Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-j824f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-06T11:04:26.704Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Among the Most Fascinating of Scholarly Objects: A Memoir

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 June 2009

Extract

I was born in Windsor, Ontario on 25 May 1943, the first child of William Robert Moggridge and Doris Livingston Moggridge. The surname Moggridge comes from Celtic Devon. Add in Livingston and my maternal grandmother's Lennox, the Celtic tinge gets stronger. The Hulls on my paternal grandmother's side reduce it, but there were Camerons in that gene pool. Both of my parents were University of Toronto graduates: my father in Metallurgical Engineering (1934) and my mother in Honours Philosophy and English (1933) and Library Science (1934).

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1997

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Bank of England. 1970. “The Bank of England's Holdings of Gold and Foreign Exchange, 1925–1931Bank of England Quarterly Bulletin, March (Suppllement).Google Scholar
Clarke, S. V. O. 1967. Central Bank Cooperation 1924–1931, Federal Reserve Bank of New York, New York.Google Scholar
Dennison, S. 1992. Preface to Presley, J., ed., Essays on Robertsonian Economics, Macmillan, London.Google Scholar
Drummond, I. M. 1983. Political Economy at the University of Toronto: A History of the Department, 1888–1982, University of Toronto, Faculty of Arts and Science.Google Scholar
Hansen, Alvin H. 1953. A Guide to Keynes, McGraw Hill, New York.Google Scholar
Harrod, R. F. 1951. The Life of John Maynard Keynes, Macmillan, London.Google Scholar
Heilbroner, R. 1961. The Worldly Philosophers, Simon and Schuster, New York.Google Scholar
Howson, S. and Moggridge, D. E., eds. 1990a. The Collected Papers of James Meade, 4, The Cabinet Office Diary, 1944–46, Unwin Hyman, London.Google Scholar
Howson, S. 1990b. The Wartime Diaries of Lionel Robbins and James Meade, 1943–45, Macmillan, London.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, H. G. 1962. “Monetary Theory and PolicyAmerican Economic Review, 52, June, 335–84.Google Scholar
Johnson, H. G. 1963. The Canadian Quandary, McGraw-Hill, Toronto.Google Scholar
Kaldor, N. 1966. Causes of the Slow Rate of Growth of the United Kingdom, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Little, I. M. D. 1949. A Critique of Welfare Economics, Clarendon Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Moggridge, D. E. 1969. The Return to Gold, 1925: The Formulation of Economic Policy and its Critics, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Moggridge, D. E. 1972. British Monetary Policy, 1924–1931: The Norman Conquest of $4.86, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge; reprint, Gregg Revivals, 1992.Google Scholar
Moggridge, D. E. 1973. “From the Treatise to the General Theory: An Exercise in ChronologyHistory of Political Economy, 5, Spring, 7288.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moggridge, D. E. 1976. Keynes, Fontana and Macmillan, London; subsequent editions by Macmillan, 1980 and University of Toronto Press, 1993.Google Scholar
Moggridge, D. E. 19811982. “Financial Crises and Lenders of Last Resort: Policy in the Crises of 1920 and 1929Journal of European Economic History, 10, Spring, 4769;Google Scholar
which appeared also as “Policy in the Crises of 1920 and 1929” in Kindleberger, C. P. and Laffargue, J. P., eds., Financial Crises: Theory, History and Policy, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 171–87.Google Scholar
Moggridge, D. E. 1989. “The Gold Standard and National Economic Policies, 1914–1939” in Mathias, P. and Pollard, S., eds., The Cambridge Economic History of Europe, 8, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 250314 and 1158–64.Google Scholar
Moggridge, D. E. 1990. “Keynes as Editor” in Hey, J. D. and Winch, D., eds., A Century of Economics: 100 Years of the Royal Economic Society and the Economic Journal, Basil Blackwell, Oxford, 143–57.Google Scholar
Moggridge, D. E. 1992. Maynard Keynes: An Economist's Biography, Routledge, London.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moggridge, D. E., ed. 1987. Editing Modern Economists, AMS Press, New York.Google Scholar
Moggridge, D. E. and Howson, S.. 1974. “Keynes on Monetary Policy, 1910–1974Oxford Economic Papers, 25, July, 226–47.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nevin, Edward. 1955. The mechanism of Cheap Money: A Study of British Monetary Policy, 1931–1939, University of Wales Press, Cardiff.Google Scholar
Patinkin, Don. 1976. Keynes's Monetary Thought: A Study of its Development, Duke University Press, Durham.Google Scholar
Robertson, D. H. 1940. Essays in Monetary Theory, P. S. King, London.Google Scholar
Robertson, D. H. 1948. Money, Nisbet, London.Google Scholar
Robertson, D. H. 1956. Economic Commentaries, Staples Press, London.Google Scholar
Robertson, D. H. 1963. Lectures on Economic Principles, Fontana, London.Google Scholar
Stigler, G. 1988. Memoirs of an Unrepentant Economist, Basic Books, New York.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, L. P. 1980. Kingsmen of a Century, 1873–1972, King's College, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Yates, C. A. B. 1993. From Plant to Politics: The Auto Workers' Union in Postwar Canada, Temple University Press, Philadelphia.Google Scholar