1-20 of 28 Search Results for

Virginia Woolf

Follow your search
Access your saved searches in your account

Would you like to receive an alert when new items match your search?
Close Modal
Sort by
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2011) 43 (1): 59–82.
Published: 01 March 2011
...Craufurd D. Goodwin The Bloomsbury group was a multidisciplinary association of friends who came together early in the twentieth century. It contained John Maynard Keynes and others who had an interest in economic questions, including the art critic Roger Fry, the novelists Virginia Woolf and E. M...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2007) 39 (Suppl_1): 269–291.
Published: 01 December 2007
...Craufurd D. Goodwin Duke University Press 2007 Bell, Clive. 1928 . Civilization . London: Chatto and Windus. Bell, Quentin. 1972 . Virginia Woolf: A Biography . London: Hogarth. Forster, Edward Morgan. 1910 . Howards End . London: Arnold. Fry, Roger. [1909] 1998 . An Essay...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2007) 39 (Suppl_1): 292–312.
Published: 01 December 2007
.... Webb, Beatrice, and Sidney Webb. 1992 . The Webbs in Asia: 1911-1912 Travel Diary . Hampshire: Macmillan. Wicke, Jennifer. 1994 . Mrs. Dalloway Goes to Market: Woolf, Keynes, and Modern Markets. Novel 28.1 : 5 -23. Woolf, Virginia. 1913 . Woolf to Dickinson . King's College Modern...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2000) 32 (4): 833–856.
Published: 01 November 2000
...Melvin W. Reder Correspondence may be addressed to Melvin W. Reder, 2451 Sharon Oaks Drive,Menlo Park, CA 94025. Duke University Press 2000 Alexander, Peter F. 1992 . Leonard and Virginia Woolf: A Literary Partnership . London: Harvester Wheatsheaf. Allen, Richard Loring. 1991...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2011) 43 (2): 247–255.
Published: 01 June 2011
...) • The Academic’s Handbook (with Leigh Deneef and Ellen McCrate; 1988, 1995, 2007) • Art and the Market: Roger Fry on Commerce in Art (1998) Among his many academic articles are more than ten dealing with the Bloomsbury Group, the most recent titled “Virginia Woolf as Policy Ana- lyst.” He...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2007) 39 (Suppl_1): 1–6.
Published: 01 December 2007
... relationship with Virginia Woolf, whose impact on twentieth-century fiction was comparable with 1. Alone among the papers, Leonard’s was previously published. The editors, in inviting Leonard to present the paper well after the “deadline,” were impressed at the remarkable fit between Leonard’s...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2006) 38 (4): 569–615.
Published: 01 November 2006
...: The Godless Victorian . New York: Random House. Atlay, J. B. 1912 . Sir John Rigby (1834-1903). In the Dictionary of National Biography: Supplement, 1901-1911 , edited by S. Lee, 198 -99. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Bell, Q. 1972 . Virginia Woolf: A Biography. Vol. 1, Virginia Stephen: 1882...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2012) 44 (suppl_1): 206–225.
Published: 01 December 2012
..., grew through the twentieth century in the works of Theodore Dreiser, Sinclair Lewis, Scott Fitzger- ald, Upton Sinclair, Virginia Woolf, Tom Wolfe, and many others. So long as the economics profession recoiled from micro-level observation of this kind, novelists took on a role as observers...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (1993) 25 (suppl_1): 221–248.
Published: 01 January 1993
... of modernism, the characteristically twentieth-century mode of representation. My claim is this: there is something different about the twentieth cen­ tury. Virginia Woolf may have been facetious when she observed, in 1924, that “in or about December, 1910, human character changed...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2003) 35 (3): 577–581.
Published: 01 September 2003
... McCloskeyian genealogy: creatively, elo- quently, and very persuasively written; history-with-a-twist; where all the angels have bourgeois virtues. She begins with Virginia Woolf’s remark that human char- acter changed “on or about December 1910” (102)—the point at which the values of the dominant elite...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2013) 45 (suppl_1): 68–91.
Published: 01 December 2013
.... Virginia Woolf is perhaps most well known among the members of the group for having explored the boundaries of being an outsider to conventional British soci- ety, despite her social position.1 Our contention is that although Keynes, as we explain in the next sec- tion, also used the inside...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2010) 42 (3): 521–546.
Published: 01 September 2010
... . Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. White, Hayden. 1973 . Metahistory: The Historical Imagination in Nineteenth Century Europe . Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. Woolf, Virginia. 2002 . Introduction to Moll Flanders, by Daniel Defoe . New York: Modern Library. Economics...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2009) 41 (4): 645–671.
Published: 01 November 2009
... and it became a kind of Bible for the undergraduates of his generation. This society was the source of many of Keynes’s assumptions about human behavior and human well-being. Like Moore, Keynes rejected 34. This echoes attitudes held by his Bloomsbury friends Roger Fry and Virginia Woolf. 35...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2009) 41 (3): 445–470.
Published: 01 September 2009
... but by non-Cambridge fi gures such as Virginia Woolf and Roy Harrod—although both had close contact with Cambridge intellectuals.22 As described by Craufurd Goodwin (2007, 276), “After dining with Frank Ramsey at the Keynes’, [Virginia Woolf] described him as ‘something like a Darwin, broad, thick...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2007) 39 (Suppl_1): 355–366.
Published: 01 December 2007
... Virginia Woolf and Lytton Strachey, that memoir is factually defective on crucial points. It therefore could never have served as a life, eliminating the need for a full-length biography as John Neville Keynes suggested to his son when he had completed the Marshall memoir in 1924. However...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2012) 44 (1): 41–67.
Published: 01 March 2012
... Virginia Woolf married a Jew,11 and Sraffa and Wittgenstein were half- Jewish,12 there were very few Jews in Keynes’s world in the 1920s. . . . Meanwhile, stereotyping could flourish, and there was no need to mind manners. . . . Keynes’s own stereotyping took place on the philosophi- cal...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2013) 45 (suppl_1): 92–113.
Published: 01 December 2013
... and contacts in Britain. One of Keynes’s distinct contributions was to link up Lippmann and his publishers with Bloomsbury: Lytton Strachey, Virginia Woolf, Leonard Woolf, and Clive Bell were all part of the exchange. Here are some of Lippmann’s reminiscences in 1950 of his friendship with Keynes: I...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (1999) 31 (Supplement): 185–208.
Published: 01 December 1999
... and the Art Drain of 1908–09. Apollo 93 . 228 : 110 -12. Waagen , Gustav . 1838 . Works of Art and Artists in England . London. Witt , Robert . 1911 . The Nation and Its Art Treasures . London: William Heinemann. Woolf , Virginia . 1940 . Roger Fry: A Biography . Oxford...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2011) 43 (1): 1–23.
Published: 01 March 2011
... the Bloomsbury artists, but that is bal- anced (according to Farrell’s analysis) by the greater cultural capital of Forget and Goodwin / Intellectual Communities in Economics  17 a Virginia Woolf or Vanessa Bell. The exchange must be perceived as “fair” (274–76). Finally, Farrell endogenizes...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2005) 37 (Suppl_1): 200–233.
Published: 01 December 2005
.... For the leading role of economists in promoting race-suicide arguments in the context of immigration, see Leonard 2003a, 714–21. Mistaking Eugenics for Social Darwinism 205 The intellectual influence of eugenics extended well beyond the pub- lic sphere.10 Virginia Woolf confided to her...