Skip to main navigation
Skip to search
Skip to main content
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Home
Approve / Request updates on publications
Home
Profiles
Research units
Research output
Prizes
Search by expertise, name or affiliation
Forbidden words: Language control and Victorian political correctness in Dickens and Carroll
Galia Benziman
*
*
Corresponding author for this work
Department of English
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Article
›
peer-review
Overview
Fingerprint
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Forbidden words: Language control and Victorian political correctness in Dickens and Carroll'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
Sort by
Weight
Alphabetically
Keyphrases
Alice Books
33%
Artistic Creativity
33%
Carroll
100%
Charles Dickens
100%
Children's Literature
33%
Fairy Tales
66%
Forbidden Words
100%
Language Control
100%
Lewis Carroll
33%
Manifesto
33%
Maria Edgeworth
33%
Parody
33%
Political Correctness
100%
Politically Correct
66%
Revisionist
33%
Self-censorship
66%
Social Doctrine
33%
Teetotalism
33%
Tion
33%
Uselessness
33%
Utilitarian
33%
Victorian Era
33%
What-if
33%
Word Language
100%
Young People
33%
Arts and Humanities
Artistic Creativity
33%
Careers
33%
Charles Dickens
100%
Didactics
33%
Discourse
33%
Euphemism
33%
Folk Literature
66%
Genre
33%
Imagina
33%
Lewis Carroll
33%
Literature
33%
Manifesto
33%
Maria Edgeworth
33%
Parody
33%
Political Correctness
100%
Preoccupation
33%
revisionist
33%
Self Control
33%
Usefulness
33%
Victorian
100%