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  1. Sir Geoffrey Keynes was the younger brother of the celebrated economist, John Maynard Keynes. He combined his surgeon’s career at St Bartholomew’s Hospital with the publication of bibliographies - such as those of the poet, John Donne, and the scientist Robert Hooke - and editions much respected by the bibliographic and literary worlds.

  2. Geoffrey Keynes, the second of three children, was born into a comfortable middle class home in Cambridge. Though his father was registrary to the University and a fellow of Pembroke, it was hardly a highbrow family, but by the times Keynes died the name was a household one - principally, though not entirely, because of his elder brother’s (Maynard) eminence as an economist, but also because ...

  3. Geoffrey Keynes, Kt., ed. The Letters of William Blake with Related Documents. Third edition. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1980. xxviii + 235 pp., 28 reproductions (including 6 of Related Documents). £1 8.50, $55.00. Reviewed by G. E. Bentley, Jr. T here have been separate editions of William Blake's letters edited by A. G. B. Russell in 1906 and ...

  4. 5. Apr. 2016 · Abstract. During the 1920s and 1930s, the British surgeon Geoffrey Keynes (1887–1982) treated breast cancer with radium instead of the hegemonic radical mastectomy, while vehemently attacking the “radicalists” for mutilating women.

  5. (1887–1982),scholar and bibliographer, brother of J. M. Keynes. His works include bibliographies of Donne, Evelyn, and Blake (1921, 1953); his editions of Blake (1925–66, and various studies) were a major contribution towards the 20th‐cent. reappraisal of Blake's work.

  6. During the 1920s and 1930s, the British surgeon Geoffrey Keynes (1887-1982) treated breast cancer with radium instead of the hegemonic radical mastectomy, while vehemently attacking the "radicalists" for mutilating women. Keynes was also a leading bibliographer of literary figures from Sir Thomas Browne to William Blake through Jane Austen.

  7. Abstract. Purpose: Examination of Geoffrey Keynes's contributions to brachytherapy and the management of breast cancer. Methods and materials: Review of publications and texts of the era. Results: In an era when radical mastectomy was accepted as standard treatment for breast cancer, Keynes demonstrated that brachytherapy (with or without local ...