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Read complete books and articles on: Little Dorrit

Dickens, Charles - 1812–70, English author, b. Portsmouth, one of the world's most popular, prolific, and skilled novelists.

Early Life and Works

The son of a naval clerk, Dickens spent his early childhood in London and in Chatham. When he was 12 his father was imprisoned for debt, and Charles was compelled to work in a blacking warehouse. He never forgot this double humiliation. At 17 he


14 of the Best Books and Articles on: Little Dorrit

as selected by Questia librarians
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    Little Dorrit » Read Now

    by Charles Dickens. 788 pgs.

    Collections: Literature, Entire Library
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    Oxford Reader's Companion to Dickens ("Little Dorrit" begins on p. 335) » Read Now

    by Paul Schlicke. 661 pgs.

    Collections: Literature, Entire Library
    Here is the greatest compendium of information ever produced about one of the greatest writers who ever lived. For anyone wishing to learn more about Dickens's life and works and the literary, political, and social milieu in which he lived, there is no better place to turn than The Oxford Reader's...
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    Dickens and Imagination (Chap. 8 "Little Dorrit") » Read Now

    by Robert Higbie. 204 pgs.

    Collections: Literature, Entire Library
    Robert Higbie investigates the concept and use of imagination in Romantic and Victorian literature, concentrating on the novels of Charles Dickens and showing how they illuminate and are influenced by various tendencies in post-Romantic thought. Higbie offers a new definition of imagination as a...
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    The Afterlife of Property: Domestic Security and the Victorian Novel (Chap. Two "Domestic Securities: Little Dorrit and the Fictions of Property") » Read Now

    by Jeff Nunokawa. 152 pgs.

    Collections: Literature, Entire Library
    In "The Afterlife of Property, Jeff Nunokawa investigates the conviction passed on by the Victorian novel that a woman's love is the only fortune a man can count on to last. Taking for his example four texts, Charles Dickens's "Little Dorrit and "Dombey and Son, and George Eliot's "Daniel Deronda...
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    Figures of Finance Capitalism: Writing, Class, and Capital in the Age of Dickens (Chap. Four "Banking on Sentiments: A Melodramatic Civil Society in Little Dorrit and A Tale of Two Cities") » Read Now

    by Borislav Knezevic. 234 pgs.

    Collections: Literature, Entire Library
    Figures of Finance Capitalism brings into focus Victorian narratives by major middle-class writers in which the workings of finance capitalism are prominently featured, and reads this interest in finance capitalism in the context of middle-class misgivings about a class system still dominated by a...
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    Dickens and the Daughter of the House (Chap. Five "Amy Dorrit's Prison Notebooks") » Read Now

    by Hilary M. Schor. 232 pgs.

    Collections: Literature, Entire Library
    The daughter in Dickens' fiction is considered in this study not as an emblem of tranquil domesticity and the hearth-fire, but as a bearer of cultural values--and as a potentially disruptive force. As the good daughters in his novels (Little Nell, Agnes Wickfield, Esther Summerson, Amy Dorrit) must...
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