Image for Leonard Woolf: Bloomsbury Socialist

Leonard Woolf: Bloomsbury Socialist (First Edition)

Part of the Spiritual Lives series
See all formats and editions

Leonard Woolf: Bloomsbury Socialist is an invaluable biography of an important if somewhat neglected figure in British cultural and political life,whose significance has been overshadowed by that of his wife, Virginia Woolf.

His vital role in her life and career is a central aspect of this incisive study.

Born to a prosperous middle-class Jewish family, he was profoundly affected by the early death of his father, a prominent barrister and QC, which left hisfamily in reduced economic circumstances.

Fred Leventhal and Peter Stansky expertly reveal that, despite his youthful loss of religious faith, being Jewish was as crucial in shaping Woolf's ideas as the Hellenism he imbibed at St Paul's and Trinity College, Cambridge.

As an undergraduate member of thecelebrated elite Apostles-along with his close friends, Lytton Strachey and John Maynard Keynes-he played a formative role in what later became the Bloomsbury Group.

He subsequently spent seven years as a colonial servant in Ceylon, the background to his powerful novel, The Village in the Jungle.

Within a year of his return to England in 1911 he married Virginia Stephen, and in 1917 they founded the Hogarth Press, an innovative and commercially successful publishing house.

In thecourse of his long life he wrote prolifically on international relations, notably on the creation of the League of Nations, on socialism, and on imperial policy, particularly in Africa.

Throughout this authoritative study,Leventhal and Stansky illuminate the life, scope, and thought of this seminal figure intwentieth-century British society.

Read More
Available
£56.00
Add Line Customisation
Available on VLeBooks
Add to List
Product Details
Oxford University Press
0192543881 / 9780192543882
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
320.092
29/08/2019
English
256 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%