535 résultats
1st Edition, Original Printed Paper Wrappers, 54 pages. Includes portrait of the author; 19 cm. Grigory Andreyevich Gershuni (18701908) was born in Kaunas, in the Kovno Governorate of the Russian Empire (present-day Lithuania) , to a petty bourgeois family of Lithuanian Jews . In 1898, his parents were killed in a pogrom . Gershuni was a socialist and a founding member of the Workers' Party for the Political Liberation of Russia. This led to his arrest in 1900 by the Okhrana (secret police. After his release he joined with fellow revolutionaries including Catherine Breshkovsky, Victor Chernov, Alexander Kerensky and Yevno Azef to establish the Socialist-Revolutionary Party in 1901. Gershuni also founded the SR Combat Organization in 1902, which planned and executed the assassination of Dmitry Sipyagin, the Minister of Interior, in April 1902 and of N. M. Bogdanovich, the Governor of Ufa, in May 1903. They failed to assassinate Prince Ivan Mikhailovich Obolensky, the Governor of Kharkov, in July 1902. Gershuni was unaware that Yevno Azef, his deputy, was working as an Okhrana spy. In May 1903, Gershuni was arrested in Kiev. In February 1904, Gershuni was tried by a military court in Saint Petersburg and received a death sentence, which later was reduced to life imprisonment at a hard labour camp by Tsar Nicholas II of Russia. In 1906, he hid in a barrel of sauerkraut and escaped from the Akatuy katorga to China. From China he traveled to Japan and the United States, giving speeches from San Francisco to New York City in support of the socialist-revolutionary causes. In Chicago he met Jane Addams. He returned to Europe in February 1907 in time for the Second Extraordinary Party conference of the Socialist-Revolutionary Party. There he continued to argue for a campaign of terror to overthrow the Tsarist Empire in Russia (Wikipedia) . SUBJECT(S) : Political prisoners -- Russia (Federation) -- Siberia -- Biography. Exiles -- Revolutionaries. OCLC: 13419225 OCLC lists 18 copies worldwide. (KH-8-72 BLOR)
32 pages. Features: Full-page Datsun ad shows girl getting her first car; A Man's Best Friend is his Helpmate - Elaine and Norman Campbell, Farley and Claire Mowat, and Gloria and Morton Shulman are featured with nice colour photos and write-ups; Everyone's Guide to Yiddish; The Unlovables - Baseball Umpires - great colour photo with article; Earl Kraul of the National Ballet of Canada wanted to teach Panamanians ballet but they said "Gringo, Go Home!" - article with photo; Moustache Cups. Printed by newspapers across Canada as a weekend supplement. Unmarked with moderate wear. A nice vintage copy. Magazine
SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR!8' blue gilt hardcover, cover slightly worn and slightly stained, white pages slightly stained, frontispiece, else in good condition.
Original printed boards. 8vo. 60 pages. 23 cm. Second edition. In German, with some Hebrew. 'Return to the Torah? ; A Request to Young-Israel'. First published 1911, Frankfurt. Published by the Agudas Yisroel. Addressed to the youth zionist movement. Written by Dr Wilhelm (Zev) Freyhan, a leading member of the Jewish community of Breslau, and one of the original founders of Agudat Israel at the Kattowitz Conference of 1912. Subjects: OCLC lists 4 copies of this edition (Univ Bremen, Univ Hamburg, Natl Libr Israel, Danish Natl Libr) , none in the US, 6 total copies total of all editions. Light soiling to boards. Pages lightly aged, otherwise fresh and clean. Very good condition. (GER-43-14)
14x20 cm., 454 pp., bross. edit., cop. ill. a col. da B. Binosi (dorso legg. brunito, ex libris al piatto ant.), note biografiche, ottimo stato, (Il Bosco, 101). Interessante raccolta di racconti e testi di narrativa ebraica, alcuni dei quali di Frank. 282
Original Wraps. 8vo. 126 pages. 25 cm. First edition. Inscribed by the author. Title on title page verso: Heure de la poe´sie; Chou fun lid. Hour for Song; Songs and Poems, by Chaim Leib Fox (Fuks/Fuchs; 18971984) , Yiddish author and journalist. Born in Lodz, Fox was at the center of its Yiddish literary life, which he described in a number of essays (e. G. , Dos Yidishe Literarishe Lodzh (Yiddish Literary Lodz) , in: Fun Noentn Over, 3 (1957) , 189284) and in his monograph Lodzh shel Mayle (Heavenly Lodz, 1972) . During World War I Fox was a labor conscript in Germany. After a brief period in the Bund, he joined the Labor Zionist movement and, in Palestine (193638) , the Haganah. During World War II he was in the Soviet Union (194046) and thereafter lived in Lodz, Paris (194853) , and New York. He wrote for many periodicals and contributed over 3, 000 articles to the Leksikon fun der Nayer Yidisher Literatur. A poet of intense religious and national feeling, he published seven volumes of poetry (192682) and wrote the historical novel Gyoras Letster Veg (Giora's Final Road, 1939) and 100 Yor Yidishe un Hebreishe Prese in Kanade (100 Years of Yiddish and Hebrew Press in Canada, 1980) . Subjects: Yiddish Poetry. OCLC lists 22 copies. Light soiling to wraps, light tear to top and bottom of backstrip, otherwise fresh. Good condition. (YID-18-2)
Seconda edizione.<BR>Introduzione, scelta e note a cura di Ferruccio Folkel<BR>In 16°; pp. 183; brossura editoriale illustrata; rilegato all'americana (fresato non cucito).<BR>CONDIZIONI OTTIME (conuseta ingiallitura delle pagine dovuta alla qualità della carta).
IN YIDDISH. 215x145mm. 17+115 pages. Gilt hardcover with dust-jacket. Jacket slightly tattered. Cover edges slightly bumped. Ex-library copy with usual marks. Pages slightly yellowing. Else in good condition.
27.5x21 cm. 35+143 pages. Soft cover. Corners of cover are scuffed. Cover is slightly dirty and scratched. Else in good condition.
Publishers cloth. 8vo. Xiii, 195 pages. 24 cm. Illustrated. First edition. Inscribed by author on front free end page. Four leaves of black and white photographs, as well as reproductions of paintings and documents. This book focuses on the social and intellectual odysseys of merchants, maskilim, and rabbis, and their varied attempts to combine Judaism and European culture. David Fishman here chronicles the remarkable story of these first modern Jews of Russia. (Dust jacket) Subjects: Jews -- Belarus -- Shklou -- Intellectual life. Haskalah -- Belarus -- Shklou -- History -- 18th century. Condition. (EE-6-4)
Editions du Pavillon, 1967, 245 pp., préface de Pierre Paraf, broché, ENVOI autographe de l'auteur, traces d'usage, état correct.
8vo. 303 pages, illustrated. First edition. In Yiddish. Includes English translation of title on copyright page: "The Jews of Johannesburg. " Dustjacket worn but present, otherwise very good condition. (ComHist-15-9A)
8vo. 303 pages, illustrated. First edition. In Yiddish. Includes English translation of title on copyright page: "The Jews of Johannesburg. " Inscribed by the author. Very good condition. (ComHist-15-9)
Publishers cloth. 8vo. 249, [9] pages. 23 cm. First edition. Published by the Magnes Press, under the auspices of the Center for research on Roumanian Jewry (Je´rusalem) . With fold out demographic Map of Moldavia from 1845. History of Jewish craft occupations and artisan guilds in Moldavia; throughout the 19th century the number and diversity of Jewish skilled craftsmen increased by the decade. Subjects: Jews - Romania - Moldavia - Economic conditions. Jewish artisans - Romania - Moldavia. Moldavia - Ethnic relations. Light wear to wraps, otherwise fresh and clean. Very good condition. (EE-5-14)
1st edition. Original paper wrappers. 8vo. 30 pages, 19 cm. In Yiddish. Title translates to "Darwinism. " Benjamin Feigenbaum (1860-1932) was a Polish-American Yiddish socialist and Yiddish writer. He edited The Forward and the literary monthly Di Tshukunft. He was an outspoken critic of religion, and was also a pioneer of the Socialist Party of America and ran into considerable police trouble as a result of his activism (Wikipedia) . SUBJECTS: Darwin, Charles. OCLC lists 8 copies worldwide (OCLC: 19313039) . Front wrapper is loose with some chips in the margins. Pages brownings and omewhat fragile with very small chips in bottom right corner. Otherwise good condition. (YID-33-22-EL)
Publishers cloth. 8vo. 424, 78 pages. 24 cm. First edition. In Yiddish. Long inscription by author. English title page: Jewish music in Poland between the two World Wars. With 78 page section of songs and choruses, chiefly unaccompanied, with Yiddish and romanized Yiddish. Published for the World Federation of Polish Jews. Subjects: Jews - Poland - Music - History and criticism. Songs, Yiddish. Music - Poland - History and criticism. Very Good+ condition. (EE-3-13)
1st edition. Original paper wrappers with modernist 1930s typeface design. 8vo. 28 pages, 20 cm. In Yiddish. Title translates to Nucleus. A lesser known Yiddish monthly featuring some popular Yiddish writers of the period like Jacob Stodolsky and Jacob Glatstein. First published in June of 1930. It appears to have run only 3 issues: June, July (this issue), and November 1930. SUBJECTS: Yiddish literature - Periodicals. OCLC 35215860. OCLC lists 5 holdings worldwide for any issues (NYPL, YIVO, Brandeis, Harvard, NLI), though those holdings may be incomplete. Very Good Condition, a beautiful copy. Scarce. (YID-33-49-elx) xx
1st edition. Original paper wrappers with modernist 1930s typeface design. 8vo. 29 pages, 20 cm. In Yiddish. Title translates to Nucleus. A lesser known Yiddish monthly. Features poetry and prose by Casia Koperman, Michael Licht, and more, It appears to have run only 3 issues: June, July, and November 1930 (this issue) SUBJECTS: Yiddish literature - Periodicals. Very good condition. OCLC 35215860. OCLC lists 5 holdings worldwide for any issues (NYPL, YIVO, Brandeis, Harvard, NLI), though those holdings may be incomplete. Very Good Condition, a beautiful copy. Scarce. (YID-33-49-'elx)
Original Wraps. 8vo. 316; 120; 125 pages. 22 cm. First edition. In Yiddish. Contents also in Ukrainian. First three issues (complete run? ) of Der Shtern (The Star) , published Kiev 1947-1948; literary almanac (poetry, short stories, criticism, music) of the Yiddish section of the Soviet Writers Union of the Ukraine; contains contributions from Itsik Fefer, David Hofshteyn, Avrom Kahan, Arn Kushnirov, Hershl Polianker and many others. Subjects: Yiddish literature - Ukraine - Periodicals. Jews - Ukraine - Literary collections. Jews. Yiddish literature. Literary collections. Periodicals. OCLC lists 11 copies. Scarce. Wraps aged, worn, and bumped. Pages aged but not brittle. Good - condition. (YID-22-44)
1st Edition. Original paper wrappers bound into period cloth, 4to, 6-16 pages per issue. In Yiddish. Includes some cartoons and other illustrations, including one we noticed by William Gropper. Der Yunion Arbayter (The Union Worker) lasted 2 volumes, running weekly until 1927. The first volume, complete, is here. A.L.G.V.Y / I.L.G.V.Y. stands for the Yiddish name for the heavily Yiddish speaking International Ladies Garment Workers Union; this newspaper was published by an Anarchist section within the union. Yiddish-speaking Jewish anarchists were one of the pillars of the U.S. anarchist movement before World War II. This largely immigrant radical milieu was centered in New York City and opposed capitalism, the state, and organized religion. Yiddish-speaking anarchists built militant unions, anarchist newspapers, and other organizations to further their cause. Many famous anarchists were linked to this movement, including Johann Most, Emma Goldman, Alexander Berkman, and Rudolf Rocker. Yiddish-speaking anarchists played a pivotal role in unions like the International Ladies Garment Workers Union (ILGWU), while the Yiddish anarchist newspaper the Fraye Arbeter Shtime (The Free Voice of Labor) was the largest and longest-lasting U.S. anarchist publication and formed a significant part of the Yiddish cultural landscape. In the 1930s a second generation of bilingual Jewish anarchists emerged, including Sam and Esther Dolgoff, and Audrey Goodfriend, whose influence is still felt in todays anarchist movement.Despite the importance of Yiddish anarchism to the histories of both the U.S. Left and the Jewish community, it has been largely forgotten and written out of historical scholarship (YIVO). Cited in Paul Avrichs Anarchist Portraits (Princeton, 1988) pp 192 & 196. Listed in John Pattens Yiddish Anarchist Bibliography - Periodicals (https://www.katesharpleylibrary.net/w9gk09). SUBJECT(S): Jewish anarchists. OCLC 10218086. OCLC lists 3 holdings worldwide LOC, YIVO, NYU), with NYU holding only this one volume and the Union List of Serials suggesting that the run may have "Ceased with Sept. 26, 1927 issue?" Rear hinge starting. Three issues printed on lower quality paper have darkened, but without any edgewear or breakage. The other 49 issues, printed on quality paper and well protected, remain bright white. All issues clear and very well preserved. Very Good Condition. An outstanding complete volume of a very rare and important Yiddish Anarchist periodical. (YID-42-20)
19x26.5 cm. 180 pages. Hardcover. Small dent in front cover. In good condition.
23.5x16 cm. 242 pages. Hardcover with dust jacket. As new.
1st edition. Original boards with gilt lettering. 8vo. 96 pages, 25 cm. In Yiddish. Title translates to Candlewicks. Asselin (1889-1974) was a prominent Russian-American poet. He published hundreds of poems in Yiddish and his work was featured in the biggest Yiddish newspapers of his day. The Judaica Section of Harvard currently features the Alter Esselin Archive. (Wikipedia, 2018) . SUBJECTS: Yiddish poetry. Light edge wear to boards. Very Good Condition overall. (YID-40-69-CFLX)
in-16, 266 pp., illustrations, broche, couverture illustrée.- 9782266034944 Bel exemplaire [PP-1]
Softbound. 12mo. 219 pages. 19 cm. Second edition. Reprint of the Frankfurt a. M. , 1886 edition. In German. The Jewish Colonies in Russia; Culture-Historical Study and Contribution to the history of the Jews in Russia. History and documentation of the limited nineteenth century Jewish agricultural colonies in tsarist Russia. Subjects: Jews - Russia. Jewish farmers. Agricultural colonies - Russia. Clean and fresh. Very good condition. (EE-5-45)