1.
Showalter, E. The female malady: women, madness and English culture 1830-1980. (Virago, 1987).
2.
Melling, J. & Forsythe, B. The politics of madness: the state, insanity, and society in England, 1845-1914. vol. Routledge studies in the social history of medicine (Routledge, 2006).
3.
Scull, A. The Insanity of Place. (Taylor & Francis Ltd, 2006).
4.
Gilbert, S. M. & Gubar, S. The madwoman in the attic: the woman writer and the nineteenth-century literary imagination. (Yale University Press, 2000).
5.
Wise, S. Inconvenient people: lunacy, liberty and the mad-doctors in Victorian England. (Vintage Books, 2013).
6.
Appignanesi, L. Mad, bad and sad: a history of women and the mind doctors. (W.W. Norton & Company, 2009).
7.
Wear, A. & Wear, A. Medicine in society: historical essays. (Cambridge University Press, 1992).
8.
Scull, A. Hysteria: the biography. (Oxford University Press, 2009).
9.
Andrews, J. & Digby, A. Sex and seclusion, class and custody: perspectives on gender and class in the history of British and Irish psychiatry. vol. 73 (Editions Rodopi B.V., 2003).
10.
Appignanesi, L. Mad, bad and sad: a history of women and the mind doctors from 1800 to the present. (Virago, 2008).
11.
Hide, L. Gender and class in English asylums, 1890-1914. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014).
12.
Melling, J. & Forsythe, B. The politics of madness: the state, insanity, and society in England, 1845-1914. vol. Routledge studies in the social history of medicine (Routledge, 2006).
13.
Joan Busfield. THE FEMALE MALADY? MEN, WOMEN AND MADNESS IN NINETEENTH CENTURY BRITAIN. Sociology 28, 259–277 (1994).
14.
Ussher, J. M. Women’s madness: misogyny or mental illness? (Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1991).
15.
Melling, J. & Forsythe, B. The politics of madness: the state, insanity, and society in England, 1845-1914. vol. Routledge studies in the social history of medicine (Routledge, 2006).
16.
Cox CMarland H. ‘A Burden on the County’: Madness, Institutions of Confinement and the Irish Patient in Victorian Lancashire. Social History Of Medicine: The Journal Of The Society For The Social History Of Medicine 28, 263–287 (2015).
17.
Rubenhold, H. The five: the untold lives of the women killed by Jack the Ripper. (Doubleday, 2019).
18.
D’Cruze, S. Everyday violence in Britain, 1850-1950: gender and class. vol. Women and men in history (Longman, 2000).
19.
Werner, H. Jack The Ripper and the East End. (Chatto & Windus, 2008).
20.
Riddell, F. The Victorian guide to sex. (Pen & Sword Family History, 2014).
21.
Houlbrook, M. Toward a historical geography of sexuality. JOURNAL OF URBAN HISTORY (2001).
22.
Laite, J. Common prostitutes and ordinary citizens: commercial sex in London, 1885-1960. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012).
23.
Marcus, S. & Marcus, S. The Other Victorians: a Study of Sexuality and Pornography in Mid-nineteenth-century England. (Taylor and Francis, 2008).
24.
Nead, L. Victorian Babylon: people, streets and images in nineteenth-century London. (Yale University Press, 2000).
25.
Boyd, K. & McWilliam, R. The Victorian studies reader. (Routledge, 2007).
26.
Gray, D. D. London’s shadows: the dark side of the Victorian city. (Bloomsbury Academic, 2013).
27.
Huggins, M. Vice and the Victorians. (Bloomsbury Academic, 2016).
28.
Koven, S. & Koven, S. Slumming: sexual and social politics in Victorian London. (Princeton University Press, 2004).
29.
Walkowitz, J. R. City of dreadful delight: narratives of sexual danger in late-Victorian London. (Virago, 1992).
30.
Morris, N., Rothman, D. J. & Rothman, D. J. The Oxford history of the prison: the practice of punishment in western society. (Oxford University Press, 1995).
31.
Zedner, L. Women, crime, and custody in Victorian England. (Clarendon Press, 1991).
32.
Foucault, M. Discipline and punish: the birth of the prison. (Vintage Books, 1995).
33.
Wilson, D. Pain and Retribution: a Short History of British Prisons 1066 to the Present. (Reaktion Books, 2014).
34.
Brunon-Ernst, A. Beyond Foucault: new perspectives on Bentham’s Panopticon. (Ashgate, 2012).
35.
Ireland, R. W. A want of good order and discipline: rules, discretion and the Victorian prison. (University of Wales Press, 2007).
36.
Godfrey, B. S., Lawrence, P. & Williams, C. A. History and crime. vol. Key approaches to criminology (SAGE, 2007).
37.
Godfrey, B. S., Lawrence, P. & Williams, C. A. History and crime. vol. Key approaches to criminology (SAGE, 2007).
38.
Emsley, C. Crime and society in England, 1750-1900. vol. Themes in British social history (Longman, 2010).
39.
Schirato, T., Webb, J. & Danaher, G. Understanding Foucault: a critical introduction. (SAGE Publications, 2012).
40.
Cockayne, E. Cheek by jowl: a history of neighbours. (Vintage, 2013).
41.
TOM CROOK. Accommodating the outcast: common lodging houses and the limits of urban governance in Victorian and Edwardian London. Urban History 35, 414–436 (2008).
42.
Mayne, A. The imagined slum: newspaper representation in three cities, 1870-1914. (Leicester University Press, 1993).
43.
Seed, J. Did the Subaltern Speak? Mayhew and the coster-girl. Journal of Victorian Culture 19, 536–549 (2014).
44.
Ginn, G. Answering the ‘Bitter Cry’: Urban Description and Social Reform in the Late-Victorian East End. The London Journal 31, 179–200 (2006).
45.
CROOK, T. Accommodating the outcast: common lodging houses and the limits of urban governance in Victorian and Edwardian London. Urban History 35, 414–436 (2008).
46.
Beier, A. L. Identity, Language, and Resistance in the Making of the Victorian "Criminal Class”: Mayhew’s Convict Revisited. The Journal of British Studies 44, 499–515 (2005).
47.
Jennings, P. Policing Drunkenness in England and Wales.
48.
Rubenhold, H. The five: the untold lives of the women killed by Jack the Ripper. (Doubleday, 2019).