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Bloomsbury Group
Influential group of associated English writers, intellectuals, philosophers and artists
Influential group of associated English writers, intellectuals, philosophers and artists
The Bloomsbury Group was a group of associated British writers, intellectuals, philosophers and artists in the early 20th century. Among the people involved in the group were Virginia Woolf, John Maynard Keynes, E. M. Forster, Vanessa Bell, and Lytton Strachey. Their works and outlook deeply influenced literature, aesthetics, criticism, and economics, as well as modern attitudes towards feminism, pacifism, and sexuality.
Although popularly thought of as a formal group, it was a loose collective of friends and relatives closely associated with the University of Cambridge for the men and King's College London for the women, who at one point lived, worked or studied together near Bloomsbury, London. According to Ian Ousby, "although its members denied being a group in any formal sense, they were united by an abiding belief in the importance of the arts." The historian Raymond Williams disputed the existence of the group and the extent of its impact.
Origins
All male members of the Bloomsbury Group, except Duncan Grant, were educated at Cambridge (either at Trinity or King's College). Most of them, except Clive Bell and the Stephen brothers, were members of "the exclusive Cambridge society, the 'Apostles'". At Trinity in 1899 Lytton Strachey, Leonard Woolf, Saxon Sydney-Turner and Clive Bell became good friends with Thoby Stephen, and it was through Thoby and Adrian Stephen's sisters Vanessa and Virginia that the men met the women of Bloomsbury when they came down to London.
In 1905 Vanessa began the "Friday Club" and Thoby ran "Thursday Evenings", which became the basis for the Bloomsbury Group, which to some was really "Cambridge in London". Thoby's premature death in 1906 brought them more firmly together and they became what is now known as the "Old Bloomsbury" group who met in earnest beginning in 1912. In the 1920s and 1930s the group shifted when the original members died and the next generation had reached adulthood.
The Bloomsbury Group, mostly from upper middle-class professional families, formed part of "an intellectual aristocracy which could trace itself back to the Clapham Sect". It was an informal network of an influential group of artists, art critics, writers and an economist, many of whom lived in the West Central 1 district of London known as Bloomsbury. They were "spiritually" similar to the Clapham group who supported its members' careers: "The Bloomsberries promoted one another's work and careers just as the original Claphamites did, as well as the intervening generations of their grandparents and parents."
A historical feature of these friends and relations is that their close relationships all pre-dated their fame as writers, artists, and thinkers.
Membership
Main article: List of Bloomsbury Group people
Members
The group had ten core members:
- Clive Bell, art critic
- Vanessa Bell, post-impressionist painter
- E. M. Forster, fiction writer
- Roger Fry, art critic and post-impressionist painter
- Duncan Grant, post-impressionist painter
- John Maynard Keynes, economist
- Desmond MacCarthy, literary journalist
- Lytton Strachey, biographer
- Leonard Woolf, essayist and non-fiction writer
- Virginia Woolf, fiction writer and essayist
In addition to these ten, Leonard Woolf, in the 1960s, listed as "Old Bloomsbury" Adrian and Karin Stephen, Saxon Sydney-Turner, and Molly MacCarthy, with Julian Bell, Quentin Bell and Angelica Bell, and David Garnett as "later additions". Except for Forster, who published three novels before the highly successful Howards End in 1910, the group were late developers.
There were stable marriages and varied and complicated affairs among the individual members. Lytton Strachey and his cousin and lover Duncan Grant became close friends of the Stephen sisters, Vanessa Bell and Virginia Woolf. Duncan Grant had affairs with siblings Vanessa Bell and Adrian Stephen, as well as David Garnett, Maynard Keynes, and James Strachey. Clive Bell married Vanessa in 1907, and Leonard Woolf returned from the Ceylon Civil Service to marry Virginia in 1912. Cambridge Apostle friendships brought into the group Desmond MacCarthy, his wife Molly, and E. M. Forster.
The group met not only in their homes in Bloomsbury, central London, but also at countryside retreats. There are two significant ones near Lewes in Sussex: Charleston Farmhouse, where Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant moved in 1916, and Monk's House (now owned by the National Trust), in Rodmell, owned by Virginia and Leonard Woolf from 1919.
Others
Much about Bloomsbury appears to be controversial, including its membership and name: indeed, some would maintain that "the three words 'the Bloomsbury group' have been so much used as to have become almost unusable".
Close friends, brothers, sisters, and even sometimes partners of the friends were not necessarily members of Bloomsbury: Keynes's wife Lydia Lopokova was only reluctantly accepted into the group, and there were certainly "writers who were at some time close friends of Virginia Woolf, but who were distinctly not 'Bloomsbury': T. S. Eliot, Katherine Mansfield, Hugh Walpole". Another is Vita Sackville-West, who became "Hogarth Press's best-selling author". Members cited in "other lists might include Ottoline Morrell, or Dora Carrington, or James and Alix Strachey".
Later Bloomsbury
The 1920s were in a number of ways the blooming of Bloomsbury. Virginia Woolf was writing and publishing her most widely-read modernist novels and essays, and E. M. Forster completed A Passage to India (1924), a highly regarded novel on British imperialism in India. Forster wrote no more novels, but he became one of England's most influential essayists. Duncan Grant, and then Vanessa Bell, had single-artist exhibitions. Lytton Strachey wrote his biographies of two queens, Queen Victoria (1921) and Elizabeth and Essex: A Tragic History (1928). Desmond MacCarthy and Leonard Woolf engaged in friendly rivalry as literary editors of the New Statesman and of The Nation and Athenaeum respectively, thus fuelling animosities that saw Bloomsbury dominating the cultural scene. Roger Fry wrote and lectured widely on art; meanwhile, Clive Bell applied Bloomsbury values to his book Civilization (1928), which Leonard Woolf saw as limited and elitist, describing Bell as a "wonderful organiser of intellectual greyhound racing tracks".
In the darkening 1930s, Bloomsbury began to die: "Bloomsbury itself was hardly any longer a focus". Shortly after publishing a collection of brief lives, Portraits in Miniature (1931), Lytton Strachey died in January 1932; subsequently Carrington shot herself (March 1932). Roger Fry died in 1934. Vanessa and Clive's eldest son, Julian Bell, was killed in 1937 during the Spanish Civil War. Virginia Woolf wrote Fry's biography, but with the coming of war again her mental instability recurred, and she drowned herself in 1941. In the previous decade she had become one of the century's most famous feminist writers with three more novels, and a series of essays including the moving late memoir "A Sketch of the Past" (1939). It was also in the 1930s that Desmond MacCarthy became perhaps the most widely read—and heard—literary critic with his columns in The Sunday Times and his broadcasts for the BBC. John Maynard Keynes's The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money (1936) made him one of the century's most influential economists. He died in 1946 after being much involved in monetary negotiations with the United States.
The diversity yet collectivity of Later Bloomsbury's ideas and achievements can be summed up in a series of credos produced in 1938, the year of the Munich Agreement. Virginia Woolf published her radical feminist polemic Three Guineas that shocked some of her fellow members, including Keynes who had enjoyed the gentler A Room of One's Own (1929). Keynes read his My Early Beliefs to The Memoir Club. Clive Bell published an appeasement pamphlet (he later supported the war), and E. M. Forster wrote an early version of his famous essay "What I Believe" with its choice of personal relations over patriotism: his quiet assertion in the face of the increasingly totalitarian claims of both left and right that "personal relations ... love and loyalty to an individual can run counter to the claims of the State".
Memoir Club
In March 1920 Molly MacCarthy began the Memoir Club to help Desmond and herself write their memoirs; and also "for their friends to regroup after the war (with the proviso that they should always tell the truth)". It met until 1956 or 1964. The club was made up of members of the Bloomsbury Group, a loose collective of artists, writers, intellectuals, and philosophers.
Criticism
Early complaints focused on a perceived cliquiness: "on personal mannerisms—the favourite phrases ('ex-quisitely civilized', and 'How simply too extraordinary!'), the incredulous, weirdly emphasised Strachey voice". After World War I, as the members of the Group "began to be famous, the execration increased, and the caricature of an idle, snobbish and self-congratulatory rentier class, promoting its own brand of high culture began to take shape": as Forster self-mockingly put it, "In came the nice fat dividends, up rose the lofty thoughts".
The growing threats of the 1930s brought new criticism from younger writers of "what the last lot had done (Bloomsbury, Modernism, Eliot) in favour of what they thought of as urgent hard-hitting realism"; while "Wyndham Lewis's The Apes of God, which called Bloomsbury élitist, corrupt and talentless, caused a stir" of its own. The most telling criticism, however, came perhaps from within the Group's own ranks, when on the eve of war Keynes gave a "nostalgic and disillusioned account of the pure sweet air of G. E. Moore, that belief in undisturbed individualism, that Utopianism based on a belief in human reasonableness and decency, that refusal to accept the idea of civilisation as 'a thin and precarious crust' ... Keynes's fond, elegiac repudiation of his "early beliefs", in the light of current affairs ("We completely misunderstood human nature, including our own")".
In his book on the background of the Cambridge spies, Andrew Sinclair wrote about the Bloomsbury group: "rarely in the field of human endeavour has so much been written about so few who achieved so little". American philosopher Martha Nussbaum was quoted in 1999 as saying "I don't like anything that sets itself up as an in-group or an elite, whether it is the Bloomsbury group or Derrida".
Raymond Williams saw Bloomsbury as the invention of an ageing and lonely Leonard Woolf, seeking to lift himself and his friends from obscurity. To Williams, the only two so-called "members" of any significance in their respective fields were Keynes and Virginia Woolf. Williams unfavourably compared the Bloomsbury Group to the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood and Arts and Crafts movement, finding that the older groups were more radical and consequential.
Notes
References
Bibliography
- Avery, Todd. Radio Modernism: Literature, Ethics, and the BBC, 1922–1938. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.; 1 January 2006. .
- Bénézit, Emmanuel (editor). Bénézit Dictionary of British Graphic Artists and Illustrators. Oxford University Press; 21 June 2012. .
- Blythe, Ronald. in David Daiches ed., The Penguin Companion to Literature I. Penguin, 1971.
- Clarke, Peter. Keynes. Bloomsbury Press, 2009. pp. 56, 57. .
- Edel, Leon. Bloomsbury: A House of Lions, Hogarth Press, 1979
- Fargis, Paul. The New York Public Library Desk Reference – 3rd Edition. Macmillan General Reference, 1998. p. 262. .
- Forster, E. M.. Two Cheers for Democracy. Penguin, 1965.
- Gadd, David. The Loving Friends: A Portrait of Bloomsbury London: The Hogarth Press Ltd, 1974.
- Head, Dominic. The Cambridge Guide to Literature in English. Cambridge University Press; 26 January 2006. .
- Knights, Sarah. Bloomsbury's Outsider: A Life of David Garnett, Bloomsbury Reader, Paperback and Digital, 15 May 2015,
- Koppen, Randi. Virginia Woolf, Fashion and Literary Modernity. Edinburgh University Press; 2009. .
- Kuper, Adam. Incest and Influence: The Private Life of Bourgeois England. Harvard University Press; 28 February 2010. .
- Lee, Hermione. Virginia Woolf London: Chatto & Windus, 1996.
- Ousby, Ian ed., The Cambridge Guide to Literature in English (Cambridge 1995)
- Rosenbaum, Stanford Patrick. The Bloomsbury Group: A Collection of Memoirs and Commentary. University of Toronto Press; 1995. Also published by Croom Helm, London; 1995 .
- Snow, C. P.. Last Things. Penguin, 1974.
- Spalding, Frances. Virginia Woolf: Paper Darts: the Illustrated Letters (1991)
- Tate. Bloomsbury Group Timeline. Archive Journeys: Bloomsbury Group. Tate.
- Tew, P. and Murray, A.. The Modernist Handbook 2009.
References
- Fargis, p. 262
- ''[http://bloomsbury.denise-randle.co.uk/intro.htm The Bloomsbury Group: Artists, Writers & Thinkers]'' {{webarchive. link. (25 November 2010)
- Ousby, p. 95
- Raymond Williams, “The Significance of ‘Bloomsbury’ as a Social and Cultural Group,” in Derek Crabtree & A. P. Thirlwall, Keynes and the Bloomsbury Group: The Fourth Keynes Seminar held at the University of Kent at Canterbury (Macmillan, 1980).
- Blythe, p. 54
- Gadd, p. 20
- Tate, Bloomsbury timeline
- Rosenbaum, p. 142
- Gadd, pp. 1, 45
- Kuper p. 224
- Avery, p. 33.
- Kuper, p. 241.
- Knights, S., 2015
- Lee, p. 263
- Gadd, p. 103-7
- Kuger, p. 231–232
- Rosenbaum, pp. 208, 430–431, 437
- Lee, p. 262
- Clarke, p. 56
- Lee, p. 447
- Forster, pp. 64, 96
- Lee, p. 54
- Forster, p. 111
- Forster, p. 76
- Snow, p. 84
- Quoted in Lee, p. 268
- Lee, pp. 263, 613
- Koppen, p. 16.
- Oxford University Press, p. 477
- Ousby, p. 71
- Tew and Murray, p. 122, 127
- Lee, p. 265
- Gadd, p. 63
- Rosenbaum, p. 112, 393
- Gadd, p. 133
- Gadd, p. 124
- Williams, Holly. (2 November 2023). "How Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury group unbuttoned Britain".
- Gadd, p. 112
- Gadd, p. 191
- (16 July 1931). "NEW STRACHEY BOOK DEPICTS UNKNOWNS; "Portraits in Miniature" Gives New Renown to Personalities Unfamiliar in History. ALSO WEIGHS HISTORIANS Macaulay's Lack of Emotion and Carlyle's Excess of Genius Are Remarked as Handicaps.". The New York Times.
- Rosenbaum, p. xi
- Forster, p. 76-7
- Lee, p. 436
- Rosenbaum, p. xxxii
- Spalding 1991, p. 13
- Lee, p. 267
- Forster, p. 65
- Lee, pp. 612, 622
- Lee, p. 712
- Andrew Sinclair, ''The Red and the Blue. Intelligence, Treason and the Universities'' (Coronet Books, Hodder and Stoughten, U.K. 1987) {{ISBN. 0-340-41687-4. page 33
- link. (23 May 2011)
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