Illustrations; Acknowledgements; Preface; Chronology and Bibliography; Contributors; Part I: 1. Maynard and Lydia Keynes Milo Keynes; 2. A personal view Austin Robinson; 3. A private view by a Cabinet Minister, 1919 Earl of Crawford and Balcarres; 4. The early years Geoffrey Keynes; 5. The undergraduate C. R. Fay; 6. The Kingsman George Rylands; 7. On loving Lydia Richard Buckle; 8. The Bloomsbury Group Paul Levy; Part II: 9. The influence of Keynes on the economics of his time D. E. Moggridge; 10. The Keynesian Revolution James Meade; 11. The reception of the Keynesian Revolution Robert Skidelsky; 12. Keynes and British economics Harry G. Johnson; 13. What has become of the Keynesian Revolution? Joan Robinson; 14. How Keynes came to America John Kenneth Galbraith; 15. Keynes and the finance of the First World War N. H. Dimsdale; 16. J. M. Keynes at the Paris Peace Conference Howard Elcock; 17. Economic policy in the Second World War D. E. Moggridge; 18. Bretton Woods Richard N. Gardner; Part III: 19. The international negotiator F. G. Lee; 20. Keynes in the City Nicholas Davenport; 21. Keynes and economic history Charles Wilson; 22. Keynes as a philosopher R. B. Braithwaite; 23. Maynard Keynes as a teacher A. F. W. Plumptre; 24. Maynard Keynes as a biographer David Garnett; 25. The concept of the Arts Council Mary Glasgow; 26. The Cambridge Arts Theatre Norman Higgins; 27. The picture collector Richard Shone with Duncan Grant; 28. The book collector A. N. L. Munby; Index.
The book is a biography by many authors.
'"Everyone is somebody's nephew," … but few uncles among the
shades, and surely none of so great a name, can have been as kindly
served by theirs as the subject of this "Mélange Keynes" collected
and edited by his nephew …'. The Times Literary Supplement
'The book is a delight to read. Economists and mere admirers of
human genius will treasure all the essays …'. Political Science
Quarterly
'Much has been written about the importance of Keynes's
contribution to modern economic thinking, but little about Keynes
the man. This enormously interesting collection of essays redresses
the balance. We get from them a many-sided view of Keynes - as
lover, art and book collector, biographer, philosopher …'. New
Humanist
'How is anyone actually to review this book? Who on earth could
possibly deal with so wide a variety of subjects and at the same
time maintain that air of confident expertise we expect of a
review? … Keynes himself could have done it easily … with what
gusto he would have addressed himself to the task and complained,
with half serious indignation, that there was no essay on Keynes
the farmer.' Times Educational Supplement
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