3 967 résultats
33748Paris. Editions des Femmes. 1975. Fort In-12. Br. 634 p. BE. Dos usagé.
1982SPN-67Polycopié, couverture cartonnée, dos toilé. 145 p.
58570Paris, Alcan, sans date (vers 1912), in 8° broché, 524 pages ; couverture effrangée.
199628828Montréal Les 400 coups 1996
194828434Ottawa National Gallery of Canada 1948 In-8 bien illustré, frontispice couleurs et 13 planches en noir, 14p. et [14]p. dont 11 planches. Couverture imprimée.
Barcelona, Edit. RBA, 2015. 220 p. 8º major. Rústica editorial il·lustrada. Molt bon exemplar.
In-8, demi-maroquin bleu nuit, dos à 4 faux-nerfs filetés or, auteur et titre dorés, daté en pied, couverture conservée (rel. moderne dans le goût de l'époque), lj, (3), 412 p. Edition originale, couverture de premier tirage et page de titre de remise en vente comportant une mention fictive de "deuxième édition". "À la faveur d'un quatrième séjour à Londres (mai-août 1839), Flora Tristan actualisa la vaste enquête sur l'Angleterre industrielle. Elle montrait l'Angleterre comme le laboratoire de la civilisation qui ne tarderait pas à gagner l'Europe; elle mettait en garde contre un modèle de développement où l'homme était sacrifié à la tyrannie du profit. Les 'Promenades dans Londres' approfondissaient sa vocation d'enquêtrice sociale" (S. Michaud, in Maitron cd-rom). Du point de vue de la composition et du style, certainement le meilleur des livres de Flora Tristan, où elle donne toute la mesure de son intelligence, de sa sensibilité et de sa lucidité politique. La parution de l'ouvrage en mai 1840 coïncida avec une crise économique majeure, une grève quasi-générale des corporations parisiennes et une structuration de l'organisation ouvrière à un niveau jamais encore atteint. "Les Promenades" obtinrent, dans ce contexte, un accueil élogieux de la presse républicaine et socialiste et un important retentissement populaire. "Au fond, à scruter de près les 'Promenades dans Londres', on peut dire que trois livres s'y trouvent superposés : une enquête de science sociale, une didactique révolutionnaire, un Evangile romantique" (François Bedarida). (J. Puech, 'Vie et oeuvre de F. Tristan', p. 489, n° 9. Maitron, Cd-rom). Quelques rousseurs éparses. Très bon exemplaire, très bien établi dans une reliure de maître.
In-8, cartonnage marbré moderne à la Bradel, pièce de titre de maroquin bordeaux, 100 p. Edition originale du projet de décret que Talleyrand donna à la suite de son Rapport sur l'instruction publique. Aux pages 94-95: "l'éducation des femmes". Bon exemplaire, très frais, très bien relié.
Padova. Edit. Abbazia di S. Giustina, 1976. Algunas ilustraciones en b/n. 77 p. 8º. Rústica editorial ilustrada algo deslucida. Buen ejemplar. Libro en italiano.
Original Wraps. 8vo. 92 pages. 25 cm. First edition. First general convention report of the National Federation of Temple Sisterhoods. Founded in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1913 as the National Federation of Temple Sisterhoods (NFTS) Largely at the instigation of Mrs. Abram (Carrie) Simon of Washington D. C. And Rabbi George Zepin, the director of Synagogue and School Extension of the UAHC, the sisterhoods of the Reform congregations of America were federated in 1913. The first meeting of the NFTS brought together 156 delegates from 49 sisterhoods. Mrs. Simon was elected temporary chair and later served as the NFTS's first president. Rabbi Zepin was elected executive secretary of the new organization. Initially, the NFTS emphasized its religious role as an auxiliary and support to the synagogue and various institutions of Reform Jewry. Committees were set up on religious education, museums and Jewish ceremonial objects, scholarships for the Hebrew Union College (HUC) , cooperation, and public relations. Within a few years, however, the NFTS set the pattern for taking stands on issues of national and international importance by passing a resolution protesting the passage of an immigration bill stipulating literacy tests for all immigrants entering the U. S. - Finding Aid to the Women of Reform Judaism (U. S. ) Records. 1913-2013. Manuscript Collection No. 73, American Jewish Archives. Subjects: Reform Judaism - United States - Societies, etc. Jewish women - United States - Societies and clubs. Jewish women - Societies and clubs. Reform Judaism - Societies, etc. National Federation of Temple Sisterhoods. OCLC lists 2 copies (Danish Union Cat, American Jewish Archives) . Light wear to wraps, otherwise clean and fresh. Very good condition. (WOMEN-1-28)
Original Cloth. 8vo. 426 pages. 24 cm. First edition. Proceedings of the first convention of the National Council of Jewish Women: an organization which came into being as a result of the Congress of Jewish Women, one of the denominational congresses of the World's Parliament of Religions held at the Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893. The sections are members of the city, county, and state federations of women's clubs, and are actively cooperative in all work for the public welfare. During the Spanish-American war the council within one week set its sections to work in aid of the soldiers and sailors, and in several places was the first organized body to take any steps for their relief. It raised ten thousand dollars in money an equal amount in goods, and a nurse was sent to the army; the members were, during the continuance of the war, among the most active workers in the service of relief. It cooperated with the National Red Cross Society, the regimental auxiliaries, and the various state organizations. Through the influence of the council, 72 women have been placed on Sabbath-school boards of congregations; interest in the schools has been greatly increased thereby, and, what is of signal importance, the age of confirmation, in a number of communities, has been raised. It maintains fifteen mission schools. The philanthropies of the council, numbering 85, are supported by voluntary subscription, and include settlements, clubs, libraries, free baths, night-schools, manual-training classes, household-schools, employment bureaus, penny provident funds, classes for crippled children, ice funds for consumptives, recreation-rooms, and gymnasiums. The following meetings have been held: first triennial, New York, Nov. , 1896; Omaha Exposition, Oct. , 1896; Chautauqua summer assembly, July, 1897, 1898; second triennial, Cleveland, March, 1900; first annual executive, New Orleans, La. , Feb. , 1901; third triennial, Baltimore, Md. , Dec. , 1902. The present officers, elected in 1900, are: president, Hannah G. Solomon; first vice-president (resigned) ; second vice-president, Babette Mandel, Chicago, Ill. ; recording secretary, Gertrude Berg, Philadelphia, Pa. ; corresponding secretary, Sadie American, New York city; treasurer, Bertha A. Selz, Chicago, Ill. It has (Nov. , 1902) 7, 000 members, in 70 sections; 15 junior sections, with 500 members; 89 study circles in religion, and 12 in philanthropy. - 1906 JE. Subjects: Jewish women - United States - Congresses. Jewish women. National Council of Jewish Women. National Council of Jewish Women. Conference proceedings. OCLC lists 29 copies. Institutional stamps on endpages and backstrip. Internal hinges repaired, otherwise clean and fresh. Good- condition. (WOMEN-1-20-D)
Hardcover. Large 8vo, 426 pages. 24 cm. Includes pullout section: "Report on Religious School Work." Subject: National Council of Jewish Women. Jewish women -- United States -- Congresses. Dark green cloth with gilt lettering and emblem. Solid, tight binding. Clean pages. Very Good Condition. A quite nice copy. (SPEC-27-28)
1946AMA-4681946. In 4°, agrafé, sans couverture. 43 pp.
6268Sans lieu ni date (circa 1771). In 8 dérelié de 15 pp.
35294In-8, cartonnage marbré moderne à la Bradel, pièce de titre de maroquin bordeaux, 100 p. Paris, Imprimerie Nationale, 1791.
196719537Quebec Garneau 1967
ORD-3818La femme. Paris. La Librairie Sociale. 1921. In-8 (128 x 181mm) broché, couverture verte imprimée, 32 pages. Bon exemplaire.
197429795Montréal l'Hexagone 1974
198249537Inter editions, 1982. Format 15x22 cm, broché, 391 pages. Couverture legerement defraichie. Bon état.
196915893Merit Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 1969 Book condition, Etat : Bon paperback In-8 1 vol. - 63 pages
15176P., Hachette, 1930, in 12 broché, 253 pages.
2000SPN-299Parie : Palais du Luxembourg, 2000. Document de 30 pages.
184044426Paris ; Londres, H.-L. Delloye, éditeur ; W. Jeffs, libraire, 1840. In-8 de LI-(3)-412 pp., demi-toile verte, dos lisse orné de filets à froid, couverture jaune imprimée conservée (relié vers 1870).
16166'London: R. Clay Sons and Taylor Printers Bread Street Hill'. Undated London: Edward Stanford 1871. 15 1pp. 8vo. Drophead title. In good condition lightly-aged no wraps disbound. Poetic dialogue in Tennysonian blank verse beginning: 'First Peer. - This measure every session comes to pass By large majorities the Lower House; And every year of course we throw it out But only by a bare majority. That such a Bill should ever be the law To me appears impossible absurd - Things are not what they were I know: Reform Of one kind or another is abroad.' Footnote on p.6 referring to 'Lord Lyndhurst and Sir William Follett.' See also p.14: 'For what was Equity in 'Thirty-five Must still be Equity in 'Seventy-one; If Beaufort be absolved why not the rest' Apparently lacking the title stating that the poem was published in London in 1871 by Edward Stanford. 'London: R. Clay, Sons, and Taylor, Printers, Bread Street Hill'. Undated [London: Edward Stanford, 1871]. paperback