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A C K N O W L E D G M E N T S I would like to thank the University of Victoria for research leaves in  and , and for grant money for research assistance. My thanks go especially to the student assistants themselves: Lori Emerson, Treava Kellington, Anna Kelly, Daniel Martin, Kelly Pitman, and Matt Thomson. I am also grateful to Darlene Hollingsworth and Diana Rutherford at the Department of English at the University of Victoria for their proofreading help. This book has been long in the writing, and I owe its completion to the many people who have encouraged my research and commented on the manuscript’s many draft versions: Luke Carson, Christopher Keep, Mary Elizabeth Leighton, and Marie Surridge in particular. I would also like to thank the anonymous readers at Ohio University Press, as well as my editors, Sharon Rose, Bevin McLaughlin, and Nancy Basmajian. Special thanks to Judith Mitchell for her critical acumen and warm encouragement and to John Adams, who has been a strong and loving source of support in this work and in all things. Permissions Some of the material in this book appeared in “Dogs’/Bodies, Women’s Bodies: Wives as Pets in Mid-Nineteenth-Century Narratives of Domestic Violence,” Victorian Review  (): –, and in “Domestic Violence, Female Self-Mutilation, and the Healing of the Male in Dombey and Son,” Victorians Institute Journal (): –, and is reprinted here by permission of the editors. ix You are reading copyrighted material published by Ohio University Press/Swallow Press. Unauthorized posting, copying, or distributing of this work except as permitted under U.S. copyright law is illegal and injures the author and publisher. You are reading copyrighted material published by Ohio University Press/Swallow Press. Unauthorized posting, copying, or distributing of this work except as permitted under U.S. copyright law is illegal and injures the author and publisher. ...

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