List of Bloomsbury Group people

This is a list of people associated with the Bloomsbury Group. Much about the group is controversial, including its membership: it has been said that "the three words 'the Bloomsbury group' have been so much used as to have become almost unusable".[1]

Group of friends and relatives that became a movement

The Bloomsbury group started as a loose collective of friends and relatives living near Bloomsbury in London. Some of them knew each other from their time as students in Cambridge. Around World War I most of its key members had left the Bloomsbury area, where some of them later returned.

The members of the Bloomsbury Group denied being a group in any formal sense, they however shared common values, among which was a strong belief in the arts.[2]

Core members

The group had ten core members:[3]

Included according to Leonard Woolf

In the 1960s, Leonard Woolf additionally listed the following Bloomsbury Group members:[4]

Mentioned in various sources as included in the Bloomsbury Group

Various sources include the following:

Generally not seen as members of the Bloomsbury Group

Died before the group really existed

  • Thoby Stephen, brother to key members Adrian Stephen, Virginia Woolf and Vanessa Bell

Omega Workshops

Roger Fry and other Bloomsbury Group artists such as Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant were involved in the Omega Workshops, a business which traded from 1913 to 1919. Other designers and manufacturers at the Workshops were not necessarily members of the Bloomsbury Group.

Ottoline Morrell circle

The Bloomsbury Group only partially identified with Lady Ottoline Morrell, but attended her parties at Garsington Manor. Others present:

Hogarth Press

Hogarth Press was the publishing house owned by Leonard and Virginia Woolf after they had left the Bloomsbury area in 1917. Staff members and authors published by that company were not necessarily part of the Bloomsbury Group. The following are generally not seen as part of the Bloomsbury Group:

LGBT extended groups

Duncan Grant and Maynard Keynes

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,[7] having affairs with Maynard Keynes, James Strachey, Adrian Stephen, David Garnett and straight Vanessa Bell). Names of LGBT people outside the Bloomsbury Group strictly speaking include:

Later the groups differentiated. Keynes married Lopokova, and no longer belonged to any of the LGBT groups. Other groups more or less split according to the location of the members:

  • Lady Ottoline Morrell provided housing for Aldous Huxley at Garsington where he was married to Maria Nys after the war.
  • Also Duncan Grant and David Garnett had to work on the land as conscientious objectors during World War I. They started living with Vanessa Bell (also her son Julian) in Charleston Farmhouse:
Dora Carrington, Ralph Partridge and Lytton Stratchey at Ham Spray House

After Virginia Woolf had moved to Monk's House, East Sussex, she met Vita Sackville-West, writing her roman à clef Orlando: A Biography about her. Woolf also met the LGBT people around her, including:[8]

  • Harold Nicolson, Sackville-West's husband
  • Benedict Nicolson, their son
  • Violet Trefusis, her former lover
  • Ethel Smyth was another later acquaintance of Virginia Woolf [9]
  • Katherine Mansfield and John Lehmann were LGBT acquaintances linked to the publishing company she owned with her husband (Hogarth Press).

Others

Others not generally considered part of the Bloomsbury Group properly speaking (some of them only befriended individual group members, not or only partially sharing their views or not in the same creative mindset):

Later offspring

Too young to be part of the original Bloomsbury group:

  • Nigel Nicolson, son of Harold Nicolson and Vita Sackville-West, also biographer of Virginia Woolf
  • Cressida Bell, daughter of Quentin Bell
  • Burgo Partridge, son of Dora Carrington's widower, who later married Angelica and David Garnett's daughter

Critics of Bloomsbury

gollark: Oh, the long long long thing errors, but I made it idiomatic by using uintptr_t instead.
gollark: GCC arbitrary-size integers patch time!
gollark: Outrageous.
gollark: I'm going to submit a PR to... glibc, I assume... with my excellent code.
gollark: As you can see, my code is idiomatic C™ with no issues.

References

  1. Lee, p. 262
  2. Ousby, p. 95
  3. Avery, p. 33.
  4. Lee, p. 263
  5. Clarke, p. 56
  6. Lee, p. 447
  7. Angelica Garnett, Deceived with Kindness (1984) p. 33 (in 1995 edition)
  8. Souhami, pp. 123-124
  9. Spalding 1991
  10. Francis Spalding, Duncan Grant: A Biography. (1997) p. 169-170: (around 1915 Lawrence warned David Garnett against homosexual tendencies like those of Francis Birrell, Duncan Grant and Keynes:) "Lawrence's views, as Quentin Bell was the first to suggest and S. P. Rosenbaum has argued conclusively, were stirred by a dread of his own homosexual susceptibilities, which are revealed in his writings, notably the cancelled prologue to Women in Love".

Bibliography

  • Todd Avery. Radio Modernism: Literature, Ethics, and the BBC, 1922-1938. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.; 1 January 2006. ISBN 978-0-7546-5517-6.
  • Peter Clarke. Keynes. Bloomsbury Press, 2009. pp. 56, 57. ISBN 978-1-60819-023-2.
  • Angelica Garnett. Deceived with Kindness (1984)
  • Hermione Lee, Virginia Woolf London: Chatto & Windus, 1996.
  • Ian Ousby ed., The Cambridge Guide to Literature in English (Cambridge 1995)
  • Souhami, Diana (1997). Mrs. Keppel and Her Daughter. Portrait of a Lesbian Affair: St. Martin's Griffin. pp. 123–223. ISBN 978-0-312-19517-5. denys trefusis and violet trefusis.
  • Frances Spalding. Virginia Woolf: Paper Darts: the Illustrated Letters (1991)
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