The New Group of World Workers

TitleThe New Group of World Workers
Year for Search1932
Authors[Bailey], [Alice Ann](1880-1949)
Date Published1932
PublisherAuthor
Place PublishedNew York
KeywordsFemale author, UK author, US author
Annotation

The earliest of many works based on a group like the Samurai in 1905 Wells that will lead the world to eutopia. See also her The Next Three Years (1934-1935-1936). New York: Lucis Pub. Co., 1934 [Pub. in the U.K. as The New Group of World Servers]; and The Functions of the New Group of Servers. London: Edson, 1935, which focus on this group.

Info Notes

See also her The Immediate Plans. New York: New York Unit of Service [1937] [NN Among her pamphlets]. Bailey published many books and pamphlets that touch on eutopian possibilities, and she is often credited as being the founder of what became known as New Age thought.

Holding Institutions

NN

Author Note

Bailey (1880-1949) published many books and pamphlets that touch on eutopian possibilities, and she is often credited as being the founder of what became known as New Age thought. She was born in the U.K. but spent most of her life in the U.S.

Full Text

1932 [Bailey, Alice Ann] (1880-1949). The New Group of World Workers. New York: Author. NN

The earliest of many works based on a group like the Samurai in 1905 Wells that will lead the world to eutopia. See also her The Next Three Years (1934-1935-1936). New York: Lucis Pub. Co., 1934. U.K. ed. as The Functions of the New Group of Servers. London: Edson, 1935; Rpt. in her A Treatise on White Magic or The Way of the Disciple (New York: Lucis Publishing/London: Lucis Press, 1934), 401-33, which focus on this group. See also her The Immediate Plans. New York: New York Unit of Service [1937] [NN Among her pamphlets]. Bailey published many books and pamphlets that touch on eutopian possibilities, and she is often credited as being the founder of what became known as New Age thought. The female author was born in the U.K. but spent most of her life in the U.S.; see her Problems of Humanity. New York: Lucis Publishing, 1947; and The Unfinished Autobiography of Alice A. Bailey. New York: Lucis Publishing/London: Lucis Press, 1951.