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  2. Bloomsbury Group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bloomsbury_Group

    The lives and works of the group members show an overlapping, interconnected similarity of ideas and attitudes that helped to keep the friends and relatives together, reflecting in large part the influence of G. E. Moore: "the essence of what Bloomsbury drew from Moore is contained in his statement that 'one's prime objects in life were love ...

  3. Conversations in Bloomsbury - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conversations_in_Bloomsbury

    Conversations in Bloomsbury is a 1981 memoir that depicts writer Mulk Raj Anand's life in London during the heyday of the Bloomsbury Group, and his relationships with the group's members. It provides a rare insight into the intimate workings of the English modernist movement, portraying such prominent figures as Virginia Woolf , T. S. Eliot and ...

  4. Roger Fry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roger_Fry

    Roger Eliot Fry (14 December 1866 – 9 September 1934) was an English painter and critic, and a member of the Bloomsbury Group.Establishing his reputation as a scholar of the Old Masters, he became an advocate of more recent developments in French painting, to which he gave the name Post-Impressionism.

  5. Lytton Strachey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lytton_Strachey

    Giles Lytton Strachey (/ ˈ dʒ aɪ l z ˈ l ɪ t ən ˈ s t r eɪ tʃ i /; [1] 1 March 1880 – 21 January 1932) was an English writer and critic. A founding member of the Bloomsbury Group and author of Eminent Victorians, he established a new form of biography in which psychological insight and sympathy are combined with irreverence and wit.

  6. Alfred North Whitehead - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_North_Whitehead

    Intensity of emotion was encouraged by their avant-garde associates in the turbulent Bloomsbury Group which "discussed aesthetic and philosophical questions in a spirit of agnosticism and were strongly influenced by G.E. Moore's Principia Ethica (1903) and by A. N. Whitehead's and Bertrand Russell's Principia Mathematica (1910–13), in the ...

  7. E. M. Forster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E._M._Forster

    Both members of the Bloomsbury Group, Fry was an influence on Forster's aesthetics. [59] Two of Forster's best-known works, A Passage to India and Howards End, explore the irreconcilability of class differences. A Room with a View also shows how questions of propriety and class can make human connection difficult.

  8. List of Bloomsbury Group people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Bloomsbury_Group...

    The Bloomsbury Group plays a prominent role in the LGBT history of its day. While still in the Bloomsbury area, LGBT activity was all very much in a single group (e.g. Duncan Grant, a homosexual with bisexual leanings, [8] having affairs with Maynard Keynes, James Strachey, Adrian Stephen, David Garnett and straight Vanessa Bell). Names of LGBT ...

  9. G. E. Moore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G._E._Moore

    As Professor of Philosophy at the University of Cambridge, he influenced but abstained from the Bloomsbury Group, an informal set of intellectuals. He edited the journal Mind . He was a member of the Cambridge Apostles from 1894 to 1901, [ 8 ] a fellow of the British Academy from 1918, and was chairman of the Cambridge University Moral Sciences ...