In the foundational text, George Eliot and Blackmail, Alexander Welsh charts the development of modern society, from the birth of our information culture to the emergence of new community patterns, and he explains how the tensions created by publicity fostered a widespread interest in secrecy. In outlining the conditions that intensified this need, Welsh provides a useful interpretative model for studying the human networks in Charles Dickens’s Barnaby Rudge and Martin Chuzzlewit. The worlds portrayed in these historical and domestic novels—with their emphases on local information, social mobility, and accountability—illustrate how an overall increase in publicity weakens the traditional community structure. In particular,...
The term network can refer to any collection of interconnected organisms, groups, objects, or even i...
The industrialization of England during the Victorian era had an impact not only on society's struct...
The article investigates a few characteristics of Dickensian textuality and the voices of Victorian ...
8th International ACM Web Science Conference 2016, Hanover, Germany, 22-25 may 2016Inspired by the i...
Digital Humanities Congress. University of Sheffield, United KingdomIn recent years, social network ...
Graduation date: 2000Presentation date: 1999-09-13Nineteenth-century England witnessed burgeoning ur...
To many of his contemporaries, Charles Dickens was the greatest writer of his age; a one-man fiction...
Moving from Dickens’s unfailing popularity as a successful cultural icon, this article addresses the...
grantor: University of TorontoDickens played a key role in establishing the fairy tale as ...
This study uses concepts from network science to analyze the agency of outsider characters who cause...
This thesis argues that the reflection of society in Dickens's mature novels is not mechanical, pass...
This thesis examines the social conditions and history in the nineteenth century, reviews Dickens’ m...
Among hundreds of social phenomena and problems, social stratification is the most common issue disc...
We present a method for extracting social networks from literature, namely, nineteenth-century Briti...
This article aims to provide an insight to one of the major social conflicts in the history of the w...
The term network can refer to any collection of interconnected organisms, groups, objects, or even i...
The industrialization of England during the Victorian era had an impact not only on society's struct...
The article investigates a few characteristics of Dickensian textuality and the voices of Victorian ...
8th International ACM Web Science Conference 2016, Hanover, Germany, 22-25 may 2016Inspired by the i...
Digital Humanities Congress. University of Sheffield, United KingdomIn recent years, social network ...
Graduation date: 2000Presentation date: 1999-09-13Nineteenth-century England witnessed burgeoning ur...
To many of his contemporaries, Charles Dickens was the greatest writer of his age; a one-man fiction...
Moving from Dickens’s unfailing popularity as a successful cultural icon, this article addresses the...
grantor: University of TorontoDickens played a key role in establishing the fairy tale as ...
This study uses concepts from network science to analyze the agency of outsider characters who cause...
This thesis argues that the reflection of society in Dickens's mature novels is not mechanical, pass...
This thesis examines the social conditions and history in the nineteenth century, reviews Dickens’ m...
Among hundreds of social phenomena and problems, social stratification is the most common issue disc...
We present a method for extracting social networks from literature, namely, nineteenth-century Briti...
This article aims to provide an insight to one of the major social conflicts in the history of the w...
The term network can refer to any collection of interconnected organisms, groups, objects, or even i...
The industrialization of England during the Victorian era had an impact not only on society's struct...
The article investigates a few characteristics of Dickensian textuality and the voices of Victorian ...