- Characterization in Dickens
- Dickens's Presentation of Characters [Ch. 5 from E. D. H. Johnson's Charles Dickens: An Introduction to His Novels]
- Guilt, Criminality, and Doppelgängers in in Great Expectations
- A New Kind of Hero: Dickens's Great Expectations
- Seeing Double, Double Seeing: The Use of Doubles in Great Expectations
- Magwitch's Journey to Selfhood in Great Expectations
- Abel Magwitch: A Chronology of the Step-father Figure in Dickens's Great Expectations
- Defining Characters by Their Chosen Environment
- Saint or Sinner On the Scaffold?
- Renaming and Re-Creating Identity
- Pip and Anados find themselves misled
- Alice gets it wrong, Pip gets it right (sometimes)
- Pip's Playing at Life
- Criminally Self-Conscious: Pip's "Great Expectations"
- Pip's Commercial Vocabulary
- Biddy Voices Pip's Repressed Conscience
- White and Faded Yellows — Miss Havisham
- Bad to the Bone — Pip's Guilt
- Jasper Ford's Explanation of Miss Havisham's Character
- Female Aggressiveness in Great Expectations
- Guilt and Complicity in Great Expectations
- Frightening Impressions in Martineau and Dickens
- Mechanism and Character in Great Expectations
- Wemmick: Description and Character in in Great Expectations
- Animal imagery in Great Expectations
- Miss Havisham: Pip's Sailing Vessel or Sinking Ship?
- Evil Intentions are the Evil Person's Own Undoing
- Family-Systems Theory and Great Expectations
- Techniques of Characterization: An Introduction
Last Modified 25 May 2012