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Dora Lytton Ralph Frances

Sex, of course, is one of the reasons Bloomsbury has been written about so much; though one may, reading this personal, intimate, anecdotal book, have to google occasionally to identify the individuals being discussed in the roundelay. The first is that there were two Bloomsburys: the one that began...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The Gay & lesbian review worldwide 2023, Vol.30 (1), p.25-27
Main Author: Holleran, Andrew
Format: Review
Language:English
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Online Access:Get full text
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Summary:Sex, of course, is one of the reasons Bloomsbury has been written about so much; though one may, reading this personal, intimate, anecdotal book, have to google occasionally to identify the individuals being discussed in the roundelay. The first is that there were two Bloomsburys: the one that began in 1906 at Cambridge University when John Maynard Keynes, the eminent economist, and Lytton Strachey founded a discussion society called The Apostles, in which great minds talked about ideas with handsome young undergraduates; and the one that resumed after World War I, when a new generation (who were part of, but not co-extensive with, the "Bright Young Things") emerged. The most famous members of Old Bloomsbury were Woolf (To The Lighthouse, Orlando, A Room of One's Own), Keynes (The Economic Consequences of the Peace), Lytton Strachey (Eminent Victorians), and E. M. Forster (Where Angels Fear to Tread, Maurice). Lytton made a home for himself at Ham Spray (where do they get these names?) with the apparently heterosexual artist Dora Carrington in a platonic marriage of sorts, during which both of them sometimes had sex with the same young man.
ISSN:1532-1118