Essays on John Maynard KeynesMilo Keynes Cambridge University Press, 1975 - 306 lappuses The twenty-eight essays in this fascinating and important collection may be divided into three groups: the first is concerned with Keynes's early life and his relations with 'Bloomsbury' and Cambridge, the second with his major contributions to economics and to British and world affairs (written for the general reader as well as for economists), and the third deals with various aspects of his life and work which reveal the immense range of his intellectual and other interests. The book is, in effect, a biography by many authors. |
Saturs
Maynard and Lydia Keynes I | 1 |
A personal view | 9 |
A private view by a Cabinet Minister 1919 | 24 |
The undergraduate | 36 |
On loving Lydia | 49 |
The Bloomsbury Group | 60 |
The influence of Keynes on the economics of his time | 72 |
The Keynesian Revolution | 82 |
J M Keynes at the Paris Peace Conference | 162 |
Economic policy in the Second World War | 177 |
Bretton Woods | 202 |
The international negotiator | 217 |
Keynes and economic history | 230 |
Maynard Keynes as a teacher | 247 |
The concept of the Arts Council | 260 |
The Cambridge Arts Theatre | 272 |
Keynes and British economics | 108 |
What has become of the Keynesian Revolution? | 123 |
Keynes and the finance of the First World War | 142 |
The picture collector | 280 |
299 | |
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