References
- Barker, Juliet. 1996. The Brontës. New York: St. Martin’s Griffin.
- Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine. 1825–1842. Edinburgh: William Blackwood and Sons.
- Bloom, Harold, ed. 1993. Heathcliff. New York: Chelsea House Publishers.
- Brontë, Charlotte. 1974. Shirley. Edited by Andrew Hook and Judith Hook. London: Penguin Books.
- Brontë, Charlotte. 1985. The Poems of Charlotte Brontë. Edited by Victor A. Neufeldt. New York: Garland.
- Brontë, Emily. 1992. The Complete Poems. Edited by Janet Gezari. London: Penguin Books.
- Brontë, Emily. 2007. Wuthering Heights. Edited by Beth Newman. Canada: Broadview Press.
- Cowen, Roger, and Anne Cowen. 1986. Victorian Jews Through British Eyes. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Dickens, Charles. 1977. Bleak House. Edited by George Ford and Sylvère Monod. New York: Norton.
- Dickens, Charles. 1993. Oliver Twist. Edited by Fred Kaplan. New York: Norton.
- Eagleton, Terry. 1995. Heathcliff and the Great Hunger. New York: Verso.
- Fermi, Sarah. 2015. “A Question of Colour.” Brontë Studies 4 (4): 334–342. doi: 10.1080/14748932.2015.1127661
- Gawthrop, Humphrey. 2013. “Slavery: Idée Fixe of Emily and Charlotte Brontë.” Brontë Studies 38 (4): 281–289. doi:10.1179/1474893213Z.00000000082
- Gérin, Winifred. 1971. Emily Brontë: A Biography. Oxford: Clarendon.
- Gifford, Douglas. 2012–2013. “Hogg, Scottish Literature and Wuthering Heights or Was Heathcliff a Brownie?” The 2012 Douglas Mack Lecture. James Hogg and the Romantics Conference 2012. Studies in Hogg and His World: n.d. 5–22.
- Gold, Hazel. 2009. “Illustrated Histories: The National Subject and ‘The Jew’ in Nineteenth-Century Spanish Art.” Journal of Spanish Cultural Studies 10 (1): 89–109. doi:10.1080/14636200902771129
- Joffe, Sharon. 2007. The Kinship Coterie and The Literary Endeavors of the Women in the Shelley Circle. New York: Peter Lang.
- Kartomi, Margaret, and Andrew McCredie. 2004. “Introduction: Musical Outcomes of Jewish Migration into Asia via the Northern and Southern Routes c. 1780-c. 1950.” Ethnomusicology Forum 13 (1): 3–20. doi:10.1080/17411910410001692274
- Katz, David. 1994. The Jews in the History of England: 1485-1850. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
- Kokosalakis, N. 1982. Ethnic Identity and Religion: Tradition and Change in Liverpool Jewry. Washington: University Press of America.
- Kuzmic, Tatiana. 2014. “‘The German, The Sclave, and the Semite’: Eastern Europe in the Imagination of George Eliot.” Nineteenth-Century Literature 68 (4): 513–541. doi:10.1525/ncl.2014.68.4.513
- Lavezzo, Kathy. 2013. “Introduction: Jews in Britain-Medieval to Modern.” Philological Quarterly 92 (1): 1–18.
- Maynard, John. 2002. “The Brontës and Religion.” In The Cambridge Companion to the Brontës, edited by Heather Glen, 192–213. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Michie, Elsie. 1992. “From Simianized Irish to Oriental Despots: Heathcliff, Rochester and Racial Difference.” Novel: A Forum on Fiction 25 (2): 125–140. doi:10.2307/1346001
- Needel, Yale. 2008. “Rethinking ‘Sephardic’: Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur Observances among the Jews of Bombay.” Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies 26 (2): 59–80.
- O’Callaghan, Claire, and Michael Stewart. 2020. “Heathcliff, Race and Adam Low’s Documentary, A Regular Black: The Hidden Wuthering Heights (2010).” Brontë Studies 45 (2): 156–167. doi:10.1080/14748932.2020.1715045
- Rabin, Dana. 2006. “The Jew Bill of 1753: Masculinity, Virility, and the Nation.” Eighteenth-Century Studies 39 (2): 157–171. doi:10.1353/ecs.2005.0067
- Scott, Walter. 1950. Ivanhoe. Edited by Edward Wilson. New York: The Heritage Press.
- Shakespeare, William. 2016. The Merchant of Venice. In The Norton Shakespeare, edited by Stephen Greenblatt et al., 1339–1393. New York: Norton.
- Torgerson, Beth. 2005. Reading the Brontë Body: Disease, Desire, and the Constraints of Culture. New York: Palgrave MacMillan.
- Tytler, Graeme. 2007. “The Role of Religion in Wuthering Heights.” Brontë Studies 32 (1): 41–55. doi:10.1179/147489306x132264
- Watson, Reginald. 2001. “Images of Blackness in the Works of Charlotte and Emily Brontë.” CLA Journal 44 (4): 451–470.