70 résultats
1994NL0054London: Atlas Press 1994. 1st edition. Soft cover. Very Good/No Jacket as issued. VG. 8vo 208pp printed wrappers. The rare first Atlas edition of this collection of texts by this fated Surrealist author. Tight copy appears unread minor bump to one corner some toning to interior stock. London: Atlas Press paperback
000791Publisher: Yale Journal of Law and Feminism 1992 Good Soft Cover cover rubbed. paperback
1989x-0803933983Sage Pubns 1989. Paperback. New. illustrated edition. 216 pages. 8.75x5.75x0.75 inches. Sage Pubns paperback
193912535King 1939. First Edition. Softcover. Good Condition/No Dust Jacket. Size: Quarto. Text body is clean and free from previous owner annotation underlining and highlighting. Binding is tight covers and spine fully intact bar chips to top and/or bottom section of spine. Endpapers browned text block clean. Previous owner's signature in ink. Edges foxed and browned. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilogram. Category: Women & Feminism; All our pictures shown here are of the actual item not stock photos. Inventory No: 12535. . King paperback
1982M4683Buffalo NY: Top Stories / Hallwalls 1982. 1st edition. Soft cover. Very Good/No Jacket as issued. VG. 8vo 24pp stapled wrappers. First printing of this scarce early entry in the Top Stories series. This issue is entirely in comics format in the underground comix vein and includes poster designs for Nan Goldin events. Publisher's order form bound in. Library stamp and pen line to front cover internally clean and unmarked. Buffalo, NY: Top Stories / Hallwalls paperback
20032090502113716870Not Available 2003. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Not Available paperback
1890001476London Printing & Publishing Company Approx 1890. 48 engraved plates - of the heroines - engraved in the style of art from drawings by Frith Egg Kenny Meadows Hayter Corbould and other eminent artists. Letter-press extracts from the text in English and French; and critical essays on each of the characters. Tooled and ornate gilt leather spine. Overall very good condition. Happy to answer any questions and will gladly email a scan of book. Half-Leather. Large format Hardback. <br /><br /> London Printing & Publishing Company, hardcover
2019004180Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press 2019. Hardcover. Near Fine. 8vo. xx 2 382 4 pp. Bound in glossy illustrated boards. Issued without dust jacket. Black and white illustrations. Includes bibliography and index. Near Fine minor scuffing to glossy boards otherwise crisp and clean. <br/><br/> University of Nebraska Press hardcover
1992Q-0520065530University of California Press 1992-02-25. Paperback. New. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! University of California Press paperback
0520065522.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
16236London: Cornelius Buck 23 Paternoster Row E.C. 1869. 7pp. 8vo. Inscribed at head of title-page: '<> an earnest request for a careful consideration of the whole question'. In fair condition lightly aged and worn no wraps disbound. Only one copy traced on either COPAC or OCLC WorldCat at the BL. London: Cornelius Buck, 23, Paternoster Row, E.C. 1869. paperback
16260'Frederick Bell & Co. Steam Printers King's Road Chelsea.' 1868. 4pp. 8vo. Bifolium with drophead title. In fair condition aged and worn disbound with chipping and damage at spine. Three copies on COPAC. ['Frederick Bell & Co., Steam Printers, King's Road, Chelsea.'] [1868.] unknown
16157Without place or printer. 1870. 2pp. 8vo. Handbill with drophead title. Dated at end 'Cambridge March 1. F. D. MAURICE.' In good condition lightly-aged disbound. No copy traced on either COPAC or OCLC WorldCat. Without place or printer. [1870.] unknown
16184Published by the London National Society for Women's Suffrage. London: Printed by Spottiswoode & Co. New-street Square Farringdon Street and 30 Parliament Street Westminster. 1869. 24pp. 8vo. In good condition lightly-aged no wraps disbound. Published by the London National Society for Women's Suffrage. London: Printed by Spottiswoode & Co., New-street Square, Farring paperback
200429007Univ. of Pennsylvania 2004. First Edition. Hardcover Original Cloth. As New/As New. One of a large sophisticated collection from an Australian anthropologist on New Guinea Papua and related subject areas. Several hundred volumes from this collection are listed at this site and can be found as a set by searching for the special Keyword pwnewguinea. Size: Octavo standard book size. 254 pages. Text body is clean and free from previous owner annotation underlining and highlighting. Binding is tight covers and spine fully intact. No foxing in this copy. Dust Jacket is in as new condition apart from normal shop shelf wear - contains no tears or chips or other damage. Dust Jacket un-clipped. All edges clean neat and free of foxing. Book and dustjacket condition has been well-preserved due to clear acid-free Mylar book/jacket covers . Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilogram. Category: Anthropology; Papua New Guinea; Women & Feminism. ISBN: 0812237897. ISBN/EAN: 9780812237894. All our pictures shown here are of the actual item not stock photos. Inventory No: 29007. . 9780812237894 Univ. of Pennsylvania hardcover
19982090502126802576Gaku-gei shorin 1998. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Gaku-gei shorin paperback
2090502113706306Not Available N.A. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Not Available paperback
19982091202133203788Gakugeishorin 1998. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Gakugeishorin paperback
MA 9781786995308USA Edition . New. Brand New! Fast Delivery US Edition and ship within 24-48 hours. Deliver by FedEx and Dhl & Aramex UPS & USPS and we do accept APO and PO BOX Addresses. Order can be delivered worldwide within 6-10 days and we do have flat rate for up to 2LB. Extra shipping charges will be requested if the Book weight is more than 5 LB. This Item May be shipped from India United states & United Kingdom. Depending on your location and availability. unknown
2019Manohar-9781786995308Zed Books 2019. Paperback. New. Zed Books paperback
2019Manohar-9781786995308Zed Books 2019. Paperback. New. Zed Books paperback
23105London: Trübner and Co. 60 Paternoster Row. 1867. Printed by J. E. Taylor and Co. Little Queen Street Lincoln's Inn Fields. 18pp. 8vo. In good condition lightly-aged no wraps disbound. Number of copies in libraries. London: Trübner and Co., 60, Paternoster Row. 1867. [Printed by J. E. Taylor and Co., Little Queen Street, Lincoln's Inn Fields paperback
16175Printed by Spottiswoode & Co. New-street Square London. 1870. 12pp. 12mo. In good condition lightly-aged no wraps disbound. Two copies on COPAC and two copies on OCLC WorldCat. Printed by Spottiswoode & Co., New-street Square, London. 1870. paperback
1978220741978. Gay Community News a major grassroots LGBTQ newspaper published in Boston between 1973 and 1992 documenting lesbian and gay political activism feminist organizing anti-racist solidarity movements and state surveillance during the post-Stonewall era. Produced collectively and distributed nationally through activist and community networks the publication served as one of the most influential independent queer newspapers in the United States during the late 1970s and early 1980s. The archive reflects LGBTQ political and cultural expression within the underground press illustrating how queer activists responded to institutional discrimination media hostility police violence and internal community debates through journalism photography and movement reporting. The issues preserve contemporary coverage of major developments including the White Night Riots anti-lesbian military investigations attacks on queer institutions and lesbian visibility in sports and public life providing important evidence of the political priorities and cultural language of LGBTQ activism before the AIDS crisis transformed queer organizing in the United States.<br /> <br /> Gay Community News. Boston Massachusetts 1978-1981. Five tabloid-format newspaper issues printed on newsprint each approximately 16-24 pages and illustrated throughout with black-and-white photography activist graphics and bold typographic layouts. 1 Gay Community News. Vol. 5 No. 48. Boston: June 17 1978. Includes a Lesbian & Gay Pride Calendar coverage of the expulsion of two gay seminarians from a Methodist institution reporting on tax-exempt status controversies affecting queer organizations and continuation of a fire safety project focused on LGBTQ households. Front cover features a pride march photograph prominently displaying a "Women Unite" banner. 2 Gay Community News. Vol. 6 No. 8. Boston: September 16 1978. Documents the fifth break-in and ransacking of the newspaper's offices that year alongside reporting on Anita Bryant's canceled Boston appearances and a feature discussing the poetry of Adrienne Rich. 3 Gay Community News. Vol. 6 No. 44. Boston: June 2 1979. Covers the White Night Riots in San Francisco following Dan White's manslaughter conviction in the killings of Harvey Milk and George Moscone accompanied by front-page protest photographs outside City Hall. Additional articles address the Thorpe trial and legal challenges to anti-gay legislation in Oklahoma. 4 Gay Community News. Vol. 7 No. 48. Boston: June 28 1980. Reports on anti-lesbian investigations within the U.S. Navy under the headline "Women Undergo Psychological Testing in Navy's Lesbian 'Witchhunt'" while also covering discrimination cases involving Black lesbians in Chicago and aid efforts supporting Cuban refugees. 5 Gay Community News. Vol. 8 No. 42. Boston: May 16 1981. Features extensive coverage of Billie Jean King's public outing and the media response under the headline "Yes There Are Lesbians in Tennis" alongside articles on Latin American gay activism antiwar protest movements and women participating in the Boston Marathon.<br /> <br /> The archive captures a critical period in LGBTQ history marked by expanding queer political visibility alongside escalating backlash from religious institutions employers law enforcement and government agencies. Gay Community News distinguished itself from commercial gay publications through its sustained emphasis on feminism anti-racism labor activism antiwar politics and coalition-building across social movements. Coverage of the White Night Riots military anti-lesbian purges attacks on queer institutions and lesbian representation in public culture demonstrates the newspaper's role as both activist platform and documentary record of late twentieth-century LGBTQ organizing. Edge wear creasing moderate toning and occasional closed tears consistent with the fragility of newsprint; interiors remain generally clean and legible throughout. Overall good to very good condition. An important archive of underground queer journalism documenting political struggle lesbian feminist activism and community self-representation during the post-Stonewall decade. unknown
191168600New York: Mother Earth Publishing Association 1911. Third edition Second revised edition on title page. Hardcover. Good. SIGNED. 277pp. plus 8pp. of publisher's advertisements at the rear. Duodecimo 19 cm Beige cloth over boards with a black ink stamped title on the backstrip and front board and black ink stamped single-ruled borders on the front board. Reproduced photographic frontispiece portrait of the author by T. Kajiwara. Prominent toning to the spine and a large section of the rear board. Cloth a bit frayed at the edges with the underlying boards at times peeking through. Endpapers split along the hinges. Text block cracked at the title page. Name in pencil on the title page. Very occasional brief markings mostly in the form of hatching in pencil and colored pencil. With two newspaper clippings pertaining to Emma Goldman "Red Emma" laid in. A classic of radical literature. Third edition printed on front cover. Emma Goldman was once viewed as "the most dangerous woman in America" and was a thinker so far ahead of her time that even today her views seem strikingly revolutionary. This collection of essays is a magnificent introduction to her thoughts: ranging from her views on women's suffrage and emancipation patriotism's menace to liberty the psychology of political violence the prison system "a social crime and failure" the hypocrisy of Puritanism and the strategies of dissent. These writings all reflect her fearless joyousness her radical dedication to the idea that life is meant to be a source of delight- and that avoiding the meaningless grind of everyday life must be achieved in any way possible.<br /> <br /> This copy is inscribed not to a specific person by Emma Goldman on the front free endpaper: "Emma Goldman / Portland August / 1916."<br /> <br /> Emma Goldman 1869-1940 was born in Kovno now Kaunas Lithuania. She grew up in what is now Kaliningrad Russia and in St. Petersburg. Her formal education was limited but she read widely and in St. Petersburg became involved with a radical student circle. She immigrated to the United States in 1885 first settling in Rochester New York then in New Haven Connecticut where she worked in clothing factories and came into contact with socialist and anarchist groups. Subsequently she moved to New York City where in 1893 she was jailed for inciting a riot when a group of unemployed workers reacted to a fiery speech she had delivered. In 1895 upon her release Goldman began lecturing throughout Europe and the United States and later in 1906 Goldman founded Mother Earth a periodical that she edited until its suppression in 1917. Goldman's naturalization as a U.S. citizen was revoked by a legal stratagem in 1908. Two years later she published Anarchism and Other Essays.<br /> <br /> An early edition of Goldman's famous essays signed by the much revered revolutionary activist author just under a year before she was sentenced to two years in prison for her opposition to the U.S. involvement in World War I and for agitating against mandatory military service. Mother Earth Publishing Association hardcover