Number of items: 16.
Renshaw, D.
(2024)
The foreshadowing of state domestic policy and discourse during the First World War in the fin de siècle science fiction of H.G Wells: autonomous and collective forms of violence.
The Wellsian: Journal of the H.G Wells Society.
ISSN 0263-1776
(In Press)
Renshaw, D.
(2024)
The moneylender as monster: ‘The Jew’ as transformative influence in Bram Stoker’s The Watter’s Mou’.
Patterns of Prejudice.
ISSN 1461-7331
(In Press)
Renshaw, D.
(2023)
‘And now you love me, and there is no way out of it’: marital engagement, misogyny and violence in the Victorian fin-de-siècle gothic short story.
Women's History Review, 32 (1).
pp. 82-100.
ISSN 1747-583X
doi: https://doi.org/10.1080/09612025.2022.2103894
Renshaw, D.
(2022)
Old prejudices and new prejudices: state surveillance and harassment of Irish and Jewish communities in London – 1800-1930.
Immigrants and Minorities, 40 (1-2).
pp. 79-105.
ISSN 0261-9288
doi: https://doi.org/10.1080/02619288.2021.1934673
Renshaw, D.
(2022)
‘A fine fellow… although rather Semitic’: Jews and antisemitism in Jules Verne’s Le Château des Carpathes and Bram Stoker’s Dracula.
Jewish Culture and History, 23 (4).
pp. 289-306.
ISSN 1462-169X
doi: https://doi.org/10.1080/1462169X.2022.2131060
Renshaw, D.
(2021)
The discourse of repatriation in Britain, 1845-2016: a political and social history.
Routledge Studies in Modern British History.
Routledge, Abingdon, pp240.
ISBN 9781138579637
Renshaw, D.
(2020)
The Queen’s loyal ‘Others’ –the Metropolitan Jewish and Catholic hierarchies, the communal press and the Diamond Jubilee of 1897.
Immigrants and Minorities, 38 (3).
pp. 184-204.
ISSN 0261-9288
doi: https://doi.org/10.1080/02619288.2020.1855422
Renshaw, D.
(2020)
A letter to the editor, a challenge to the status quo? Radical and transgressive correspondence in the Anglo-Jewish press, 1901-1914.
In: O'Hagan, L. A. (ed.)
Rebellious Writing: Contesting Marginalisation in Edwardian Britain.
Writing and Culture in the Long Nineteenth Century.
Peter Lang, Oxford.
Renshaw, D.
(2020)
Monsters in the capital: Helen Vaughan, Count Dracula and demographic fears in fin-de-siècle London.
Gothic Studies, 22 (2).
pp. 148-164.
ISSN 2050-456X
doi: https://doi.org/10.3366/gothic.2020.0046
Renshaw, D.
(2019)
The disillusionment of Robert Dell: the intellectual journey of a Catholic socialist.
Intellectual History Review, 29 (2).
pp. 337-358.
ISSN 1749-6985
doi: https://doi.org/10.1080/17496977.2017.1370898
Renshaw, D.
(2019)
The other diasporas - Western and Southern European migrants in Charles Booth’s Life and Labour of the People in London.
Journal of Migration History, 5 (1).
pp. 134-159.
ISSN 2351-9924
doi: https://doi.org/10.1163/23519924-00501006
Renshaw, D.
(2018)
Investigating the “other” – a comparative study of migrant settlement in the work of Charles Booth and Jacob Riis in Victorian London and New York.
In: Ruiz, M. (ed.)
International Migrations in the Victorian Era.
Studies in Global Social History, 33/11.
Brill, pp. 278-302.
ISBN 9789004366398
Renshaw, D.
(2018)
Socialism and the diasporic 'other': a comparative study of Irish Catholic and Jewish radical and communal politics in East London, 1889-1912.
Studies in Labour History 11.
Liverpool University Press, Liverpool, UK, pp288.
ISBN 9781786941220
Renshaw, D.
(2018)
The violent frontline: space, ethnicity and confronting the state in Edwardian Spitalfields and 1980s Brixton.
Contemporary British History, 32 (2).
pp. 231-252.
ISSN 1743-7997
doi: https://doi.org/10.1080/13619462.2018.1434001
Renshaw, D.
(2016)
Prejudice and paranoia: a comparative study of antisemitism and Sinophobia in turn-of-the-century Britain.
Patterns of Prejudice, 50 (1).
pp. 38-60.
ISSN 1461-7331
doi: https://doi.org/10.1080/0031322X.2015.1127646
Renshaw, D.
(2014)
Control, cohesion and faith – a comparative discussion of immigrant communal control in the turn-of-the-century East End.
Socialist History, 45.
ISSN 0969-4331
This list was generated on Thu Nov 21 13:38:11 2024 UTC.