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1970230841970. El Popo student newspaper archive 1970-1991 documents the sustained role of Chicano student journalism as an organizing instrument within the Movimiento Estudiantil Chicanx de Aztlán MEChA network and the broader Chicano Movement. Founded in 1970 by students responding to the absence of Chicana and Chicano perspectives in mainstream media El Popo functioned as a political communication system linking campus activism to labor struggles electoral politics and community-based organizing. The publication's name drawn from the volcano Popocatépetl signaled an explicitly militant and mobilizing ethos aligned with movement-era consciousness. Across the archive coverage of United Farm Workers activity anti-Proposition 38 organizing around bilingual ballots urban displacement and police brutality establishes the newspaper as a primary source for grassroots political discourse while the 1991 issue extends this framework into global and late-Cold War contexts through coverage of the Gulf War AIDS crisis awareness and transnational cultural production.<br /> <br /> 1 El Popo. Vol. 1 No. 1. Northridge CA: M.E.Ch.A./California State University Northridge November 1970. Early foundational issue produced at the height of the Chicano Movement situating student activism within labor struggles and community resistance. Coverage includes United Farm Workers organizing boycotts arrests and critiques of institutional racism alongside poetry and personal accounts that articulate emergent Chicano political identity.<br /> <br /> 2 El Popo. Northridge CA: M.E.Ch.A./CSUN March 1985. Mid-period issue reflecting the institutionalization of Chicano Studies and continued student activism. Articles address urban development displacing Latino families police brutality and "tokenism" demonstrating the persistence of structural critiques into the 1980s. The issue maintains bilingual engagement and integrates literary expression with political reporting.<br /> <br /> 3 El Popo. Vol. 25 No. 1. California State University Northridge Spring 1991. Eight-page tabloid-format issue produced through the Chicana and Chicano Studies Department. Lead article "A World Without Fear" documents Judith F. Baca's World Wall project with front-page caption: "Soviet woman worker prepares the Gorky Park site for the World Wall Exhibition 1990." Additional content includes "An Ecological Disaster" on the Persian Gulf War "AIDS CRISIS AWARENESS" and "Sí Se Puede - Young Latina Forum" alongside a "Poesía" section featuring works such as "Brown Hope" "1990: 20 years since the Chicano Moratorium. Away from the spotlight; little access to a dream" and "A Chicano Will Die Today" by Manuel Castro reprinted from Somos Raza. Layout demonstrates the alternative press practice of embedding political meaning through visual and textual juxtaposition.<br /> <br /> Three issues total spanning 1970 to 1991 each measuring approximately 11.5 x 16 inches and printed in tabloid newspaper format with bilingual English and Spanish content. The archive traces the evolution of Chicano student press from movement-era militancy through institutional continuity and into late 20th-century global and public health discourse. Newsprint exhibits age toning expected horizontal folds and minor edge wear consistent with student-produced distribution; all issues remain legible with strong textual clarity. Overall condition very good. The archive provides longitudinal evidence of how Chicano student newspapers functioned as durable infrastructures of political communication sustaining activism across decades of shifting social and geopolitical conditions. unknown
1818189601818. Americana Handwritten 1818 commonplace book. 38 handwritten pages 6" x 4." England. While the writer of this book remains unnamed flipping through the pages offers an intimate look into their thoughts ideas and reading habits. Writings in this book range from the political "The paper money system is a system of murder as well as robbery" to the thoughtful "An artichoke and a pineapple have the same shape but what a difference in flavor!" to the biting "Women have such a tedious manner of telling a story." The latter half of the book is entitled "Memorandum" and appears to be mostly concerned with matters of business. There quotes and verses of poems that the writer found inspiring such as an excerpt from Voltaire: "The art of instructing succeeds better than the art of lampooning because satire dies with those who are its victims but.virtue is immortal." Other excerpts include "The universe appeared as a vault wherein true comfort was entombed; and the sun himself as a lamp to show the gloomy horror of a guilty mind." "One of the Roman emperors sent to buy the pillow of a man that was greatly in debt yet could sleep sweetly." "Of all the tyrannies on humankind the worst is that which persecutes the mind." "Many prose writers dislike wit as eunuchs dislike love." "On Monday evening Mr. Brougham is reported to have made a motion for the diminution of the influence of the crown in a speech which the Times calls the greater parliamentary effort this __. If instead of the greatest the Times had called it the longest that judicious paper would have been for once right.we have heard that the hon. member spoke for three hours & a half." Fascinating journal that offers a detailed view into everyday life two hundred years ago. Delicate pages are intact with expected tanning. Cover is loose from the book with a large stain to blank area. Otherwise very good condition. unknown
1988223411988. Baim Tracy ed. Outlines: The Voice of the Gay and Lesbian Community archive 1988 to 1992 documents Chicago LGBTQ journalism during the AIDS crisis the expansion of queer community media and the intensification of legal cultural and political struggles over gay and lesbian public life. Tracy Baim co-founded Outlines in 1987 after co-founding Windy City Times in 1985 and contemporary accounts describe Outlines as part of a competitive and consequential Chicago LGBTQ newspaper environment that helped record local and national movement history. These issues show the cultural sphere of LGBTQ community journalism through interviews protest photography AIDS coverage lesbian conference reporting arts criticism legislative updates and international news offering insight into how queer periodicals connected Chicago readers to national politics women's culture legal advocacy and media representation.<br /> <br /> Outlines: The Voice of the Gay and Lesbian Community. Chicago: Lambda Publications 1988 to 1992. Five issues. Archive of five issues from Vol. 2 Nos. 4 and 7; Vol. 4 No. 12; and Vol. 5 Nos. 6 and 8 with visible contents including feature interviews community news protest reporting arts coverage AIDS-related material legal updates and national and international LGBTQ news. 1 Baim Tracy ed. Outlines: The Voice of the Gay and Lesbian Community. Vol. 2 No. 4. Chicago: Lambda Publications 1988. The September 1988 issue carries the headline "Michigan Fest" and centers a report on the Michigan Womyn's Music Festival with additional coverage of an AIDS benefit hosted by Circus Vargas Lily Tomlin and Robin Tyler performances activism against a state AIDS bill protest at the Republican National Convention and a profile of author John Rechy. The issue is especially useful for documenting lesbian cultural space AIDS-era benefit work electoral protest and queer literary visibility within one Chicago-based periodical. 2 Baim Tracy ed. Outlines: The Voice of the Gay and Lesbian Community. Vol. 2 No. 7. Chicago: Lambda Publications 1988. The December 1988 issue features "Torch Song Trilogy-An Interview with Harvey Fierstein" and includes coverage of gay and lesbian choruses queer bookstores LGBTQ representation at Carnegie Hall holiday community programming and World AIDS Day reflections. Its contents place queer performance memorial practice and community institutions within the same field of coverage. 3 Baim Tracy ed. Outlines: The Voice of the Gay and Lesbian Community. Vol. 4 No. 12. Chicago: Lambda Publications 1991. The May 1991 issue headed "3000 at Lesbian Confab" covers a major gathering of lesbian leaders includes an interview with Christie Hefner reports on plans for a Chicago LGBTQ community center and includes global LGBTQ coverage state legislative updates and a section for Asian American Heritage Month. The issue documents lesbian organizing community infrastructure international attention and race-conscious editorial programming. 4 Baim Tracy ed. Outlines: The Voice of the Gay and Lesbian Community. Vol. 5 No. 6. Chicago: Lambda Publications 1991. The November 1991 issue uses the cover title "Victims No More" and documents protests against Cracker Barrel's anti-gay hiring practices and California's veto of gay-rights legislation with a cover image of queer activists confronting authority. Contents include "Dykes Take the Capitol" visuals an interview with Lily Tomlin and legal coverage of Chicago Police Department accountability rulings and internal discipline decisions in a gay case placing street protest lesbian direct action celebrity interview and police accountability in direct relation. 5 Baim Tracy ed. Outlines: The Voice of the Gay and Lesbian Community. Vol. 5 No. 8. Chicago: Lambda Publications 1992. The January 1992 issue headed "World Review: Victories and Setbacks Marked a Momentous 1991" includes coverage of the Thompson/Kowalski guardianship victory international LGBTQ repression including Russia setbacks for LGBTQ political appointments in Chicago Gloria Steinem's Revolution from Within interviews with Dick Sargent and Joe Keenan and legal action against Cracker Barrel. The retrospective format shows how Outlines framed a single year through law family recognition international repression feminism popular culture and workplace discrimination.<br /> <br /> Mild handling wear age toning to newsprint and creasing consistent with circulation and storage very good overall. Concentrated AIDS-era and early 1990s LGBTQ press archive preserving Chicago-based coverage of lesbian organizing queer cultural production legal rights struggles anti-discrimination protest police accountability and national and international movement news. unknown
0204QYR0RFPHardcover. Good. Good on the outside very good inside full leather with consistent scuffing and ghost of gold lettering still visible. Very good inside. Well bound complete. Friends' Miscellany 1837 Hardcover Isaac Comly Joshua Evans John Hunt John Comly hardcover
1875103812Paris rue Guénégaud 1875. Bonded Leather. <b>Livre en français</b>. Couverture rigide. 10 volumes 16 x 24 cm d'environ 400 pages reliures demi basane en très bon état. <i>ref. 103812</i> Paris, rue Guénégaud hardcover
190543844Ottawa Valley. Manuscript 1905. 24mo. 13.5cm circa 200 pages in manuscript black ink closely written fairly legible in full maroon limp fine grain calf typical diary type binding of the day french marbled endpapers and edges some slight edge wear rear inner paper over the hinge is broken this is common with diaries as they were opened flat and pressed down for writing in the text is clean and sound ~ all considered. A Very Good Copy. Middle-class women were not expected to write professionally in Victorian / Edwardian times. Diaries however gave these ladies an opportunity to express themselves in print. This fine example is probably part of a series of her output. Diaries of this era were more commonly done by the Upper classes describing vacation trips and scenery clippings chromo litho flora printing and cards poetry. Full length day to working day diaries are much less common even rare. Ottawa Valley. Manuscript unknown
34486Manuscript. 1865-1870. Soft cover. folio.34x 20cm c.400p. hand-written in half reversed calf pebbled clothboards leather spine title "Journal" spine heavily worn wear on theboard edges covers worn contents very good. cgc The village of SouthMountain is located in the county of Dundas in eastern Ontario. Aninteresting mix of products sold - hardware clothing food cloth - asexpected in a nineteenth century country store. The customer names include Hyndman saw mill owner Fell Richardson Beggs McConkeyReverend Bell Ridley and many more making this an valuable research itemfor Eastern Ontario genealogists. The use of old journals as scrapbookswas a common undertaking as unlike today paper could be a scarcecommodity in rural areas. Manuscript. 1865-1870 unknown
186412254<p>A nice example of a very uncommon newspaper printed weekly for the staff and patients of Hammond General or Point Lookout Hospital during 1863 and 1864. This Hospital for Union troops was constructed at the location of a summer resort on an isolated peninsula extending into Chesapeake Bay. After the Battle of Gettysburg during which a large number of Confederate troops were captured Point Lookout also quickly became the location of the largest Union prison camp. </p><p>The newspaper carries war news some general news and even a bit of poetry. The back page contains a list of the staff of the Hospital as well as the names States and units of the current patients. There were about 250 patients at the Hospital when this issue of the newspaper was printed. </p><p>The newspaper also contains several Army reports and notices including one noting the continued poor health of General Meade and the likelihood that "in consequence thereof General Grant will command the army in person." Also included is a clarifying proclamation regarding amnesty issued by President Lincoln.</p><p>Issues of this wartime hospital newspaper are very uncommon. As an indication of its rarity: the American Antiquarian Society which has the country's largest collection of newspapers only holds nine issues of the paper not including the issue offered here. ICN 7386.</p><br /> George Everett, Publisher.
19982091502133534565Setagun'azumamura 1998. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 2 Setagun'azumamura paperback
M14416Very rare set of 206 issues in 23 volumes. Société Française d'Egyptologie Paris 1949-2023. First edition. In-8. Contemporary cloth and half-leather until #196 and softcover from #197 to #209. From the library of Egyptologist Charles Cornell Van Siclen III VSX. Language: French/Français. This set ships from the USA shipping costs will be updated accordingly TXR. Relevant subjects: Egypt: Journals Egypt. unknown
M14395Rare set of 14 volumes. Göttinger Miszellen Beiheft 1-9 & 11-16. Göttingen 2007-2016. First edition except vol. 7 which is the 2nd revised edition. In-8. Vol. 1 2007: iv & 85 pages 2 colour plates 15 b/w plates 4 maps. Vol. 2 2007: 112 pages. Vol. 3 2008: 160 pages. Vol. 4 2008: vii & 120 pages. Vol. 5 2009: xii & 139 pages. Vol. 6 2009: iii & 107 pages. Vol. 7 2014: 166 pages. Vol. 8 2010: 120 pages. Vol. 9 2011: vii & 184 pages. Vol. 11 2012: 118 pages 44 plates. Vol. 12 2012: 164 pages. Vol. 13 2013: 128 pages. Vol. 14 2013: viii & 387 pages. Vol. 16 2014: 104 pages. Original softcover a fine set. From the library of Egyptologist Charles Cornell Van Siclen III VSX. Language: German/Deutsch. This set ships from the USA shipping costs will be updated accordingly TXR. Relevant subjects: Egypt: Journals Egypt. unknown
M12722Complete run of 9 issues in 3 volumes. Gorgias Press Piscataway NJ 2010-2017. First edition. Volumes 1-4 and 5-8 bound in half-leather volume 9 in its original softcover. A fine set. From the library of Egyptologist Charles Cornell Van Siclen III VSX. Language: English - French/Français. This set ships from the USA shipping costs will be updated accordingly TXR. Relevant subjects: Egypt: Journals Egypt Coptic Language Texts & Writing Coptic Studies. unknown
M14408Rare set of 11 volumes. Sudan Antiquities Service Khartum 1960-2008. First edition. In-8. Original softcover rubbed and sometimes stained otherwise a very good set. From the library of Egyptologist Charles Cornell Van Siclen III VSX. Language: English. This set ships from the USA shipping costs will be updated accordingly TXR. Relevant subjects: Egypt: Journals Egypt Nubia & Africa. unknown
M14402Rare set of 9 monographs bound in one partly XEROX. Mededelingen en Verhandelingen van het Vooraziatisch-Egyptisch Genotschap 1-12. Rijksmuseum van Oudheden te Leiden Leiden 1933-1957. First edition. In-4. Vol. 1 1933 in XEROX: pages 44-66. Vol. 2 1935 original: 26 pages. Vol. 3 and 3A 1936-1938 original: 24 pages 14 plates pages 29-32 plates 15-17. Vol. 4 1939 original: 32 pages 2 plates. Vol. 5 1943 original: 104 pages 5 plates. Vol. 7 1947 in XEROX: pages 19-32 & 255-267. Vol. 10 1953 original: 28 pages. Vol. 11 1956 original: 37 pages. Vol. 12 1957 original: 40 pages 18 plates. Later cloth a fine copy. From the library of Egyptologist Charles Cornell Van Siclen III VSX. Language: Dutch/Nederlands - English. This book ships from the USA shipping costs will be updated accordingly TXR. Relevant subjects: Egypt: General. unknown
1990HVD-43536-XZ-0New York NY: Human Sciences Press. Very Good. 1990 - 1994. Serial Issue. Paperback. Charts; Minor smudges and rubbing to the covers. Very Good condition otherwise. No other noteworthy defects. No markings. ; - Your satisfaction is our priority. We offer free returns and respond promptly to all inquiries. Your item will be carefully cushioned in bubble wrap and securely boxed. All orders ship on the same or next business day. Buy with confidence. . Human Sciences Press paperback
19742090502128701901Sakamoto Hiroshi Saburo 1974. Soft Cover. Fine. Size: chrysanthemum format Number of books: 2 Sakamoto Hiroshi Saburo paperback
19322110502150400420Publishing and printing person Taizo Ishiba Hinoue-cho Kita-ku Osaka 1932. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Publishing and printing person Taizo Ishiba (Hinoue-cho, Kita-ku, Osaka) paperback
19962091202133202160Izumi shoin 1996. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Izumi shoin paperback
19982111902156001184Chinese voice 1998. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Chinese voice paperback
1881NF3702THE ART JOURNAL NEW SERIES J. S. Virtue & Co. Lim. 1881 first edition 380 pages some wear to the bottom board edges and fore edge corner tips some flaking to the bottom edge of the spine else a tight solid vg copy bound in green half leather and like pebbled cloth with marbled end-papers and near fine contents containing 12 etchings; 12 steel engravings; 8 facsimiles; 4 steel engravings from sculpture and 1 colored illustration each with original tissue guard not to mention 100's of fine illustrations with the text. We cannot locate any institutional holdings of this item. J. S. Virtue & Co., Lim. hardcover
19782090502130301086Hyogo Prefecture Kinosaki Town Board of Education 1978. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 1 Hyogo Prefecture Kinosaki Town Board of Education paperback
1994354805Cambridge: University Press 1994. First Edition. Softcover. Near fine set in the original stiff-card wrappers; edges very slightly dust-dulled and toned. Remains particularly and surprisingly well-preserved; tight bright clean and especially sharp-cornered. Physical description; 36 volumes. Contents; vol. 2 part 1: February 1994 ; v. 2 no. 2: June 1994 ; v. 2 part 3: October 1994 ; v. 3 part 1: February 1995 ; v. 3 part 2: June 1995 ; v. 3 part 3: October 1995 ; v. 8: part 1: February 2000 ; v. 8 part 2: June 2000 ; v. 8: part 3: October 2000 ; v. 11 Part 1: February 2003 ; v. 11 part 2: June 2003 ; v. 11 part 3: October 2003 ; v. 12 part 1: February 2004 ; v. 12 part 2: June 2004 ; v. 12 part 3: October 2004 ; v. 13 part 1: February 2005 ; v. 14 part 1: February 2006 ; v. 14 part 1; February 2006 ; v. 14 part 2: June 2006 ; v. 14 part 3: October 2006 ; v. 15 no. 1: February 2007 ; v. 15 no. 2 June 2007 ; v. 15 no. 3: October 2007 ; v. 14 n.S. 2008 ; v. 16 no. 1: February 2008 ; v. 16 no. 2: June 2008 ; v. 16 no. 3: Special Issue: Colonial Legacies: October 2008 ; v. 17 no. 1: Special Issue: Anthropology of contemporary China: February 2009 ; v. 17 no. 2: May 2009 ; v. 17 no. 3: August 2009 ; v. 17 no. 4: Special Issue: 'Muslim Women' in Europe: November 2009 ; v. 18 no. 1: special issue: Anthropologies of university reform: February 2010 ; v. 18 no. 2: May 2010 ; v. 18 no. 3: August 2010 ; v. 18 No. 4: Special Issue: a cosmopolitan anthropology: November 2010. Subjects; Social Anthropology. Anthropology. Cambridge: University Press paperback
19712080502106910816Not Available 1971. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Not Available paperback
19762080502106905316Not Available 1976. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Not Available paperback
1981223841981. SocialismLaborFeminismEducation Nine-issue archive of Radical Teacher a socialist and feminist journal devoted to theory and practice in education spanning the 1980s and early 90s. These issues capture a generation of leftist educators and scholars responding to U.S. imperialism apartheid racism sexism and structural inequality through pedagogical critique. The archive foregrounds writing by and about women and people of color particularly Black feminist educators women's studies pioneers and anti-racist activists in academia. Contributors include Sharon Dean Erlene Stetson Sara Freedman Cynthia Kinnard and Becky Thompson among others .Archive includes:<br /> <br /> 1 Radical Teacher No. 18 Spring 1981. Focuses on feminist teaching and women's studies. Opens with "Flower-Dust and Springtime: Harlem Renaissance Women" by Sharon Dean and Erlene Stetson-a rare educational examination of Zora Neale Hurston Georgia Douglas Johnson and other Black women writers. Essays include feminist teaching guides course design and critical reflections on pedagogy by and for women. Contributors include Nancy Schniedewind Cynthia Kinnard Berenice Fisher and Jean Robinson. Light edgewear.<br /> <br /> 2 Radical Teacher No. 21 1982. Issue theme: anti-imperialism and critical pedagogy. Features teaching on Nicaragua and essays on apartheid women college students and the return of the draft. Of special note is Renate Duelli-Klein's "Women College Students and Feminism" an intersectional analysis of women's shifting relationship to institutional politics. Also includes coverage of South African resistance and PACE Progressive Adult and Continuing Education. Moderate edge wear else clean.<br /> <br /> 3 Radical Teacher No. 32 Spring 1987. A cluster on women and labor in socialist Eastern Europe including "Education in Yugoslavia" and Madonne Miner's "Another Women's Play Doesn't That Make Like Number 6"-a critique of the marginalization of women's theatrical texts in English curricula. Also includes discussions of Simone de Beauvoir Fred Ho and Croom Helm and Cold War pedagogy. Light wear very good.<br /> <br /> 4 Radical Teacher No. 35 Summer 1988. Theme: Christianity and education. Articles examine radical Christianity teaching religion critically and confronting fundamentalism in schools. Notable contributions include Kathleen Sands on religion in the university and Caroline Zinsser on biblical literalism. While not a themed feminist issue several authors critique patriarchy in religious education. Minor corner crease.<br /> <br /> 5 Radical Teacher No. 36 1989. Family and education theme. Articles include Sara Freedman's "To Love and to Work" on the double burden of women teachers and mothers and Ynestra King's "Family Secrets" on teaching domestic violence. The issue challenges traditional conceptions of the nuclear family through a feminist lens. Excellent feminist scholarship by and about women. Light wear to spine.<br /> <br /> 6 Radical Teacher No. 37 1989. Theme: balancing the curriculum. Focuses on race gender and class integration in U.S. syllabi. Includes a collective essay by Marie Buncombe and Dorothy O. Helly on curriculum transformation and a review of Women Teaching for Change. Particularly rich in content on BIPOC authors and inclusive pedagogy. Near fine.<br /> <br /> 7 Radical Teacher No. 38 1990. Special issue on Mississippi Freedom Schools. Includes Charles Cobb Liz Fusco and Jimmy Garrett on education in the 1964 Freedom Summer with facsimiles of original curricula and poetry. Features Susan O'Malley's tribute to Myles Horton. An essential issue for those studying African American education SNCC pedagogy and movement schooling. Excellent condition.<br /> <br /> 8 Radical Teacher No. 40 1991. Issue on education and revolution. Focuses on Nicaragua Cuba Palestine and apartheid-era South Africa. Judy Brady's "Why Do Cuban Children Learn" and Ellen Fleischmann's "Education in the West Bank" are standout articles. Centers anti-imperialist and decolonial education frameworks. Light wear to fore-edge.<br /> <br /> 9 Radical Teacher No. 41 1992. Feminist Pedagogies and Difference in the Classroom. A landmark issue featuring Becky Thompson and Signe Disch on anti-oppression teaching Sarah Napier on elementary-level women's studies and Ruth Hsiao's guide to teaching Asian American literature. Noteworthy for its intersectional focus and diverse author pool including multiple women of color educators. Near fine.<br /> <br /> Overall condition very good with light handling wear and some edge toning. A rich pedagogical archive documenting the intersections of feminism socialism anti-racism and education in late 20th-century activist scholarship. unknown