This thesis examines the popular and cultural legacy of Charles Dickens in the period 1900-1940. During this period Dickens was largely ignored or derided within the academy but his works remained consistently marketable to a popular audience. The thesis explores Dickens’s mass cultural appeal, assessing what the term ‘Dickensian’ represented in the early decades of the twentieth century and evaluating Dickens’s role as a national figure. This thesis engages with recent scholarship in the fields of Dickens criticism, heritage studies and material culture to explore a popular appreciation of Dickens which is characterised by its language of feeling and affect. The first chapter situates Charles Dickens’s literary standing and cultural legacy...
This thesis examines Dickens’s representation of cockney dialect and cockney speakers, as well as re...
The thesis concentrates on the illustration of Dickens's novels in their original publication. In s...
Because Charles Dickens' literature has become a part of popular culture, Lyn Pykett wrote that mode...
This thesis examines the popular and cultural legacy of Charles Dickens in the period 1900-1940. Dur...
This thesis examines representations of Charles Dickens in the period 1857 to 1939, arguing that bot...
Charles Dickens, a man so representative of his age as to have become considered synonymous with it,...
In 1925, the Dickens Fellowship founded the ‘Dickens House Museum’ at Number 48 Doughty Street, Lond...
Such has been Dickens’ popularity, that we see today evidence of the activity of his readers all aro...
This thesis examines the biographical narration of Charles Dickens’s life in the 150 years from his ...
This thesis investigates the relationship between the fiction of Charles Dickens and the work of can...
Since his death in 1870, Dickens’s popularity has been sustained most obviously by the ubiquity of h...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Oxford University Press ...
grantor: University of TorontoDickens played a key role in establishing the fairy tale as ...
To many of his contemporaries, Charles Dickens was the greatest writer of his age; a one-man fiction...
The diploma thesis presents Charles Dickens not only as one of the most popular Victorian writers bu...
This thesis examines Dickens’s representation of cockney dialect and cockney speakers, as well as re...
The thesis concentrates on the illustration of Dickens's novels in their original publication. In s...
Because Charles Dickens' literature has become a part of popular culture, Lyn Pykett wrote that mode...
This thesis examines the popular and cultural legacy of Charles Dickens in the period 1900-1940. Dur...
This thesis examines representations of Charles Dickens in the period 1857 to 1939, arguing that bot...
Charles Dickens, a man so representative of his age as to have become considered synonymous with it,...
In 1925, the Dickens Fellowship founded the ‘Dickens House Museum’ at Number 48 Doughty Street, Lond...
Such has been Dickens’ popularity, that we see today evidence of the activity of his readers all aro...
This thesis examines the biographical narration of Charles Dickens’s life in the 150 years from his ...
This thesis investigates the relationship between the fiction of Charles Dickens and the work of can...
Since his death in 1870, Dickens’s popularity has been sustained most obviously by the ubiquity of h...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Oxford University Press ...
grantor: University of TorontoDickens played a key role in establishing the fairy tale as ...
To many of his contemporaries, Charles Dickens was the greatest writer of his age; a one-man fiction...
The diploma thesis presents Charles Dickens not only as one of the most popular Victorian writers bu...
This thesis examines Dickens’s representation of cockney dialect and cockney speakers, as well as re...
The thesis concentrates on the illustration of Dickens's novels in their original publication. In s...
Because Charles Dickens' literature has become a part of popular culture, Lyn Pykett wrote that mode...