References
- Amato, S. (2015). Beastly possessions: Animals in Victorian consumer culture. University of Toronto Press.
- Armitage, J. H. 1974. The twenty-three years, or the late way of life – and of living. by the exile. (Unpublished MS. Brunel Collection. Brunel University Library).
- Armstrong, N. (2010). Christmas in nineteenth century England. Manchester University Press.
- Ayre, J. 1978. The socialist (Unpublished MS. Brunel Collection. Brunel University Library).
- Blythe, R. (1972). Akenfield: Portrait of an English village. Penguin.
- Bourke, J. (2020). Loving animals: On bestiality, zoophilia and post-human love. Reaktion.
- Broughton, T. L., & Rogers, H. (eds.). (2007). Gender and fatherhood in the nineteenth century. Palgrave Macmillan.
- Burton, H. M. (1958). There was a young man. Geoggrey Bles.
- Canine Defence League. (1927). Annual report.
- Chinn, C. (1988). They worked all their lives: Women of the urban poor in England, 1880-1939. Manchester University Press.
- Cowper, A. (1952). A backward glance on Merseyside. Wilmer Brothers & Co..
- Cowper, D. 1964. De Nobis (Unpublished MS. Brunel Collection. Brunel University Library).
- Davidoff, L. (2012). Thicker than water: Siblings and their relations, 1780-1920. Oxford University Press.
- Davies, A. (1992). Leisure, gender and poverty: Working-class culture in Salford and Manchester, 1900-1939. Open University Press.
- Day, S. (2006). London born. Harper Perennial.
- Dickens, C. (1837). Oliver Twist. Richard Bentley.
- Dixon, T. (2015). Weeping Britannia: Portrait of a nation in tears. Oxford University Press.
- Donald, D. (2020). Women against cruelty: Protection of animals in nineteenth century Britain. Manchester University Press.
- Foakes, G. (2011). Four meals and fourpence: A heartwarming tale of family life in London’s Old East end. Virago.
- Fudge, E. (2008). Pets. Art of Living. Stocksfield
- Fudge, E. (2018). Quick cattle and dying wishes: People and their animals in early modern England. Cornell University Press.
- Gagnier, R. (1991). Subjectivities: A history of self-representation 1832-1920. Oxford University Press.
- Grier, K. (2006). Pets in America: A History. University if North Carolina Press.
- Griffin, E. (2013). Liberty’s dawn: A people’s history of the industrial revolution. Yale University Press.
- Griffin, E. (2018). The emotions of motherhood: Love, culture and poverty in Victorian Britain. American Historical Review, 123(1), 60–85. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1093/ahr/123.1.60
- Griffin, E. (2020). Breadwinner: An intimate history of the Victorian economy. Yale University Press.
- Hall, L. (2000). Prince and others, 1850-1940. Bloomsbury.
- Hall, L. (2002). Prince and other dogs II. Bloomsbury.
- Hribal, J. (2003). Animals are part of the working class: A challenge to labour history. Labour History, 44(4), 435-453. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1080/0023656032000170069.
- Humphries, J. (2010). Childhood and child labour in the British industrial revolution. Cambridge University Press.
- Jalland, P. (1996). Death in the Victorian family. Oxford University Press.
- Johnes, M. (2007). Pigeon racing and working-class culture in Britain, 1870-1950. Cultural and Social History, 4(3), 361–383. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.2752/147800407X219250
- Johnson, P. (1985). Saving and spending: The working class economy in Britain, 1870-1939. Clarendon.
- Jones, B. (2010). The uses of nostalgia: Autobiography, community publishing and working-class neighbourhoods in post-war England. Cultural and Social History, 7(3), 355–374. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.2752/147800410X12714191853346
- Kean, H. (1998). Animal rights: Political and social change in Britain since 1800. Reaktion Books.
- Kean, H. (2017). The Great dog and cat massacre: The real story of World War II’s unknown tragedy. University of Chicago Press.
- Kete, K. (1994). The beast in the Boudoir: Petkeeping in nineteenth-century Paris. University of California Press.
- Loane, M. E. (1908). From their point of view. Edward Arnold.
- Loane, M. E. (1910). Neighbours and friends: Articles on social questions. Edward Arnold.
- Mason, J. (2018). Affinities: Potent connections in personal life. Polity Press.
- Mayhew, H. 1861-1862. London labour and London poor. No publisher.
- Pearson, C. (2015). Beyond ‘resistance’: Rethinking nonhuman agency for a ‘more-than-human’ world. European Review of History: Revue européenne d’histoire, 22(5), 709–725. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1080/13507486.2015.1070122
- Pearson, C. (2019). Four-legged Poilus: French army dogs, emotional practices and the creation of militarized human-dog bonds, 1871-1918. Journal of Social History, 52(3), 731–760. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1093/jsh/shx090
- Pemberton, N., & Worboys, M. (2007). Mad dogs and Englishmen: Rabies in Britain, 1830-2000. Palgrave Macmillan.
- Penn, M. (1947). Manchester fourteen miles. Cambridge University Press.
- Preston, R. (2014). The pastimes of the people: Photographing house and garden in London’s small suburban homes, 1880-1914. The London Journal, 39(3), 205–226. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1179/0305803414Z.00000000049
- Roberts, E. (1984). A woman’s place: An oral history of working-class women, 1890-1940. Blackwell.
- Rogers, H., & Cuming, E. (2018). Revealing fragments: Close and distant reading of working-class autobiography. Family and Community History, 21(3), 180–201. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1080/14631180.2018.1555951
- Ross, E. (1993). Love and toil: Motherhood in outcast London, 1870-1918. Oxford University Press.
- Saha, J. (2017). Colonising elephants: Animal agency, undead capital and imperial science in British Burma. British Journal for History of Science, 2, 169–189. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1017/bjt.2017.6.
- Salmi, H. (2011). Cultural history, the possible and the principle of plenitude. History and Theory, 50(2), 171–187. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2303.2011.00575.x
- Scannell, D. (1977). Mother knew best: An East end childhood. Macmillan.
- Scheer, M. (2012). Are emotions a kind of practice? And is that what makes them have a history? A Bourdieuian approach to understanding emotion. History and Theory, 51(2), 193–220. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2303.2012.00621.x
- Scherren, H. (1902). Bird land and pet land in London. In G. R. Sims (Ed.), Living London (Vol. II, pp. 326). Cassell.
- Slater’s Royal National Commercial Directory of Manchester and Salford. (1876). Slater.
- Sparrow, T. (1900). Poverty’s pets. Quiver, 759(1), 278–282.
- Stamper, J. (1960). So long ago. Hutchinson.
- Strange, J.-M. (2005). Death, grief and poverty in Britain 1870-1914. Cambridge University Press.
- Strange, J.-M. (2015). Fatherhood and the British working class, 1865-1914. Cambridge University Press.
- Summerfield, P. (2018). Histories of the self: Personal narratives and historical practice. Routledge.
- Tague, I. (2015). Animal companions: Pets and social change in eighteenth-century Britain. Pennsylvania State University Press.
- Tinkler, P. (2013). Using photographs in social and historical research. Sage.
- Tipper, B. (2011). A Dog I knew quite well: Everyday relationships between children and animals children’s geographies. Children’s Geographies, 9(2), 145–165. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1080/14733285.2011.562378
- Vincent, D. (1981). Bread, knowledge and freedom: A study of nineteenth-century working-class autobiography. Europa.
- Webb, T., Pearson, C., Summerfield, P., & Riley, M. (2020). More-than-human emotional communities: British soldiers and mules in second world war Burma. Cultrural and Social History, 17(2), 245–262. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1080/14780038.2020.1744879
- Willes, M. (2014). The gardens of the British working class. Yale University Press.
- Worboys, M., Strange, J.-M., & Pemberton, N. (2018). The invention of the modern dog: Breed and blood in Victorian Britain. John Hopkins University Press.