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19181309152Cambridge (Mass.), Harvard Univ. Press, (1918). 16, 134 S., 1 Bl. OLwdbd mit OUmschlag (Umschlag m. Läsuren).
Paperback with small pen mark to rear cover and to page block head. No other faults, pages are clean, and text is clear. TH Used
198815779Cambridge Philological Society. 1988. Softcover. Near Fine. Light browning to spine. Very minor shelfwear; Contributions from C R Whittaker; John F Cherry; Stephen Hodginson; Jens Erik Skydgaard; Michael H Jameson; Carmine Ampolo; Regula Frei-Stobla; Christian Goudineau; S Bökönyi; Philippe Leveau; Peter Garnsey; Willem Jongman; Jonathan Thompson; Mireille Corbier; Supplementary Volume No. 14 / Cambridge Philological Society; 218 pages . 0906014131 . Cambridge Philological Society paperback
Light bump to 1 corner. DJ has light shelfwear. ; 250 pages
1973151637London, 1867 (Nachdr. Hildesheim, Olms, 1973). 489 S. OLwd. Bibliotheksex. m. Rsign. St. a. Tit. Schnitt farb. markiert. 2 Bl. lose beiliegend. (Documenta Semiotica 1)
1879009933Leipzig: Breitkopf and Hartel 1879. Book. Fine. Hardcover. First Edition. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. xxiv 485 1 pages. The First Edition of this classic study of Sanskrit grammar handsomely bound in 20th c. full blue pebbled morocco silver lettering at spine. With distinguished provenance the name stamp of Clyde Pharr noted American classicist at title page and the ownership signature in ink and name stamp of James W. Marchand noted medieval scholar linguist and polyglot at front end page. Fine with marginal notations and some underlining in red ink noted in only the first 33 pages of text likely in Pharr's hand as Marchand did not typically mark in his books. SCARCE in commerce and no auction records found for 1st ed. copies at RBH. Breitkopf and Hartel Hardcover
1983500144559J'ai lu 1983 350 pages poche. 1983. Poche. 350 pages.
1991447Cambridge University Press. 1991. Hardcover. Fine in Very Good dust jacket. Dustjacket has minor shelfwear and rubbing.; In this innovative study James Whitley examines the relationship between the development of pot style and social changes in the Dark Age of Greece 1100-700 BC. He focuses on Athens where the Protogeometric and Geometric styles first appeared. He considers pot shape and painted decoration primarily in relation to the other relevant features - metal artefacts grave architecture funerary rites and the age and sex of the deceased - and also takes into account different contexts in which these shapes and decorations appear. A computer analysis of grave assemblages supports his view that pot style is an integral part of the collective representations of Early Athenian society. It is a lens through which we can focus on the changing social circumstances of Dark Age Greece. Dr Whitley's approach to the study of style challenges many of the assumptions which have underpinned more traditional studies of Early Greek art.; New Studies in Archaeology; 10.25 x 1 x 7.5 Inches; 245 pages . 0521373832 . Cambridge University Press hardcover
Hardcover. Text is in Korean. Leading corners of flaps are slightly clipped. Publisher's stamp on foot of page block. Binding is sound; pages are tight, crisp and clean; text and illustrations are clear. AF Used
Hardcover. Text is in Korean. Minor wear to jacket spine ends. Leading corners of flaps are slightly clipped. Light bump to left side of hardcover spine head. Publisher's stamp on foot of page block. Binding is sound; pages are tight, crisp and clean; text and illustrations are clear. AF Used
Hardcover. Text is in Korean. Very slight wear on jacket spine ends and leading corners. Contents are clean and clear throughout. Binding is sound. AF Used
Hardcover. German language. New. AF
Hardcover. German language. New. AF
Hardcover. German language. Item remains in original shrinnkwrapping and is unopened. AF
Hardcover in good condition. Text in Japanese. Superficial marks, light scores and edge wear on jacket and hardcover. Pages are clean and contents are clear throughout. Binding is sound. HCW Used
69-0217WhiteWalls: A Journal of Language and Art 1990. 4to. 68 pp. Soft Cover. Good. Tiny tears along Spine. Smudges on Back Cover. BW Photographs. Provenance: From the estate of Gerald Nordland 1927-2019. Nordland was a museum director art critic educator and author.Dean of the Chouinard Art Institute 1960-64 Director of the San Francisco Museum of Art now SFMoMA 1966-73 Milwaukee Art Museum 1977-85 and the UCLA Wight Art Gallery 1973-1977. He is the author of over 60 publications including books on Lachaise Nakian Diebenkorn and Frank Lloyd Wright. WhiteWalls: A Journal of Language and Art, 1990 paperback
Paperback volume with slightly worn edges, leading corners, and head and foot of spine. Front cover is faded towards spine. Front lower leading corner is creased, as is rear upper spine side. Name of previous owner (linguistics professor) penned on inside front cover. Contains laid in pamphlet entitled The Ann Arbor Decision: Memorandum Opinion and Order & The Educational Plan, also with name penned inside front cover, and containing laid in notice. Contents are sound and clean, and the text is clear. TH. Used
Paperback in good condition. Covers are shelf and edgeworn, including sticker remnants to front cover. Ink stamp to title page. Contents clean and binding sound. AD Used
Studies presented and discussed at the ninth International African Seminar at University College, Dar es Salaam, December 1968. Hardcover is clean and sound with sun faded lower edge and softened spine ends. Small mark on fore - edge of page block. Previous owner's name, place and year on front inside cover; staple remains on upper edge of pages 333 - 335; contents otherwise in very good condition with sound binding, clean pages and clear text throughout. Price - clipped and sun faded dust jacket has significantly worn edges, creases and small chips and tears on edges and some discoloration at front. T Used
Book is in excellent condition as new with previous owner's sticker in front section of the book. Binding is solid and square, covers have sharp corners, exterior shows no blemishes, text/interior is clean and free of marking of any kind. Dust jacket is Fine also, now wrapped in clear protective cover. 235 pages.
1979151436New York, Academic Press, 1979. XII, 313 S. OPp. Bibliotheksex. m. Deckel- u. Rsign. St. a. mehr. S. Schnitt farb. markiert.
197742337Cambridge Philological Society. 1977. Softcover. Good. Light highlighting to a couple of pages. Minor pencil underlining. Minor shelfwear to wraps. Former owner's name on ffep.; A meticulously researched study of `metics' or settled immigrants who played an essential and large part in the economic social and political life of ancient Greek communities but were normally excluded from citizenship.; Cambridge Philological Society Supplementary Vol 4; 200 pages . 090601400X . Cambridge Philological Society paperback
1937OY8596New York: Farrar & Rinehart 1937. First Edition. HB. Black cloth gilt lettering on front cover and spine 8vo 409 pp. SIGNED and inscribed by the author to William Anderson publisher of the Winfield Courier of Kansas and dated June 1937. Full page typed letter tipped in certifying ownership by the Anderson family. No marks in book binding solid. In unclipped dust jacket missing about 3/4" x 1" top of front panel. Book condition VG in Good DJ. Farrar & Rinehart hardcover
Hardcover without dust jacket. Text in Japanese, with illustrations. Boards are edgeworn, lightly marked and chipped at spine ends. Cloth at spine sides is split and spine is cocked. Hinge break at FEP. REP has been reinforced. Tanning to endpapers and page block, some light foxing internally. Text and illustrations are all clean and clear. AD Used
199315031Harvard University Press. 1993. Hardcover. Fine in Very Good dust jacket. Book is fine. Light sunning to panels of DJ. Small sticker stain to rear panel of DJ. 2 small tears to DJ.; It served a poet well indeed to have Augustus for a friend. And if Augustus were a friend of poets All the better for the great glory of Roman letters. It is this arrangement complicated by questions of influence and accommodation and simple human susceptibility to the blandishments of power that Peter White explores in "Promised Verse". Combining social history and literary interpretation this book reveals the circumstances of poetic production in the golden era of Virgil Ovid Horace Tibullus and Propertius. Peter White takes a close look at the relationship between the Augustan poets and the men of wealth and status who befriended them - and rewarded their literary efforts with money gifts and the benefits of illustrious connection. These ties - between for instance Horace and Maecenas - appear as part of an elaborate system of social conventions a system of mutual advantage to poet and patron. Within this context White also considers groups and institutions - the mysterious collegium poetarum the schools of the grammarians libraries and public recitations - that helped the poet make his way and linked him to Roman society. In Augustus we see a patron comparable in many ways to his aristocratic counterparts. The Emperor sought to promote Roman literature and yet seems to have intervened only rarely in the poetry he sponsored. Contrary to a view that has been prevalent since the eighteenth century the result was not literary propaganda. Instead White shows the public poetry created by Augustan poets was as independent and inventive as the rest of their work.; 330 pages . 067471525X . Harvard University Press hardcover