Climbing Boys and Factory Girls: Popular Melodramas of Working Life.Published in:Journal of Victorian Culture, 2000, v. 5, n. 1, p. 28, doi. 10.3366/jvc.2000.5.1.28By:Newey, KatherinePublication type:Article
Resistances in the Haunted House: A Perspective on Melodrama.Published in:Journal of Victorian Culture, 1999, v. 4, n. 2, p. 292, doi. 10.1080/13555509909505994By:Trodd, AntheaPublication type:Article
The Cockney and the Prostitute: Dickens and the literary market, 1836-37.Published in:1999By:Payne, DavidPublication type:Literary Criticism
Darkness Visible: The Early Melodrama of British Imperialism and the Commodification of History in Sheridan's Pizarro.Published in:2012By:Van Kooy, DanaPublication type:Literary Criticism
"Why Girls Leave Home": Victorian and Edwardian "Bad-Girl" Melodrama Parodied in Early Film.Published in:Theatre Journal, 2006, v. 58, n. 4, p. 575, doi. 10.1353/tj.2007.0022By:Mayer, DavidPublication type:Article
TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES THE REAL WORLD OF TROLLOPE'S MELODRAMA.Published in:1983By:White, Gertrude M.Publication type:Literary Criticism
The Melodramatic Imagination (Book).Published in:1978By:Hartsock, Mildred E.Publication type:Book Review
Melodrama and parody: A reading that Nicholas Nickleby requires?Published in:1996By:Rem, TorePublication type:Literary Criticism
Staging Sport: Dion Boucicault, the Victorian Spectacular Theatre, and the Manly Ideal.Published in:Critical Survey, 2012, v. 24, n. 1, p. 57, doi. 10.3167/cs.2012.240105By:Smith, Shannon R.Publication type:Article