30 332 résultats
199466989München ; Wien ; Zürich : BLV 1994. 604 S. : 534 Fotos, 252 Zeichn. ; 23 cm Top Zustand, Pp., gebundene Ausgabe, Hardcover/Pappeinband, im Schuber, sonst Exemplar in gutem Erhaltungszustand
1901167362Berlin, R. Eisenschmidt, 1900, 1901. XII, XXIII, 968 S., Mit 359 Abbildungen im Text und VIII, teils mehrfach gefalteten Tafeln, vielzahl von gefalteten Tabellen, Gr.-8° OHalbleder, mit Lederecken und goldgeprägten Rückentitel, Frakturschrift
19841057302Hildesheim : Gerstenberg, 1984. 694 S. Fadengehefteter Originalpappband mit Schutzumschlag.
198493171Hildesheim: Gerstenberg Verlag, 1984. 24 cm ; Pp.
197866475Frankfurt am Main : Röderberg-Verlag 1978. 53 S. ; 30 cm kart., Softcover/Paperback, Exemplar in gutem Erhaltungszustand
1997gg2004Concord Publications Company Dos carré collé 1997 In-4 (21,5 x 28 cm), dos carré collé, 52 pages ; très bon état. Livraison a domicile (La Poste) ou en Mondial Relay sur simple demande.
1985NAT2385Schwäbisch Hall, Schwend, 1985. IV. Quartal. 9353 - 9512 S, Ill., graph. Darst., 8° (21 cm H.), ill. OKart. (TB) - gute Erhaltung. broschiert/ Taschenbuch/ paperback
1982241112Prag, Albatros Verlag, 1982.
198250360Prag, Albatros Verlag, 1982.
8vo., First Edition, text in German, with photographs, illustrations and diagrams in the text; black cloth, backstrip lettered in red, a near fine copy in unclipped dustwrapper.
198640750ABKoblenz, Bernard und Graefe, 1986. gr.8°, 239 S. mit sehr zahlreichen s/w-Abbildungen, Illustrationen, technischen Zeichungen etc., original Leineneinband mit illustr. original Schutzumschlag, Erstausgabe ganz leichter Nikotingeruch (verliegt), sonst ein gutes, sauberes Exemplar
1992128727Bonn: Bernard & Graefe Verlag, 1992. 239, 320 S. ; 24 x 17 cm ; Pp. ;
1990954636Nürnberg: Publizistisches Archiv für Militär- und Waffenwesen Pawlas. 1990. 21cm. Zustand: Gut bis Sehr Gut min. bis gering gebräunt (Innen); Einband (Außen) min. bis geringe Gebrauchsspuren; Broschiert
1972954786Nürnberg: Publizistisches Archiv für Militär- und Waffenwesen Pawlas. 1972. 689-855 Seiten. 21cm. Zustand: Gut gering bis leicht gebräunt, etwas wellig (Innen); Einband (Außen) hat leichte Gebrauchsspuren; Broschiert
1973954011Nürnberg: Publizistisches Archiv für Militär- und Waffenwesen Pawlas. 1973. 1497-1656 Seiten. 21cm. Zustand: Gut gering bis leicht gebräunt (Innen); Einband (Außen) hat leichte Gebrauchsspuren; Schnitt ist min. bis geringfügig fleckig; Broschiert
199027689Stuttgart : Motorbuch-Verl. 1990. 348 S. : 557 Abb. ; 27 cm Pp., gebundene Ausgabe, Hardcover/Pappeinband
19921236566Bonn : Bernard und Graefe, 1992. 276 S. : Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. Originalbroschur mit Schutzumschlag.
19861236562Koblenz : Bernard u. Graefe, 1986. 208 S. : 98 Ill., graph. Darst. u. Kt. Festeinband mit Schutzumschlag.
198652878Koblenz, Bernard und Graefe Verlag, 1986. Mit zahlreichen Abbildungen. 208 S. Gr.-8°, Ln., OU. Leichte Gebrauchsspuren, sonst gut erhalten.
19901236569Koblenz : Bernard u. Graefe, 1990. 227 S. : 95 Ill., graph. Darst. u. Kt. Originalbroschur mit Schutzumschlag.
1990231017PN. New. 1990. Soft Cover. Date is original print. This is a reprint edition . PN paperback
1885256761Carl Krabbe, 1885. 511 Seiten. Originalhalblederband mit reicher Rückentitelvergoldung und Lederecken. 20 cm. Halbleinen
194115714verlag des Nordland - Echo .[in Norwegen gedruckt mit deutschen Druckfarben], 1941. mit vielen schwarzweißen fot. Abb. ill. OLwd. (Gold-Blindprägung), 80 nn. S., Gr.8° (=24 cm)
1950231531950. WACKorean War Women's Army Corps photo album compiled by Sgt. Elizabeth Adamek of Cairnbrook PA ca. early to mid 1950s extensively recording enlisted women in post-1948 U.S. Army administrative operations at Camp Zama Japan during the Korean War period. Elizabeth Adamek later Elizabeth Adamek Pierce 1932-2016 served approximately twenty years in the United States Army as an administrative assistant and instructor including service in Japan and the Korean Theater during the Korean War. Adamek is shown several times in uniform with her twin sister Cpl. Cristania Adamek indicating the sisters served in the WAC around the same time period. This album documents postwar U.S. Army overseas base administration showing how clerical labor recordkeeping and office management were carried out by WAC personnel during the Korean War. Images of Hill and fellow servicewomen engaged in office work reveal women's roles in the Army's daily bureaucratic and logistical functions while stationed abroad. A comprehensive primary-source documentation of the operational role of women within permanent peacetime Army structures following the formal establishment of the Women's Army Corps in 1948.<br /> <br /> Photo archive of approximately 240 silver gelatin photographs from Camp Zama Japan and the United States circa early to mid 1950s. The album is housed in a Japanese lacquer-style postbound binding with black paper leaves containing a mixture of small snapshot prints deckle-edge photographs and larger mounted images. The visual content centers on Hill frequently shown in WAC uniform posed in front of barracks administrative buildings and landscaped areas as well as inside office environments seated at desks surrounded by stacked files paperwork and card index systems. Several images explicitly depict clerical workspaces including a servicewoman operating a typewriter beside filing drawers reinforcing the administrative function of WAC personnel. A clearly legible building sign reads "Camp Zama 8030th Army Unit APO 50" situating the album within a specific military unit structure. Additional photographs include formal military reviews with officers and dignitaries group portraits of uniformed women before display walls and social scenes in dining facilities and clubs. Off-duty life is extensively documented through images of Japanese urban streets market stalls rail platforms commercial signage shrine gateways temple architecture zoo enclosures and landscaped gardens alongside recreational scenes such as swimming roadside travel and barracks exteriors collectively illustrating both the operational and social dimensions of overseas Army life. Adamek is posed throughout the album with a romantic partner one Sgt. Kidder whose service at Camp Zama is also documented extensively.<br /> <br /> The album captures the workings of U.S. Army overseas base administration demonstrating the process by which women in the Women's Army Corps sustained military infrastructure through administrative labor. Camp Zama functioned as a major logistical and support installation during the Korean War era and the photographs provide insight into the women that maintained its operations while also recording the social networks and cultural encounters experienced by American service personnel in postwar Japan.<br /> <br /> Elizabeth Adamek Pierce's obituary in The Oklahoman indicates she was honorably discharged from the US Army in 1971 after which she relocated to Oklahoma City and worked in an administrative role with the OKC Police Department. Adamek was a member of the Civil Air Patrol the VFW Post 1335 and a volunteer at Tinker Air Force Base in Oklahoma City. Light edge wear and chipping to album leaves occasional corner wear scattered fading and softness to prints and general handling wear to the binding; overall good condition. A cohesive and well-identified visual record of women's military service in the U.S. Army in East Asia. unknown
1940231951940. Women's wartime military mobilization photo archive documenting female military service across Allied wartime culture in the United States and southern France during the 1940s. Official press photographers commercial postcard publishers and private snapshot makers record women in uniform within military structures wartime publicity systems and informal social settings while the comic material makes clear that women's enlistment was also processed through satire about masculinization labor reversal and altered domestic authority. The August 22 1944 Army Radiotelephoto press photograph captioned "FRENCH WACS COME HOME" includes helmeted French women carrying rifles and duffel bags as they debark from landing craft "US 38" on the Riviera to join the liberation of their homeland placing women's military service directly within Allied invasion reporting and wartime news transmission.<br /> <br /> Photo archive of 13 silver gelatin and colored real photo postcards ranging from 10 x 8 inch press photos to smaller 3 x 2.5 inches vernacular photos United States and southern France circa 1940s. The grouping joins official press photography commercially printed comic postcards and private snapshots: women serving in uniform within military structures news agencies translating that service into public wartime narrative and vernacular photographs framing servicewomen through friendship memory and off-duty self-presentation. One large press photograph includes a WAC marching unit in tight alignment behind a guidon for a unit attached to a Naval Operating Air Station the elevated viewpoint emphasizing drill uniformity and command structure rather than individual identity. The Radiotelephoto print retains its typed verso caption identifying French WACs coming ashore in southern France. Four color comic postcards published by Beals in Des Moines turn women's enlistment into wartime humor through slogans including "WE'RE GIVING 'EM A BIG WAAC . . . " "I'M BRINGING HOME THE BACON!" "I'M GETTING A BIG BANG OUT OF THIS ARMY LIFE" and "MY HOW TIMES HAVE CHANGED." The most pointed of these "I'M BRINGING HOME THE BACON!" has a uniformed woman dragging a defeated male figure on a rope recasting military service as a comic transfer of masculine power and economic authority to women. "MY HOW TIMES HAVE CHANGED" extends that logic by imagining a man in an apron cooking and sweeping at home making domestic reversal itself the joke. The remaining cards similarly convert women's service into exaggerated spectacle through a rolling-pin attack on a caricatured Axis figure and a smiling servicewoman posed between oversized cannons. Seven small vernacular snapshots shift to individualized presence: one is signed "Love Sherry" two versos identify "Hazel" one verso reads "Golden Gate Park" and the images include women in uniform seated on an urban balustrade standing along city streets posed in landscaped parks visiting a pagoda-like garden site and appearing together outdoors in a paired portrait.<br /> <br /> Women's military service during World War II expanded through the WAAC WAC and related Allied formations while press agencies commercial print culture and snapshot photography assigned that service different public meanings; this archive preserves those overlapping channels in a single grouping. The postcards register wartime unease and fascination around women entering socially masculine roles turning military participation into jokes about strength breadwinning authority and domestic displacement. Minor corner and edge wear to the larger photographs one crease and caption wear to the Radiotelephoto print light rubbing and handling wear to the postcards and general wear curling and minor soiling to the vernacular snapshots; overall very good condition. The grouping preserves women's wartime military presence as it moved between official documentation commercial gender satire and private snapshot culture. unknown