- Trollope and His Middle-Class Readership
- Anti-Semitism in Trollope and Punch
- “This most precious rank” — Trollope's The Prime Minister and the English gentleman
- Artistic Relations
- Conservative Social Satire in Punch and The Way We Live Now
- "False from Head to Foot": Aristocratic Pretentiousness in Punch and The Way We Live Now
- Letters and London in The Way We Live Now
- Georgey Longestaffe's Reaction to Ezekiel Breghert's Letter
- Manliness in Trollope's Female Characters
- Trollope's Heroines
- Punch looks at Fortune-Hunting Men — The Social Context of The Way We Live Now
- Lady Lufton's “ideal of life” in Framley Parsonage
- Punch-ing the Beargarden: Punch looks at Men's Clubs and Fortune-Hunting Men
- Social Satire in Punch: "A Misconception"
- Social Satire in Punch and Trollope: Marriage
- Social Position
- Trollope's Social Satire
- Trollope's Comfort Romances for Men: Heterosexual Male Heroism in his Work
- “Do something for a poor crathur [with] five starving childher” — Irish poverty in Castle Richmond
- Trollope's Heroes who are not Sexually and Socially Triumphant
- Trollope's crippled, paralyzed and tragic figures
- Can We Forgive Him? Trollope on America
- Shabby genteel poverty in a Victorian suburb
- Kincaid on Rachel Ray as an explicitly nationalist, pastoral romantic comedy
- Dr. Thorne’s ambiguous class position
- Trollope uses settings outside England as places of social and political instability in which work out problems in a simplified form
- The unconventional burlesque of American feminism in He Knew He Was Right
Last modified 11 June 2022