References
- Ashbridge, P. 2004. Village Chapels; Some Aspects of Rural Methodism in the East Cotswolds and South Midlands 1800–2000. Hook Norton: Kershaw.
- Boultwood, M.E.A. and Curtis, S.J.. 1960. An Introductory History of English Education since 1800. Cambridge: University Tutorial Press.
- Butler, J.F. 1977. “Methodist Architecture in Relation to Methodist Liturgy.” Institute for the Study of Worship and Religious Architecture; Research Bulletin, 20–45.
- Cherry, Steven. 2003. “Medicine and Public Health, 1900–1939.” In Christopher John Wrigley (ed.), A Companion to Early Twentieth Century Britain, 405–423. Blackwell: Oxford.
- Connelly, Angela. 2010. “Methodist Central Halls as Public Sacred Space.” Unpublished PhD Thesis, University of Manchester.
- Connelly, Angela. 2015. “Continuity and Adaptation: Archway Central Hall, 1934–2010.” The London Journal, 40(1): 33–55.10.1179/0305803414Z.00000000058
- Cracknell, Kenneth and White, Susan J.. 2005. An Introduction to World Methodism, 92–11. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Cunningham, Hugh. 2014. Time, Work and Leisure. Manchester, NH: Manchester University Press.10.7228/manchester/9780719085208.001.0001
- Dolbey, G.W. 1964. The Architectural Expression of Methodism; the First One Hundred Year. London: Epworth Press.
- Edensor, Tim. 2011. “Entangled Agencies, Material Networks and Repair in a Building Assemblage: The Mutable Stone of St Ann’s Church Manchester.” Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 36: 238–252.10.1111/tran.2011.36.issue-2
- Erdozain, Dominic. 2010. The Problem of Pleasure: Sport, Recreation and the Crisis of Victorian Religion. Woodbridge: Boydell.
- Field, Clive. 1974. Methodism in Metropolitan London, 1850–1920: A Social and Sociological Study. Unpublished D.Phil Thesis, University of Oxford.
- Graham, S. and Thrift, N.. 2007. “Out of Order: Understanding Repair and Maintenance.” Theory, Culture and Society, 24: 1–25.10.1177/0263276407075954
- Graves, Pamela. 1989. “Social Spaces in the English Medieval Parish Church.” Economy and Society, 18(3): 297–322.10.1080/03085148900000014
- Gregson, N., Metcalf, A. and Crewe, L. 2009. “Practices of Object Maintenance and Repair: How Consumers Attend to Consumer Objects within the Home.” Journal of Consumer Culture, 9: 248–272.10.1177/1469540509104376
- Harrison, B. 1994. Drink and the Victorians: The Temperance Question in England 1815–1872, 2nd ed. Keele: Keele University Press.
- Harvey, David D., Brace, Catherine, and Bailey, Adrian R. 2007. “Parading the Cornish Subject; Methodist Sunday Schools in West Cornwall, C.1830–1930.” Journal of Historical Geography, 33(1): 24–44.
- Holloway, Julian. 2011. “Tracing the Emergent in Geographies of Religion and Belief.” In Catherine Brace, Adrian Bailey, Sean Carter, David Harvey and Nicola Thomas (eds.), Emerging Geographies of Belief, 30–52. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
- Howdle, Susan R. n.d. “Methodist Union.” Dictionary of Methodism in Britain and Ireland. Available online: http://wesleyhistoricalsociety.org.uk (accessed July 18, 2014).
- Ingold, Tim. 2012. “Towards an Ecology of Materials.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 41: 427–442.10.1146/annurev-anthro-081309-145920
- Jobson, Rev. F. J. 1850. Chapel and School Architecture as Appropriate to the Buildings of Nonconformists; Particularly to Those of the Wesleyan Methodists; with Practical Directions for the Erection of Chapels and School-Houses. London: Hamilton, Adams, & Co.
- Knott, Kim. 2005. The Location of Religion; a Spatial Analysis. London: Equinox, London.
- Kong, Lily. 1990. “Geography and Religion: Trends and Prospects.” Progress in Human Geography, 14: 355–371.10.1177/030913259001400302
- Kong, Lily. 2001. “Mapping ‘New’ Geographies of Religion: Politics and Poetics in Modernity.” Progress in Human Geography, 25(2)June: 211–233.10.1191/030913201678580485
- Kong, Lily. 2010. “Global Shifts, Theoretical Shifts: Changing Geographies of Religion.” Progress in Human Geography 34(6) December: 755–776.10.1177/0309132510362602
- MacDonald, Fraser. 2002. “Towards a Spatial Theory of Worship: Some Observations from Presbyterian Scotland.” Social and Cultural Geography, 3(1): 61–80.10.1080/14649360120114143
- Madden, D. 2009. “Wesley as Advisor on Health and Healing.” In R.L. Maddox and J.E. Vickers (eds)., The Cambridge Companion to John Wesley, 176–189. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Mangion, Carmen M. 2012. ‘“to console, to nurse, to prepare for eternity”: The Catholic Sickroom in Late Nineteenth-Century England.’ Women's History Review, 21(4): 657–672.
- Mann, Horace and Great Britain Census Office. 1854. Census of Great Britain, 1851: Religious Worship in England and Wales. London: G. Routledge.
- Mason, Ruth. 2015. “The Design of Nineteenth-Century Wesleyan Space: Re-Reading F. J. Jobson’s Chapel and School Architecture.” Wesley and Methodist Studies, 7(1): 78–99.10.5325/weslmethstud.7.1.0078
- Miller, Daniel. 2010. Stuff. Cambridge and Malden: Polity Press.
- Moir, Esther. 1963. “The Architecture of Dissent.” History Today, 13(June): 383–389.
- Naylor, Simon and Ryan, James R. 2002. “The Mosque in the Suburbs: Negotiating Religion and Ethnicity in South London.” Social and Cultural Geography, 3(1): 39–59.10.1080/14649360120114134
- Rack, Henry D. 1973-1974. “The Decline of the Class Meeting and the Problem of Church Membership in Nineteenth-Century Wesleyanism.” Proceedings of the Wesley Historical Society, 39: 12–21.
- Rack, Henry D. 1983. “Wesleyan Methodism, 1849–1902.” In R. Davies, A.R. George and G. Rupp(eds), A History of the Methodist Church in Great Britain, III, 119–166. London: Epworth Press.
- Saw, Thomas. 1959. “The Methodist Chapel Interior (1739–1839) in Relations to Contemporary Church Arrangement.” Proceedings of the Wesley Historical Society, 32(3): 53–58.
- Lewis Shiman, Lilian. 1973. “The Band of Hope Movement: Respectable Recreation for Working-Class Children.” Victorian Studies, 17(1), The Victorian Child (September): 49–74
- Smith, Ian. 2004. Tin Tabernacles; Corrugated Iron Mission Halls, Churches and Chapels of Britain. Salisbury: BAS Printers.
- Stell, Christopher. 1994. “Wesley’s Chapel City Road, Islington; Anniversary Address 1993.” Transactions of the Ancient Monuments Society, 38: 15–29.
- Stell, Christopher. 2000. “Nonconformist Architecture and the Cambridge Camden Society.” In J. Elliot (ed.), A Church as It Should Be: The Cambridge Camden Society and Its Influence, 317–330. Stamford: Shaun Tyas.
- Stell, Christopher. 2002. An Inventory of Nonconformist Chapels and Meeting Houses in Eastern England. Swindon: English Heritage.
- Thomas, John. 2000. “The Meaning of ‘Style’ in Traditional Architecture the Case of the Gothic.” The Journal of Architecture, 5(3): 293–306.10.1080/136023600419609
- Turner, Harold W. 1979. From Temple to Meeting House: The Phenomenology and Theology of Places of Worship. The Hauge: Mouton.10.1515/rs
- Vickers, John A. n.d. “Methodism.” Dictionary of Methodism in Britain and Ireland. Available online: http://www.wesleyhistoricalsociety.org.uk (accessed July 14, 2014).
- Wakeling, Christopher. 1995. “The Nonconformist Traditions: Chapels, Change and Continuity.” In C. Brooks and A. Saint (eds), The Victorian Church, 82–97. Manchester, NH: Manchester University Press.
- Wakeling, Christopher. 2007. “Nonconformity and Victorian Architecture.” In Bridget Cherry (ed), Dissent and the Gothic Revival; Papers from a Study at Union Chapel Islington, 39–71. London: The Chapels Society.
- Wakeling, Christopher. 2012. “Sitting around: Some Nonconformist Shapes of Worship.” Paper presented at the Chapels Society Conference, Sitting in Chapels; Nonconformist Contributions to the Story of Pews, Benches and Chairs, Birmingham, March 2.