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Original Wraps. 12mo. 96, [6] pages. 17 cm. Only edition. With 6 leaves of plates, depicting photographs of the facilities of the YWHA building at 31 West 110th Street, New York City. Fourteenth Annual Report of the YWHA. Subjects: Jews - New York (State) - New York. Young Women's Hebrew Association (New York, N. Y. ) - Annual Reports. OCLC lists 1 copy (NYPL) . Light soiling and wear to wraps, otherwise clean and fresh. Good + condition. (WOMEN-1-26) xxx
Original Wraps. 4to. 16 pages. 26 cm. Periodical of the Young Women's Hebrew Association members at the Dormitory building. Third issue, first volume, of 'Kol Alamoth'. Issued quarterly by the Dormitory girls and Associate members of the Young Women's Hebrew Association, 31, W. 1110th st. New York City. Editor in chief Esther Schulman. Issue dedicated to Miss Sophia Berger. Contains portraits of Sophia Berger, Carrie Sommerfeld, photograph of the swimming pool at the YWHA building. Contains poems, articles, and short stories from members of the YWHA building. With an article commemorating the Fifteenth Anniversary of the YWHA. Subjects: Kol Alamoth Periodical YWHA. None listed on OCLC. Scarce. Edge wear and light soiling to wraps, otherwise clean and fresh. Good + condition. (WOMEN-1-27)
Original Wraps. 12mo. 137, [5] pages. 17 cm. Only edition. With 5 leaves of plates depicting the facilities of the YWHA building (31 West 110th Street) , celebration of Succah, etc. Detailed thirteenth annual report of the YWHA. As a communal agency run entirely by and for women, the YWHA provided an important political arena for Jewish women in the early part of the twentieth century. As a pioneering Jewish institution combining social and religious services, the YWHA became one of the principal sources of the Jewish community center movement. - Jewish Women's Archive. Subjects: Jews - New York (State) - New York. Young Women's Hebrew Association (New York, N. Y. ) - Annual Reports. OCLC lists 1 copy (NYPL) . Edges of wraps cghipped, light soiling to wraps, otherwise clean and fresh. Very good condition. (WOMEN-1-25) xx
Original Wraps. 12mo. 94, [7] pages. 17 cm. Only edition. With 7 leaves of plates: depicting the Young Women's Hebrew Association building, facilities, and courses. Detailed twelfth annual report of the YWHA. As a communal agency run entirely by and for women, the YWHA provided an important political arena for Jewish women in the early part of the twentieth century. As a pioneering Jewish institution combining social and religious services, the YWHA became one of the principal sources of the Jewish community center movement. In the new building of 1914, the auditorium doubled as the synagogue, and services were conducted every Friday night, Saturday morning, and on Jewish holidays. The other major Jewish aspect of the YWHA was its curriculum consisting of classes in Hebrew, Bible study, and Jewish history. This was coordinated with an experimental Hebrew school for girls conducted at the YWHA by the Bureau of Jewish Education (of the New York City Kehilla) . Of course, the YWHA offered far more than religious services and Hebrew classes. In 1917, a few years after the completion of its new eight-story facility on 110th Street overlooking Central Park, the New York YWHA was described as 'the only large institution of its kind in America. ' The description of the modern social center continued: 'Besides being a most comfortable home for one hundred and seventy girls, the building is also a true center for the communal interests of the neighborhood; it houses a Commercial School, a Hebrew School, Trade Classes in Dressmaking, Millinery, Domestic Science, classes in Hebrew, Bible Study, Jewish History, Art, English to Foreigners, Advanced English, French, Spanish, and Nursing. There is a completely equipped modern gymnasium and swimming pool. - Jewish Women's Archive. Subjects: Jews - New York (State) - New York. Young Women's Hebrew Association (New York, N. Y. ) - Annual Reports. OCLC lists 1 copy (NYPL) . Wraps previously rebacked, bumped and soiled wraps, internally clean and fresh. Good + condition. Rare. (WOMEN-1-24)
1988100145664MIT Press 1988 304 pages 15 24x22 86x1 7526cm. 1988. Broché. 304 pages. Ce livre examine de près les sogo shosha les puissantes maisons de commerce japonaises comme Mitsubishi et Mitsui qui gèrent environ la moitié des exportations et importations du Japon. Il fournit une description systématique et équilibrée de leurs opérations couvrant des aspects allant de la finance au personnel
185513384Paris Meyrueis 1855
1989Etb7115,6 cm X 24,1 cm, 212 pp + 4 planches d'illustrations N&B, couverture souple et illustrée. Broché.
Fine Turkish Original b/w photograph. 8,5x13,5 cm. Shows Yildiz Eruçman and twelve male parachutists and aviators, an aircraft wing with its shadow on the surface. Yildiz Kayalar Eruçman was the first Turkish female parachutist. She was born in Thessaloniki, Kingdom of Greece in 1919. Her family was of Turkish descent, and according to the Population exchange agreement between Turkey and Greece, her family moved to Turkey and settled in Izmir in 1924. In 1934, after the Surname Law, the family assumed the surname Kayalar. Eruçman is her surname by marriage. In 1935, after reading an article in a foreign periodical about female pilots, she applied to the training center of the Turkish Aeronautical Association in Ankara. Mustafa Kemal Atatürk's adopted daughter and aviator Sabiha Gökçen personally concerned herself with Eruçman's training. Together with three other women in the training center, namely Edibe Subasi, Nezihe Viranyali, and Sahavet Karapas, she received her aviation certificate. On 4 October 1935, she parachuted from a Soviet-made aircraft of type Polikarpov R-5. She was the first-ever female skydiver in Turkey. In later years, she continued in the same association as a trainer. However, her profession was not officially acknowledged. So, her title was "minaret worker", which was considered one of the most dangerous occupations of that time. A fine and extremely rare image.
Fine English Paperback., Very good., 20 x 14 cm, 190 p. "Osmanli'da kadin dergileri ve sosyoloji dergileri., YILDIZ AKPOLAT, Fenomen Yayincilik, Istanbul, N.d.i .
New English Paperback. Pbo. Demy 8vo. (21 x 15 cm). In English. 582 p. World War I deeply altered the lives of Muslim Ottoman women. The Ottoman Army consisted only of Muslim men and war caused the death of one and a half million Muslim Ottoman men. The heavy losses of the Ottoman army meant that every day more and more dependants lost their breadwinners. When the breadwinner had gone to war, was wounded or died at the front; the wives, daughters, sisters and mothers they had left behind were faced with two options: to find work and make a living, or to starve to death. On 14 August 1916, the Committee of Union and Progress (Ittihâd ve Terakkî Cemiyeti), the ruling party of the Ottoman Empire, established a new society under the leadership of one of its leading figures: Vice-Commander and Minister of War, Enver Pasa. The Society for the Employment of Ottoman Muslim Women (Kadinlari Çalistirma Cemiyet-i Islâmiyesi) was a Unionist organization created to find employment for Muslim Ottoman women who were in urgent economic need. Within a matter of months, it received more than 14,000 applications and was soon employing 8,194 destitute Ottoman women in its braches and in the related state and military institutions. In time, it would offer jobs to an aggregate number of 20,000 women workers, and became the leading employer of Muslim Ottoman women in the Ottoman Empire. This comprehensive work constitutes both a case study of Muslim Ottoman women during World War I, and a detailed analysis of the foundation, organization and activities of the Society for the Employment of Ottoman Muslim Women, created to find employment for them.
Very Good Turkish, Ottoman (1500-1928) Contemporary green cloth bdg. Slight scratches on faded cloth, with slight foxing on pages. Overall a good copy. Cr. 8vo. (20 x 14 cm). In Ottoman script (Old Turkish with Arabic letters). 238, [2] p., 1 b/w portrait of Nezihe, ills. First and only edition of this exceedingly rare first book including a "May 1" poem, written by a Turkish female poet Yazar Nezihe. Nezihe was considered as one of the female poets in the Ottoman Period. She is known as a writer of the first Turkish poem for International Workers' Day on May 1. Yasar Nezihe differed from other female poets of the period in the sense of her life story and a contrary literary identity. Throughout her lifetime, she wrote poems about her penurious and challenging childhood as well as her love life and marriages. Being known as the first female poet whose works were published in Aydinlik Dergisi (i.e. Enlightenment Journal), Yasar Nezihe also became prominent for supporting labor unrests and her activist identity. She was recognized as a socialist poet who gave voice to poverty in her poems. She wrote the poem named "Gazete Sahiplerine" (i.e. To Newspaper Owners) addressing the executives with the intent of supporting laborers who were on strike because of the disagreement between newspaper owners and Mürettipler Cemiyeti (i.e. Typesetters Society). (Source: Wikipedia). This is her second poetry book. Being the first female poet wrote in Aydinlik Dergisi, Yasar Nezihe Bükülmez was accused of being a communist because of her writings, her membership of Osmanli Amele Cemiyeti [The Ottoman Workers' Society], and support for labor unrests and was arrested. Book has a biographical introductory text by Rifat Necdet Evrimer, (1898-1971) who was a Turkish/Ottoman poet, educator, and biographer in which is important being the earliest male gaze in its period. Özege 5645.; TBTK 6996.; Five copies in OCLC: 25346925 (Four copies) and 1030875484 (One copy).
9954Paris Editions Domat 1955 in 12 (19x14) 1 volume broché, 160 pages [3]. Avec le bandeau et le feuillet volant de "Vient de paraître " portant chacun la mention: De l'esclavage au féminisme. Sommaire: La religion et les japonaises; les idées et la femme japonaise; L éducation des japonaises; La situation sociale des japonaises; La vie littéraire et les femmes; La vie esthétique des japonaises. Kikou Yamata, Lyon 1897 - Genève 1975, femme de lettres française. Edition originale. Exemplaire de service de presse numéroté. Bel exemplaire
Shelfwear with crease along the spine. The front cover has a damaged spot in the center where the print has been torn away, good otherwise. K. Used
000791Publisher: Yale Journal of Law and Feminism 1992 Good Soft Cover cover rubbed. paperback
64305Paris, Payot, 1982 11 x 18, 292 pp., quelques dessins, broché, bon état (couverture défraîchie).
199211300Payot 1992 202 pages 12x19x1cm. 1992. Poche. 202 pages.
70628P., Payot, 1978, in 8° broché, 203 pages ; couverture illustrée.
19857802Lattes 1985 in8 broché avec un envoi autographe
198564697Jean-Claude Lattès Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 1985 Book condition, Etat : Bon broché, sous couverture illustrée de quelques portraits d'épouses célèbres grand In-8 1 vol. - 280 pages
198419610Ottawa Parcs Canada 1984
1822PHO-913Paris, Béchet et Arthus Bertrand, 1822. 2 vol. 8°. XIV, 351 p.; VI, 359 p. Reliure demi cuir époque , dos lisse orné avec titre et tomaison, uniformément bruni , plats et charnières légèrement frottés
19660, Gent, Koninklijke Academie voor Nederlandse Taal- en Letterkunde, 2007, Paperback , 155 x 240mm., 274pp. ISBN 978 90 72474 72 8. ISBN 9789072474728.
185182338New York Harper & Brothers 1851 1 vol. relié in-12, cartonnage pleine percaline vert sombre, décor à froid sur les plats, 463 pp. + 16 pp. de cat. de l'éditeur. Première édition américaine publiée l'année de l'originale anglaise en 3 volumes. Récit de voyage d'une jeune veuve britannique accompagnée de sa fille à l'Est et au Sud des Etats-Unis, au Mexique, au Panama et au Pérou. Des rousseurs intérieures, sinon en bonne condition.
185182338New York Harper & Brothers 1851 1 vol. relié in-12, cartonnage pleine percaline vert sombre, décor à froid sur les plats, 463 pp. + 16 pp. de cat. de l'éditeur. Première édition américaine publiée l'année de l'originale anglaise en 3 volumes. Récit de voyage d'une jeune veuve britannique accompagnée de sa fille à l'Est et au Sud des Etats-Unis, au Mexique, au Panama et au Pérou. Des rousseurs intérieures, sinon en bonne condition.
19522949Corrêa, 1952, in-8°, 349 pp, broché, bon état