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Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Introduction
A Note on Money

  • ANGUS REACH, “Labour and the Poor: The Manufacturing Districts” (1849)
  • HENRY MAYHEW, “Labour and the Poor: The Metropolitan Districts” (1849)
  • CHARLES DICKENS, “A Sleep to Startle Us” (1852)
  • HUGH SHIMMIN, “Liverpool Life” (1856)
  • JOHN HOLLINGSHEAD, “London Horrors” (1861)
  • MARY CARPENTER, “On the Treatment of Female Convicts” (1863)
  • JAMES GREENWOOD, “A Night in a Workhouse” (1866)
  • “A.B.,” “Baby Farming” (1870)
  • HENRY LABOUCHERE, “Inside Newgate” (1872)
  • J. EWING RITCHIE, “In a Gipsy Camp” (1879)
  • GEORGE R. SIMS, “How the Poor Live” (1883)
  • W.T. STEAD, “The Maiden Tribute of Modern Babylon” (1885)
  • ANNIE BESANT, “White Slavery in London” (1888)
  • BEATRICE POTTER, “Pages from a Work-Girl’s Diary” (1888)
  • ELIZABETH BANKS, “In Cap and Apron” (1893)
  • HERBERT CADETT, “Massacre of the Innocents” (1895)
  • ROBERT H. SHERARD, “The White Slaves of England” (1897)
  • MARY HIGGS, “The Tramp Ward” (1904)
  • OLIVE CHRISTIAN MALVERY, “The Edge of the Street” (1904)
  • Further Reading

    About the Author

    Stephen Donovan is Senior Lecturer in English Literature at Uppsala University, Sweden.

    Matthew Rubery is Reader in English Literature at Queen Mary, University of London.

    Reviews

    “This is a book full of amazing stuff—Victorian in its facts, but contemporary in its themes. Great reporters doing great stories.” — Nick Davies, investigative reporter, The Guardian“A superbly annotated anthology that establishes without doubt the origins of modern investigative journalism in the mid- to late-nineteenth-century press. Stephen Donovan and Matthew Rubery’s selection of articles from the late 1840s to the turn of the century makes compelling reading, demonstrating the innovative techniques of the journalists and the shocking nature of their exposés.” — Joanne Shattock, Emeritus Professor of Victorian Literature, University of Leicester“As this collection of specimens of investigative journalism convincingly illustrates, ‘More is required of the Investigative reporter than sightseeing’! Donovan and Rubery’s thoughtful and provocative introduction is full of fresh perspectives and links to provide an historical and critical context for what follows: a rich cornucopia of examples from across the period and press—dailies, popular weeklies, and monthly reviews, in which a developing definition of fact-based and witness-based journalism may be gleaned.” — Laurel Brake, Professor Emerita of Literature and Print Culture, Birkbeck, University of London

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