535 résultats
CONTAINS XLIX B&W PLATES. 23.5x16.5cm. 191 pages. Softcover. Cover slightly wrinkled, slightly rubbed and slightly yellowing. Spine slightly curved, slightly bumped, slightly rubbed and slightly yellowing. Cover slightly yellowing. Else in good condition.
230x155 mm. 169 pages. Softcover. Sticker on front cover. In good condition.
23x15 cm. 164+XXVII pages. Softcover. In good condition.
230X155 mm. 164+XXVII pages. Cover corners slightly wrinkled. Else in good condition.
IN ENGLISH, RUSSIAN, YIDDISH AND HEBREW. 23x16cm. 75+171+34 pages. Softcover. In good condition.
IN HEBREW AND ENGLISH. 22X15 cm. 14+327+10 pages. Softcover. Cover slightly chafed. Else in good condition.
IN YIDDISH, ENGLISH, RUSSIAN AND HEBREW. 24x17cm. 64+63 pages. Softcover. Cover corners and spine edges slightly wrinkled. Else in good condition.
First edition. Original boards, 8vo, 474 pages, 23 cm. In Hebrew. SUBJECTS: Jews -- Germany -- History -- To 1096. Rabbis -- Germany. Jewish scholars -- Germany. Judaism -- Germany -- History. Ethnic relations. Jewish scholars. Jews. Judaism. Rabbis.. Very Good Condition. (AC-2-1)
Milano, Mondadori, 2009, 8vo brossura con copertina illustrata, pp. 781.
SERIES: Hippocrene Practical Dictionary Book
IN YIDDISH. SIGNED BY AUTHOR. 22x15.5 cm. XII+537 pages. Hardcover. In good condition.
Publishers cloth. 8vo. 213 pages. 24 cm. First edition. Volume II only. Completed and edited by Mark Wischnitzer using manuscripts left after the death of Louis Greenberg. The first volume, published in 1944, discusses the situation of Jews in Russia and their struggle for emancipation through the reign of Alexander II (1881.) This second volume follows that history with an examination of the period up to the Bolshevik revolution of 1917. Subjects: Jews -- Russia. Jews -- Legal status, laws, etc. -- Russia. Antisemitism -- Russia. Russia -- Ethnic relations. No dust jacket. Some fading to backstrip. Light shelf wear and rubbing. Front hinge starting. Text is clean and fresh. Good + condition. (EE-6-12)
16.5X24 cm. 307 pages. Gilt hardcover with dust-jacket. Jacket slightly torn.First white page slightly stained. Else in good condition.
IN YIDDISH. SIGNED BY AUTHOR. 220x145 mm. 238 pages. Hardcover. Ex library copy with the usual marks. Cover slightly stained. Cover corners slightly rubbed. Spine edges slightly rubbed. Else in good condition.
Original paper wrappers. 8vo. 15 pages, 23 cm. In Yiddish. Title translates to Simplon and Children of Parma. A Naiz-era Yiddish language studybook focusing on Maksim Gorky. Gorky (1868-1936) was a Soviet Russian writer and pioneer of the Socialist realism genre. Nice illustrated ad on rear for children's publishers Grinke Beymelekh ("Green Saplings") with a shouting capped newsboy hocking papers. SUBJECTS: Short stories, Yiddish. Selections. OCLC Number: 20069016. OCLC lists 3 copies worldwide (Harvard, FAU, NLI), none in New York and none west of Florida. Light edge wear and browning to wrappers. Overall good condition. Scarce (YID-33-64-L'ex)
IN HEBREW. AS IS. SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR. 23x16 cm. 461 pages. Gilt hardcover. Spine is missing and has been repaired with tape. Corners of cover are scuffed. Cover is slightly dirty and scratched. Small age stains on some pages. Pages are yellowing. Else in good condition.
250x175mm. 14+141 pages. Gilt hardcover. Cover slightly yellowing. Cover corners and edges slightly rubbed. Spine edges slightly bumped. Pages yellowing. Else in good condition.
HEBREW AND YIDDISH SONGS TRANSLATED INTO ENGLISH WITH ENGLISH FOREWORD. 24X16 cm. 80 pages. Softcover with spiral binding. Few worm Holes on front cover. Else in good condition.
22x15 cm. 140 pages. Hardcover. Spine is scuffed and partially torn. Cover is slightly scratched and stained. Spine is partially disconnected between body of book and back cover. Spine is repaired with tape between some pages. Else n good condition.
First edition. Original Printed Wrappers, 8vo, 6, 8, 12, 32 pages ; 26 cm. In Yiddish. Title translates as, A Bouquet of Flowers: In Four Parts. Singerman 4953. Contents: 1. Ale Lider fun Akaydes Yitshak, fun A. Goldfaden; 2. Kupleten un Folks Lider, fun M. Avramovits [Max Avramovich]; 3. Ale Lider fun Kuzari, fun Prof. Hurvits; & Anekdoten, fun G. Broyda. Abraham Goldfaden, (18401908), was a Yiddish poet, dramatist, composer, and father of the Yiddish theater. Born in Staro Konstantinov, Ukraine, he received not only a thorough Hebrew education but also acquired a knowledge of Russian, German, and secular subjects. To avoid the draft, Goldfaden was sent to a government school at 15 and there came under the influence of his teacher Abraham Ber Gottlober, a Hebrew writer who was also a lover of Yiddish. Graduation from this school in 1857 permitted Goldfaden to enter the rabbinical seminary at Zhitomir, which trained rabbis, teachers, and Jewish officials for government service. Under the guidance of sympathetic teachers, including such leaders of the Haskalah movement as E. Z. Zweifel, H. S. Slonimsky, and Gottlober, he was encouraged to compose Hebrew lyrics. The first of these were published in 1862 in Ha-Meliz. A year later Goldfaden's first Yiddish poems appeared in Kol Mevasser. In 1865 Goldfaden published a booklet of his Hebrew songs Zizim u-Ferahim. In 1866, the year of his graduation as a teacher, his first collection of Yiddish songs Dos Yudele offered rich material for badhanim and folksingers. It was followed by a supplementary booklet Di Yudene (1869). In 1875 he joined a former classmate Isaac Joel Linetzki in founding and editing in Lemberg a short-lived humorous magazine Der Alter Yisrolik. Goldfaden then went to Rumania where he came in contact in Jassy with the Broder Singers, who were singing and acting out Yiddish songs, including his own, in wine cellars and restaurant gardens. He then conceived the idea that the dramatic effect of the songs and impersonations could be heightened if they would be combined with prose dialogues and woven into an interesting plot. He gathered a few singers and rehearsed with them scenarios composed by himself. The first performances in October 1876 initiated the professional Yiddish theater. Encouraged by the enthusiastic reception accorded his performances in Jassy, Goldfaden engaged wandering minstrels and cantors' assistants as additional actors, toured other Rumanian cities, including Bucharest, and then went to Odessa. By 1880 his troupe was giving performances throughout Russia and his phenomenal success was encouraging theatrical ventures by other enterprising actors and librettists. The Yiddish theater expanded and flourished until 1883, when the Russian government, fearing this new mass medium, banned performances in Yiddish. This action compelled authors, actors, and producers to migrate to other lands. Yiddish theaters were established in Paris, London, and New York. In 1887 Goldfaden was invited by some of his actors who had moved to New York to join them, but when he arrived he encountered severe competition from producers who had preceded him and from scriptwriters who were even more prolific than he. He found Europe more congenial and returned to produce and direct performances of his plays in London, Paris, and Lemberg. He returned to the United States in 1903 and spent his last five years in New York. Many of Goldfaden's 60 plays - not all of them published - continued to be adapted by actors and producers and entered into the permanent repertoire of the Yiddish theater. His characters from Schmendrik and Kuni Lemel to Hotzmakh, the good-natured peddler, and Bobbe Yakhne, the malevolent witch, have been real figures to several generations of theatergoers. (EJ, 2007).OCLC: 41454623. OCLC and Singerman together list 3 copies worldwide (Harvard, NYPL, NLI), with the NYPL copy described as defective. Scarce. Our copy: Paper brown, old damps stains, edgewear. Good- Condition. (YID-42-14)
8vo. 201 pages. Illustrated. SUBJECT (S) : Labor unions United States officials and employees biography; Fur workers United States labor unions history; labor unions and communism United States history. OCLC lists 27 copies worldwide. Gold, America's only openly Communist international union president, headed the Jewish Fur & Leather Workers Union until 1954 when he was forced out by anti-communist hysteria. Very good jacket, very good condition. (ComHist-10-20)
Nyu York : Y. L. Perets shrayber farayn, 1945. Paper Wrappers, 4to, 196 pages. Includes illustrations & portraits. 28 cm. In Yiddish. SUBJECT (S) : Journalism -- United States -- History. Yiddish newspapers -- United States. Yiddish newspapers -- United States -- History. Also includes title in English: "75 [Seventy-five] years Yiddish press in the United States of America 1870-1945" OCLC lists 17 copies worldwide. Good Condition. (Y-23)
1st edition. Original black cloth with modernist gold lettering, initialed B.B. in the plate. 8vo, 96 pages. 21 cm. In Yiddish. Title page in classic interwar modernist typefacePoems by the great Yiddish poet, Yaakov Glatshteyn (1896-1971). Born in Poland, Glatshteyn became a modernist Yiddish poet who immigrated to the United States. in 1919, together with Aaron Glanz,and N.B. Minkoff, he founded the In-Zikh ("Introspectivist") movement of Yiddish poetry and the literary organ In Zikh for the propagation of the Inzikhist credo. SUBJECT(S): Yiddish poetry. Poe´sie. OCLC: 19309093. Bits of paper from original dust jacket stuck to bottom edge of of cloth, with some related staining, otherwise Very Good Condition. (YID-42-37-++)
1st edition. Original Printed Cloth, 12mo, 63 pages. 20 cm. Inscribed and dated in year of publication by author. In Yiddish. Title translates as, To You To Me: Poems. Aaron Glanz-Leyeless (18891966) was an American Yiddish poet and essayist. Born in Vloclawek, Poland, he was educated in his father's talmud torah in Lodz, studied literature at the University of London (190508) and, after immigrating to New York in 1909, at Columbia University (191013). He taught at Yiddish schools, lectured on Yiddish literature, edited Yiddish journals, and for more than half-a-century wrote articles on literary, social, and political events for the New York daily Der Tog. His prose appeared primarily under the name, A. Glanz, and his verse under the pseudonym A. Leyeles. In 1919, together with Jacob Glatstein and N.B. Minkoff, he founded the In-Zikh (Introspectivist) movement of Yiddish poetry and the literary organ In Zikh for the propagation of the Inzikhist credo .He held that poetry must always be concrete, the direct or indirect expression of a real experience, in which thought and feeling were intertwined. In the lyrics of Amerike un Ikh ("America and I," 1963), he voiced his faith in the historical ideals of the U.S .Glanz-Leyeles translated works from English, Russian, and Polish into Yiddish, most notably the works of Edgar Allen Poe (Sol Lipzin).OCLC: 19053827. Light wear to boards. Title page improperly opened with resulting tear at gutter, which has been professionally repaired. Otherwise Very Good Condition. (YID-42-38-++)
MACCHIETTE/FIORITURE ALLA COPERTINA E NELLE PRIME PAGINE BIANCHE. SEGNI DEL TEMPO. MAI SFOGLIATO. 25 anni nel cinema polacco. Il viaggio esemplare di un cineasta dell'Est dentro i miti della Polonia, dentro la storia, dentro i fantasmi della letteratura e del quotidiano, dentro le contraddizioni di un cinema critico che vuole restare popolare. Informazioni bibliografiche Titolo: Cenere e diamanti. Il cinema di Andrzej Wajda Autore: Giandomenico Curi Editore: Roma: Edizioni E/O, 1980 Lunghezza: 267 pagine, 21 cm. Soggetti: Cinema, Registi cinematografici, Polonia, Est, Europa, Critica, Wajda, Andrzej, Saggi, Film Polski, Opere, Filmografia, Cultura yiddish, Romanticismo, Sociale, Cattolico, Socialismo, Ribellione, Comunismo, Varsavia, Borghesia, Letteratura, Montaggio, Nouvelle Vague, Fellini, Orson Welles, Teatro, Katyn, Le signorine di Wilko, L'uomo di ferro, Oscar, Palma d'oro, La terra della grande promessa, Cannes, Anni settanta, Zbigniew Cybulski, simbolismo, Generazione, I dannati di Varsavia, Lech Walesa, Orso d'oro, Berlino, Cultura, Pierscionek z orlem w koronie, Zemsta - La Vendetta, Solidarnosc, Solidarnosc..., Popiól i diament