Identity area
Reference code
Title
Date(s)
- 1905-1983 (Creation)
Level of description
Extent and medium
88 boxes
Context area
Name of creator
Biographical history
Piero Sraffa was born in Turin in 1898 the son of Angelo Sraffa, Professor of Commercial Law and Irma Tivoli. The young Sraffa was educated at the Liceo d'Azeglio and at the University of Turin where his honours thesis Monetary inflation in Italy during and after the War gained the approval of his tutor, Luigi Einaudi. From 1921-22 Sraffa studied at the LSE, but returned to Italy to hold posts at Perugia and Cagliari. He was appointed Professor of Political Economy at this latter institution in 1926 and held it for the rest of his life, donating his salary to the maintainance of the library. However, as a critic of the Fascists there was some personal danger if he remained there permanently and in 1927 he took up a lectureship in Cambridge which he was to hold only for three years, feeling himself unfit for the duties of lecturing. The intervention of Keynes caused the position of Marshall Librarian to be created especially for Sraffa allowing him to concentrate on research and his responsibilities for graduate students. He did, nonethless, return to lecturing for the years 1941-43 when he gave a course on industry.
Although Sraffa held dining rights at King's College, he was awarded no college fellowship until 1939 when he was elected as a fellow by Trinity, and that College remained his home for the rest of his life. In 1961 he was awarded the Södeström Gold Medal by the Stockholm Academy of Sciences and two years later was made Reader in economics by Cambridge University. He died in 1983.
At his best face-to-face or in small group discussions, Sraffa's interests and intellectual contacts seem far-reaching. A close but not uncritical friendship with Antonio Gramsci began in 1919. After Gramsci's imprisonment in 1926 Sraffa visited him and tried, unsuccessfully, to gain his release. He was nevertheless instrumental in the production of the Quaderni dal Carcere by providing Gramsci with writing materials and, after his death in 1937 by recounting his wishes regarding their publication. During the 1930's, his weekly discussions with Wittgenstein were foremost in persuading the philosopher to turn from the ideas regarding language proposed in the Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus and to strike out on the course that led to the Philosophical Investigations. No less important in terms of influence is the fact that Sraffa was one of the organisers of the circus that discussed Keynes' Treatise on Money which was to lead to the views propounded in the General Theory....
Sraffa's own literary reputation rests on a number of important articles and two longer works, The Works and Correspondence of David Ricardo (pub 1951-73) and Production of Commodities by means of Commodities: prelude to a critique of economic theory (1960). The former work runs to ten volumes plus an index and was 43 years in completion, requiring the patient aid of Maurice Dobb and a number of research assistants. It is regarded as a scholarly masterpiece. Once volume ten of the Ricardo edition was completed. Sraffa turned again to his notes of the 1920s, 1930s and early 1940s to produce Production of Commodities... which received mixed reviews.
Not entirely divorced from his academic interests was Sraffa's love of books, especially on the subject of economics and politics. He amassed an outstanding library of over 8000 volumes, also housed at Trinity College Library, a catalogue of which has been published by Giancarlo de Vivo. In addition to printed works Sraffa collected several hundred autographs which are catalogued elsewhere
Repository
Archival history
The papers passed from Sraffa to Trinity College Library via Pierangelo Garegnani, Sraffa's literary executor
Immediate source of acquisition or transfer
Piero Sraffa
Content and structure area
Scope and content
Personal and family papers 1916-80, official papers 1905-81, correspondence 1911-83, miscellaneous notes 1923-63, notes for lectures 1927-31 and 1941-43, publications 1920-73, diaries 1927-81, bibliographical notes
Appraisal, destruction and scheduling
Accruals
System of arrangement
Conditions of access and use area
Conditions governing access
The majority of the archive is open for consultation by readers with the exception of a few closed items which are marked as such.
Conditions governing reproduction
Following the death of Sraffa's literary executor, Prof Pierangelo Garegnani, Lord Eatwell took on the role. Any request to publish material from Sraffa's unpublished papers should be directed to him at Queens' College, Cambridge CB3 9ET
Language of material
Script of material
Language and script notes
Physical characteristics and technical requirements
Finding aids
Generated finding aid
Allied materials area
Existence and location of originals
Existence and location of copies
With the permission of the literary executor, digital copies of the papers are gradually being released online under Creative Commons Licence CC BY-NC-ND. Links to available digital copies are embedded in this catalogue
Related units of description
Sraffa's collection of the manuscript correspondence and notes of a number of important political economists and politicians, dating from the 17th-20th century, is also held at Trinity College Library.
Letters from J. M. Keynes and Ludwig Wittgenstein, along with biographical material relating to Sraffa, were originally among his papers but left his possession at some time towards the end of his life. They returned to the Library in 2004 and were catalogued as Add. MS a/427.