70 résultats
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
16133Married Women's Property Committee. Manchester: Alexander Ireland & Co. Printers. 1879. 39 1pp. 8vo. In good condition lightly-aged no wraps disbound. One copy on COPAC at the Bishopsgate Library and none on OCLC WorldCat. [Married Women's Property Committee.] Manchester: Alexander Ireland & Co., Printers. 1879. paperback
16251Extracted from the 'Proceedings of the National Association for the Promotion of Social Science' vol.XIV No.1 31 January 1881. London: P. S. King. 18pp. paginated 1-18 8vo. Printed cover of the magazine loosely inserted. Footnote on first page: 'Read at an Afternoon Meeting Saturday January 22nd 1881.' In good condition lightly-aged disbound from collection with chipped front cover. Extracted from the 'Proceedings of the National Association for the Promotion of Social Science', vol.XIV, No.1, 31 January 1881 unknown
197932004Berlin 1979. First Edition. Original photo-montaged advertisement poster 83.5x58.75cm. printed offset in black and yellow on glossy white stock; previous mail folds general wrinkling most heavily along right-hand edge else About Very Good and sound. Advertising poster for the German feminist magazine Courage the image presumably reproducing the cover of the current issue. Contents feature articles on women in the military the feminist movement in Spain and the letters of Sylvia Plath. At bottom of image: "Jedefrau Braucht Courage / Ab sofort im Handel" Every woman needs courage from now on in work. Quite a large poster presumably issued to be displayed at the newsagent. unknown
1990EL0020<p>Los Angeles: Illuminati 1990. 1st edition. Soft cover. Very Good/No Jacket as issued. VG . 8vo 78pp printed wrappers. Evident first printing this copy from the collection of Pentagon Papers activist Daniel Ellsberg and his wife Patricia. Illuminati phone number written under address on copyright page else an unmarked copy with minor wear.</p> Los Angeles: Illuminati paperback
0950860204.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
000059<p><strong>Huda Sha'rÄwÄ« 1879–1947</strong><br /><strong>Collection of 19 Photographs</strong></p><p>A group of <strong>nineteen individual photographic prints of varying sizes</strong> depicting <strong>Huda Sha'rÄwÄ«</strong> the pioneering Egyptian feminist leader nationalist and founder of the Egyptian Feminist Union.</p><ul><li><strong>Four photographs are signed by Huda Sha'rÄwÄ«</strong> including <strong>two dedicated and signed in Paris to Majd ed-Din Nasif</strong>.</li><li>Approximately <strong>fourteen are studio photographs</strong> taken predominantly in <strong>Paris</strong> with several examples from <strong>Cairo</strong>.</li><li>One notable photograph shows Sha'rÄwÄ« in <strong>Egyptian local dress</strong> <strong>signed by the photographer Lekegian Cairo</strong>.</li></ul><p>The photographs document Sha'rÄwÄ« in both European and Egyptian contexts reflecting her transnational life and public persona during the early twentieth century.</p><p><strong>Biographical Note:</strong><br />Huda Sha'rÄwÄ« June 23 1879 – December 12 1947 was a leading figure in Egyptian feminism and nationalism. Born into a wealthy family in Minya she was the daughter of Muhammad Sultan the first president of the Egyptian Representative Council. Raised in the seclusion of an upper-class harem she married her cousin Ali Pasha Sha'rÄwÄ« at the age of thirteen. A later separation allowed her to pursue formal education and develop an early sense of independence. Educated in Quranic studies Arabic Turkish and Islamic subjects she also wrote poetry in Arabic and French. Her memoir <em>Harem Years: The Memoirs of an Egyptian Feminist 1879–1924</em> remains a key source for understanding her life and era.</p>
1965157435San Francisco: Determined Productions 1965. Vintage wall calendar for the year 1966 composed of twelve calendar sheets illustrated with twelve lithographs held together at the top edge with a metal rod. <br /> <br /> Designed and illustrated by noted fashion artist Betty Brader best known for her work for San Francisco specialty store Joseph Magnin as well as her freelance work for Neiman Marcus in Dallas. <br /> <br /> Bay Area publisher Determined Productions was founded by Connie Boucher in 1961 largely creating licensed products-including some of the first Peanuts merchandise. The company quickly expanded producing books and ephemera on a variety of topics including astrology the occult and alcohol. With a vibrant feminist overtone the calendar on offer here features illustrations of women from around the world posed in bright and nationally specific garments with text focusing on the way language is often used to discriminate against women. <br /> <br /> Not found in OCLC.<br /> <br /> Housed in the original pictorial paper tube. 19 x 14 inches rolled as issued. Calendar sheets Fine. Paper tube Near Fine with light wear at the right end of the tube. Determined Productions unknown
102381<p>Amsterdam 1973 - 1974. Size: 215 x 275 cm. 17; 23; 22 10 pp. Illustrated in b/w. Stencilled. Stapled.<br /><br />This short-lived radical feminist magazine was published from 1972 to 1974. Only six issues saw the light of day. It is an important source for the history of feminism and gender studies. Copies are extremely rare and complete sets impossible to find. I have only found three complete sets in libraries all in Amsterdam. Paarse September conisted of four women who became soon famous for claiming in the first issue of their magazine that feminists that stayed heterosexual were not real feminists and could even be considered anti-feminists. Their motto was "Being lesbian is a political choice" Lesbisch zijn is een politieke keuze. After six issues Paarse September stopped in 1974 because they thought their ideas were well known by then.</p>
20032090502113716870Not Available 2003. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Not Available paperback
1975H9246Milwaukee: Tom Montag 1975. Wraps 10.5 inches tall on newsprint good copy with some wear and stains to covers age toning to contents. 72 pp illustrated consists of reviews articles essays & more. Tom Montag unknown
1980EL0018<p>New York: Harper & Row Publishers 1980. 1st edition. Hardcover. Very Good/Fine. Near VG in Near Fine dw. 8vo viii88pp blue cloth with spine stamped in pink printed dustwrapper. Stated first printing this copy from the collection of Pentagon Papers activist Daniel Ellsberg and his wife Patricia. Unmarked copy two adjacent leaves have roughness at the lower margin from adherence in binding else nice in unclipped dustwrapper.</p> New York: Harper & Row, Publishers hardcover
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
17599360Paris: Braisson et al. 1759. 2 vols long 12mos 4 387 3; 2 292 4pp. Title and text on facing pages in French and Italian. Typographical headpieces. Contemporary half calf over marbled boards gilt-titled spines. Ownership rubber stamp of Lord Algernon Percy on half title of Vol II his initials on final leaf of Vol I and his presumed embossed coat of arms on all four covers. Leaf A12 with small paper flaw affecting a few letters but not the readability. Joints and boards rubbed. Very good. <br /> <br /> Bi-lingual edition of this extremely important and popular 18th century work of fiction by Françoise de Graffigny 1695-1758. Lettres D'une Peruvienne was first published in 1747 tells of Zilia a young Inca woman who is abducted and bought by a French officer. Zilia writes her estranged fiance Aza and tells of her adapting to French society while criticizing its traditions of female submission. Besides the status of women she also attacks religion education and politics. The novel was so popular it went through some 40 editions in 50 years before being somewhat forgotten in the revolution. However its "pre-feminist gesture" brought it back into focus centuries later with literary critics.<br /> <br /> <br /> This set in an attractive contemporary binding and owned by Lord Algernon Percy 1750-1830 the first Earl of Beverly. . Braisson et al. unknown
1951228591951. International Labour Conference. Equal Remuneration for Men and Women Workers for Work of Equal Value 1950 documents the formal development of international labor standards addressing gender-based wage inequality in the immediate postwar period. Issued in advance of the adoption of the Equal Remuneration Convention the report supports research into women's labor history international law and the institutional mechanisms through which gender equity policies were articulated and debated. The publication situates wage discrimination as a matter of economic justice and human rights presenting coordinated efforts by member states and labor delegates to establish enforceable standards for equal pay across national economies.<br /> International Labour Conference. Equal Remuneration for Men and Women Workers for Work of Equal Value Report VII 1; Thirty-fourth Session 1951. Geneva: International Labour Office 1950. First edition. Octavo. Original printed wrappers. The report opens with proceedings from the 33rd session of the International Labour Organization outlining debates over gendered wage structures and the economic implications of pay inequality. It includes excerpts from committee reports and plenary discussions alongside a comparative survey of member state legislation and labor practices concerning women's wages. The latter portion presents the full draft convention text proposed for adoption defining "equal remuneration" to include both wages and supplementary benefits as well as an alternative recommendation for countries not prepared to ratify binding measures. The document frames unequal pay as both structural discrimination and a violation of fundamental rights establishing terminology and policy frameworks that would shape subsequent international labor standards.<br /> 57 pages. Original printed wrappers. Octavo format. Mild toning to margins faint crease to lower front wrapper light wear at spine ends and small pencil notation at upper corner of title leaf; internally clean and secure; overall very good condition. Produced during a period of expanding international governance through organizations such as the International Labour Organization the report provides direct evidence of early multilateral efforts to codify gender equality in employment offering substantial value for the study of global labor policy and the historical foundations of equal pay legislation. unknown
1987EL0019<p>Los Angeles: Illuminati 1987. 1st edition. Soft cover. Good /No Jacket as issued. Good . 8vo viii88pp blue-printed wrappers. Stated third printing this copy from the collection of Pentagon Papers activist Daniel Ellsberg and his wife Patricia. Has different back cover than first printing. Illuminati phone number written under address on copyright page else an unmarked copy with staining soil and some fading and wear to wrappers.</p> Los Angeles: Illuminati paperback
1991170896San Rafael CA: Falkirk Cultural Center 1991. First Edition. Softcover. First Edition. Published in conjunction with an exhibition held from May 16 through August 25 1991 at the Falkirk Cultural Center in San Rafael. <br /> <br /> Near Fine in side-stapled wrappers. Falkirk Cultural Center unknown
1989x-0803933983Sage Pubns 1989. Paperback. New. illustrated edition. 216 pages. 8.75x5.75x0.75 inches. Sage Pubns paperback
16123New York 1870s. Without printer or date. 31pp. 8vo. Drophead title. In good condition lightly-aged no wraps disbound. Excessively scarce: two copies on COPAC at Lambeth Palace and the London School of Economics and only one more copy apart from surrogates on OCLC WorldCat at the Ohio History Convention. This copy like the two on COPAC lacking the title leaf which according to the WorldCat entry gives the place of publication as New York and the full title as 'No female suffrage! Attila: theology logic anatomy physiology and philology united to establish the truism that the woman is no human being'. From the style not written by a native English speaker. The author names himself as 'Attila' on the first page and the work is on the outer reaches of misogyny. Final paragraph p.31: 'However much indignation this our work may provoke we believe to have conscientiously acted according to our motto: "Every being must be instrumental in the progress of truth." And we really believe to have told the truth. The woman is no human being like man she has therefore no claims to "usurp power over man" and claim female suffrage. Let her remain the helpmate of man attend to her domestic duties and she will from her beginning to her end be man's blessing.' [New York, 1870s.] Without printer or date. paperback
16219Published for the London National Society for Women's Suffrage by Messrs Trübner and Co. 6 Paternoster Row London E.C. Circa 1870. 16pp. 8vo. In fair condition lightly-aged and creased with minor marking to last page no wraps disbound. No copy in the British Library. COPAC lists several copies. No other copy currently on the market. Published for the London National Society for Women's Suffrage, by Messrs Trübner and Co., 6 Paternoster Row, London, E.C. [Cir paperback
16132Married Women's Property Committee. 'A. Ireland & Co. Printers Pall Mall Manchester.' 1880. 1 16pp. 8vo. In good condition lightly-aged no wraps disbound. No copy of this proof on either COPAC or OCLC WorldCat. Three copies of the report on OCLC WorldCat and none on COPAC or at the British Library. [Married Women's Property Committee.] ['A. Ireland & Co., Printers, Pall Mall, Manchester.'] [1880.] paperback
16223'Frederick Bell and Co. Steam Printers King's Road Chelsea.' Dated on p.4: 'January 1874.'. 4pp. 8vo. Bifolium with drophead title. In good condition lightly-aged disbound. No copy traced on either COPAC or WorldCat. No copy currently on market. 'Frederick Bell and Co., Steam Printers, King's Road, Chelsea.' Dated on p.4: 'January, 1874.' unknown
16163Manchester: A. Ireland & Co. Printers Pall Mall. 1870. 16pp. 8vo. In good condition lightly-aged no wraps disbound. The only copy traced either on COPAC or OCLC WorldCat at the London School of Economics. Manchester: A. Ireland & Co., Printers, Pall Mall. [1870.] paperback
16142Vigilance Association for the Defence of Personal Rights. 'Secretary MISS WOLSTENHOLME 27 Great George Street Westminster S.W.' London: Frederick Bell & Co. Printers King's Road Chelsea S.W. Dated at end 'March 1874.'. 4pp. 8vo. Bifolium with drophead title. In fair condition lightly-aged disbound. Six copies on COPAC. [Vigilance Association for the Defence of Personal Rights. 'Secretary, MISS WOLSTENHOLME, 27, Great George Street, Westminster, unknown
16232Vigilance Association for the Defence of Personal Rights. No printer or date. Circa 1871. 3pp. 8vo. Bifolium. In good condition lightly-aged disbound. Beneath the Association's name at the head of the first page is a list of the names of the eight members of the 'Executive Committee' followed by the names and addresses of the treasurer and 'Hon. Secretary pro tem.'. The first page carries a four-point 'Constitution' the second page carries eight 'Rules' and the third page a membership form. It would appear reasonable to date the pamphlet from the time of the Association's foundation. Only one copy found on either COPAC or OCLC WorldCat at the London School of Economics. No other copy currently on market. [Vigilance Association for the Defence of Personal Rights.] No printer or date. [Circa 1871.] unknown