questions
- 1. Question One: Novels of the 1840s Only
- 2. The New Historicist Perspective
- 3. The Rise of the Novel as Supreme Among Popular Genres
- 4. Banning or Limiting the Availability of the Novel
- 5. The Predominance of the "Triple-Decker"
- 6. The Rise of Part-Publication
- 7. The Illustrated Part-Issue
- 8. The Monthly Part-Issue, 1836-1870
- 9. The Rise of Magazine Serial Fiction, 1860-
- 10. The Limitations of Novels of the 1840s
- 11. Victorian Readers' Reactions to Death in a Novel
- 12. Victorian Readers' Reactions to a Suffering Child in Fiction
- 13. Podsnappery and "The Tyranny of the Young Person"
- 14. Reactions to The Newgate Novel
- 15. Disraeli's "Two Nations"
- 16. Expanding the Range of the Novel: Class and Geography
- 17. A novel neither historical nor thoroughly contemporary tillotson/
- 18. The Thesis-Novel or "Novel-with-a-Purpose"