Article: The first annual Leonard Woolf memorial lecture, Colombo, 2007; Leonard Woolf's divided mind: the case of The Village in the Jungle.(Critical essay)

At the end of his long life in 1969, aged 88, Leonard Woolf knew that he would be better known to history as the husband of Virginia Woolf than for his own achievements. But the fact remains that his achievements were considerable. He was a political theorist and a staunch Fabian/Labour Party supporter, and his activity in this field included the writing of several notable books such as Cooperation and the Future of Industry (1918), Mandates and Empire (1920), Socialism and Cooperation (1921), Fear and Politics (1925), Imperialism and Civilization (1928), and editing the Political Quarterly. The Hogarth Press, which he established and which originally published The Village ...

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