Bibliography

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Champion de Crespigny, Mary, Lady. Letters of Advice from a Mother to her Son. Cadell and Davies, 1803.
Champion de Crespigny, Mary, Lady. The Pavilion. William Lane, Minerva Press, 1796, 4 vols.
Champneys, A. M. “New Novels”. Times Literary Supplement, No. 1107, 5 Apr. 1923, p. 231.
Chan-Sam, Tanya et al. Creative Freedom: The FWords Anthology. Peepal Tree Press, 2008.
Chancellor, Edwin Beresford. The History of the Squares of London. K. Paul, Trench, Trübner, 1907.
Chandler, David. “’The Athens of England’: Norwich as a Literary Center in the Late Eighteenth Century”. Eighteenth-Century Studies, Vol.
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Chandler, James. England in 1819: The Politics of Literary Culture and the Case of Romantic Historicism. University of Chicago Press, 1998.
Chandler, Mary. A Description of Bath. James Leake, 1733.
Chandos, Oliver Lyttelton, first Viscount. The Memoirs of Lord Chandos. Bodley Head, 1962.
Chandra, Sudhir. Enslaved Daughters: Colonialism, Law, and Women’s Rights. Oxford University Press, 1998.
Chandrasekhar, Sripati et al. "A Dirty Filthy Book": The Writings of Charles Knowlton and Annie Besant on Reproductive Physiology and Birth Control and an Account of the Bradlaugh-Besant Trial. University of California Press, 1981.
Channing, Edward. A History of the United States. Macmillan, 1932, 6 vols.
Chant, Laura Ormiston. A Merry Christmas. Miller’s Library, 1911.
Chant, Laura Ormiston. How I Became a Total Abstainer. 1890.
Chant, Laura Ormiston. Sellcuts’ Manager. Grant Richards, 1899.
Chant, Laura Ormiston. Verona and Other Poems. David Stott, 1887.
Chant, Laura Ormiston. Why We Attacked the Empire. Marshall and Son, 1894.
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Chant, Laura Ormiston. “Woman as Athlete: A Reply to Dr. Arabella Kenealy”. Nineteenth Century, Vol.
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Chant, Laura Ormiston. “Women and the Streets”. Public Morals, Morgan and Scott, 1902.
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Chanter, Charlotte. Ferny Combes: A Ramble After Ferns in the Glens and Valleys of Devonshire. Lovell Reeve, 1856.
Chanter, Charlotte, and John Mill Chanter. Jack Frost and Betty Snow. Griffith and Farran, 1858.
Chanter, Charlotte. Over the Cliffs. Smith, Elder, 1860, 2 vols.
Chanter, Charlotte. Over the Cliffs. Smith, Elder, 1866.
Chanter, John Mill. Wanderings in North Devon. Editor Chanter, Gratiana, Twiss and Son, 1887.
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Chapman, Alison. “Mary Elizabeth Coleridge, Literary Influence and Technologies of the Uncanny”. Victorian Gothic: Literary and Cultural Manifestations in the Nineteenth Century, edited by Ruth Robbins and Julian Wolfreys, Palgrave, 2000, pp. 109-28.
Chapman, Alison. The Afterlife of Christina Rossetti. MacMillan, 2000.
Chapman, Alison, and Jane Stabler, editors. Unfolding the South: Nineteenth-Century British Women Writers and Artists in Italy. Manchester University Press, 2003.
Chapman, Annie Beatrice Wallis, and Mary Wallis Chapman. The Status of Women Under the English Law. George Routledge and Sons, 1909.
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Chapman, Guy Patterson. A Kind of Survivor. Editor Jameson, Storm, Gollancz, 1975.
Chapman, Guy Patterson. Beckford. Jonathan Cape, 1937.
Chapman, Hilary. “The New Zealand Campaign against Kate Marsden, Traveller to Siberia”. New Zealand Slavonic Journal, 2000, pp. 123-40.
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Chapman, Robert William. Jane Austen: Facts and Problems. Clarendon Press, 1949.
Chapman, Ronald. The Laurel and the Thorn: A Study of G.F. Watts. Faber and Faber, 1945.
Chapman, Wayne K., and Janet M. Manson, editors. Women in the Milieu of Leonard and Virginia Woolf: Peace, Politics, and Education. Pace University Press, 1998.
Chapone, Hester Mulso. A Letter to a New-Married Lady. E. and C. Dilly, and J. Walter, 1777.
Chapone, Hester Mulso. Letters on the Improvement of the Mind. J. Walter, 1773, 2 vols.
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Chapone, Hester Mulso. The Posthumous Works of Mrs. Chapone. John Murray, 1807, 2 vols.
Chapone, Sarah. Remarks on Mrs. Muilman’s Letter to the Right Honourable the Earl of Chesterfield. William Owen and James Leake, 1750.
Chapone, Sarah. The Hardships of the English Laws in relation to Wives. J. Roberts, 1735.
Chappell, Jennie. Women Who Have Worked and Won. Pickering and Inglis, 1928.
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