17 205 résultats
173412 volumes in-8, demi-chagrin rouge de l'époque, dos ornés de filets, (4) f., 366 p. et (4) f., 350 p., rousseurs. Paris, Escudier frères, 1850.
2 volumes in-8, demi-chagrin rouge de l'époque, dos ornés de filets, (4) f., 366 p. et (4) f., 350 p., rousseurs. Edition originale. Exilé en Angleterre après les événements de 1849, Ledru-Rollin analyse la société anglaise et consacre l'essentiel de cet ouvrage aux descriptions du prolétariat londonien et de la misère ouvrière dans les usines et les manufactures de Grande-Bretagne. Nombreuses statistiques en annexes. Bon exemplaire, relié à l'époque.
13944S.N. Amsterdam 1763 In-12 ( 170 X 100 mm ) de XXXVI-248 pages, plein veau fauve marbré, dos lisse orné de caissons et fleurons dorés, pièce de titre de maroquin grenat, roulette dorée sur les coupes, tranches brique ( Reliure de l'époque ). Très bel exemplaire. Seconde édition, parue la même année que l'originale de l'ouvrage le plus important de MABLY.
Ventiquattro numeri rilegati in un vol. in-4°, pp. 16 ciascun numero. Alcuni numeri doppi con numerazione doppia; gli ultimi tre in un unico numero, numerazione tripla. Leg. in mezza tela con tit. in oro al dorso. Tracce del tempo e d'uso sui piatti, ingiallimento del tempo anche sulle carte interne.
19621155151962 Sans mention d'édition. En vente à "Le lien des Malades et Invalides" 44 Gde Rue de la Guillotière, Lyon / Imprimeries Bellecour - Sans date (1962 ?) - In-8, broché - 449 pages
20867In-8, broché, couverture papier bleu moderne, 23 p. Paris, Au Bureau du Globe, 1831.
In-8, broché, couverture papier marbré bleu moderne, tranches marbrées, 56 p. Edition originale. Etat des rapports entre la direction saint-simonienne de Paris et le réseau de "militants" saint-simoniens en France métropolitaine et dans les colonies (Algérie). (Manque à Walch et à Gerits. Fournel, p. 83). Bon exemplaire.
In-8, broché, couverture papier bleu moderne, 23 p. Edition originale. Actes de la séance du 18 décembre 1831 sur l'enseignement des ouvriers, réunis à l'occasion des événements de Lyon et de la révolte des canuts. L'ouvrier, Bernard, cordonnier, prend la parole sous les applaudissements du public. (Fournel, 84. Gerits, 183). Bon exemplaire.
24243In-12, demi-basane de l'époque, dos lisse orné, xxvi, 362 p. Paris, A. Colin, 1899.
In-12, demi-basane de l'époque, dos lisse orné, xxvi, 362 p. Édition originale. Enquête de terrain très fiable, commanditée par le "Musée Social" (1896-1897). La meilleure étude en langue française sur le mouvement ouvrier américain à la fin du XIXe siècle.
22 pages. Features: Alice in Italy; The "Free" Press; Atrocity by American Troops in Vietnam; Capital; The Black Panther Party; Bougainville Island - Warnings from Australia; Review of Ferdinand Lundberg's "The Rich and the Super Rich"; Drugs, Plasma and Profits; The Scientists Hear About Socialism; Response to Wayne S. Huff, of Victoria, B.C..; The Defrosting of Rip Van Blow. Average wear. Unmarked. Short taped repair to fore-edge of back cover, otherwise a sound vintage copy. Book
22 pages. Features: War on Poverty; Modern Olympics; Devaluation and the Workers; Resurgent Japan; ATHIESTS and athiests; American Politics; Introducing new radio series; Smog; "Studied" Poverty. Average wear. Unmarked. Please note: Half of back cover is missing, otherwise a sound vintage copy. Book
22 pages. Features: The Vietnam Protest Movement; The Evolution of German Social Democracy - from 'Socialist' Party to Capitalist Party; Our Declaration of Principles; Land of the Long White Cloud - Britain shrugs off New Zealand; Political Kickbacks in Canada - Ed Schreyer's loose lips; Marx on "Terrorism & Censorship"; The DeLeonist Splinter Parties; Barricades in Northern Ireland. Average wear. Unmarked. A sound vintage copy. Book
22 pages. Features: To ABM or Not to ABM; A Socialist on the Kibbutz; Rumpus on the Campus - student rebellions; Mideast Turmoil; Behind the Building of the Panama Canal; Production for Use; The Shrike - and the 'Social Shrike'; John Braine - "Muddle Conservatire"; and more. Average wear. Bit of soiling to page 3. Unmarked. A sound vintage copy. Book
1964133942Delphes 1964 In-4 en feuilles sous couverture muette et chemise de toile de jute éfrangée et fermoir cuir. 10 compositions originales d’André Masson hors-texte. Interprétation typographique de Georges Nataf. Chemise entachée d’humidité.
191943080Detroit: Literature Bureau of the Workers' International Industrial Union 1919. First Edition. Quarto 30cm. Staple-bound pictorial card wrappers; 40pp; illus. Issue for 1919 ; slightly worn with wrappers darkened and stained contents slightly age-toned with corner-creases and occasional thumb-soil; Just Good. Hand-stamp of the SLP / Detroit to front cover. Annual souvenir of the Workers' International Industrial Union. The WIIU the labor union arm of the Socialist Labor Party was effectively formed in 1908 following the split of the SLP faction from the Industrial Workers of the World; the group identified itself as the 'Detroit IWW' until 1915 at which point the name was changed to Workers International Industrial Union a typically De Leonist mouthful!. The WIIU never throve; its membership probably never numbered above about 2500 workers a number that dropped quickly following the death of Daniel De Leon in 1915. By the 1920s the WIIU was an afterthought and the group was finally disbanded in 1925.<br /> <br /> Contents include articles by Michael Altschuler Herman Richter W.J. Dodge and others; literary contributions by Fred H. Hartmann Richard Le Galienne William Morris and Walt Whitman; portraits and reproductions of artworks by Eugene Higgins Jan Styka and Eugene Chaperon. An attractive and rather uncommon American labor souvenir book; OCLC notes 6 physical locations for any issue 2018. Literature Bureau of the Workers' International Industrial Union unknown
192958602London: I.L.P. Publication Service 1929. First Edition. Narrow 12mo 18cm. Staple-bound pamphlet; pictorial paper wrappers; 24pp. Slight creasing and soil to wrappers; binding staples rusty else Near Fine. <br /> <br /> Socialist primer addressed to lay readers but not as the cover would suggest intended for children. Glasier née Conway 1867-1950 was a Fabian Socialist suffragist and prominent member of the Independent Labour Party. She was married to J. Bruce Glasier the I.L.P.'s second Chairman. The cover portrait is of the the author's son Glen who died in 1928 and for whom she penned a memorial volume The Glen Book in which she espoused some of her theosophical beliefs concerning the afterlife the same year. I.L.P. Publication Service unknown
191468293Huntington West Virginia: Issued by The State Committee. Printed by The Labor Star 1914. Pamphlet. Near Fine. 39 1 pp. Small pamphlet. 24mo 13 cm; saddle-stapled in self-wrappers. Front and rear covers are very lightly tanned and soiled else Near Fine. Rare. The Socialist Party Logo is printed on the front with globe two hands shaking and "Socialist Party – Workers of the World Unite" in a circular border. "Referendum" and "Amended by Referendum" dates listed up to July 1914. Printed within are the twenty-nine articles of this constitution of the Socialist Party of West Virginia pages 3-26 instructions on "How to Organize a Socialist Local or Branch" pages 27-33 and an index pages 35-39.<br /> <br /> "The first local branch of the West Virginia Socialist Party was established in Wheeling in 1901. With the assistance of Socialist organizers from Pennsylvania and Kentucky the West Virginia movement spread by 1908 to Huntington Parkersburg Clarksburg Charleston and a number of smaller communities throughout the state. By 1914 several thousand West Virginians were dues-paying members of the party's 86 local branches. As early as 1910 local Socialists began to elect candidates to office and in 1912 more than 15000 West Virginia voters cast their ballots for Socialist Eugene Debs for president. By 1914 West Virginians had elected Socialist Party candidates to more than 40 local offices including virtually the entire administrations of such widely scattered communities as Miami Eskdale Adamston Cameron and Hendricks. Star City near Morgantown would ultimately have the longest-lived Socialist municipal government in the United States. In addition Socialists controlled Cabin Creek Paint Creek and Washington districts in the Kanawha County coalfields and the Falls Magisterial District of Fayette County. To a great extent the progress that the West Virginia Socialists achieved on the electoral front was a reflection of the party's strategy of increasing class consciousness by working with existing unions to build the power of the labor movement. The party appealed to a fairly broad cross section of wage earners. There were important concentrations among skilled craftsmen in the pottery window glass machine tools cigar making and building construction trades. Socialists from these crafts and others held leadership positions in their own unions and in a number of the state's central labor bodies. Party members had special influence in the Ohio Valley Trades and Labor Assembly the Huntington Trades and Labor Assembly and most important of all the West Virginia State Federation of Labor. Socialists were especially popular with coal miners and were able by 1916 to control both District 29 and District 17 of the United Mine Workers in West Virginia. The steady growth of West Virginia's Socialist Party also owed much to the fact that many members of the middle class were attracted to the cause." from "e-WV: The West Virginia Encyclopedia Online a project of the West Virginia Humanities Council" retrieved at https://www.wvencyclopedia.org/entries/476 on 2/27/25. Issued by The State Committee. Printed by The Labor Star unknown
19411284Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Communist Party n.d. 1941. No edition stated. <br /><br />Single sheet of newsprint folded to create four pages of approximately 8 1/4 x 10 1/2 inches 211 x 266 mm. <br /><br />Rare announcement of a speech by Communist Party Chairman William Z. Foster in Los Angeles a little more than a month after Germany invaded the Soviet Union. The announcement appears at the beginning of a text in which the Party calls for the U.S. to spare no effort in defeating Germany: "There can be no peace for the peoples of the world without the complete destruction of Hitler and Hitlerism. Hitler fascism stands exposed as the greatest and main enemy of the peoples of the world."<br /><br />Prior to Germany's invasion of the Soviet Union the Communist Party strongly opposed U.S. involvement in World War II maintaining that the fight between Germany and Britain was an imperialist war. Obviously that policy changed 180 degrees following the German invasion of the USSR. <br /><br />An interesting look at how the Communist Party's position drastically shifted after the German invasion of the Soviet Union. <br /><br />No institutional copies found in OCLC. None in commerce in February 2022. <b>RARE.</b><br /><br />CONDITION: Evenly toned pencil notation at top left corner of cover page couple small closed tears. Horizontal fold probably due to mailing. A Very Good copy. Los Angeles County Communist Party
19411280<p>Single sheet 8 1/2 x 11 inches 217 x 280 mm printed on one side only. </p><p>A Communist Party USA flyer issued in the aftermath of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and Germany's invasion of the Soviet Union. It calls for a united front in the fight against the Axis powers and total mobilization of industry. "The Communist Party pledges its loyalty its devoted labor and last drop of its blood in support of our country in this greatest of all the crises that has ever threatened its existence."<br /></p><p>No institutional holdings found in OCLC. SCARCE.<br /></p><p>CONDITION: Heavily toned folded for mailing some pencil notations. About Very Good.<br /></p> Los Angeles County Communist Party
19411284Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Communist Party n.d. 1941. No edition stated. <br /><br />Single sheet of newsprint folded to create four pages of approximately 8 1/4 x 10 1/2 inches 211 x 266 mm. <br /><br />Rare announcement of a speech by Communist Party Chairman William Z. Foster in Los Angeles a little more than a month after Germany invaded the Soviet Union. The announcement appears at the beginning of a text in which the Party calls for the U.S. to spare no effort in defeating Germany: "There can be no peace for the peoples of the world without the complete destruction of Hitler and Hitlerism. Hitler fascism stands exposed as the greatest and main enemy of the peoples of the world."<br /><br />Prior to Germany's invasion of the Soviet Union the Communist Party strongly opposed U.S. involvement in World War II maintaining that the fight between Germany and Britain was an imperialist war. Obviously that policy changed 180 degrees following the German invasion of the USSR. <br /><br />An interesting look at how the Communist Party's position drastically shifted after the German invasion of the Soviet Union. <br /><br />No institutional copies found in OCLC. None in commerce in January 2021. <b>RARE.</b><br /><br />CONDITION: Evenly toned pencil notation at top left corner of cover page couple small closed tears. Horizontal fold probably due to mailing. A Very Good copy. Los Angeles County Communist Party books
19411280<p>Single sheet 8 1/2 x 11 inches 217 x 280 mm printed on one side only. </p><p>A Communist Party USA flyer issued in the aftermath of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and Germany's invasion of the Soviet Union. It calls for a united front in the fight against the Axis powers and total mobilization of industry. "The Communist Party pledges its loyalty its devoted labor and last drop of its blood in support of our country in this greatest of all the crises that has ever threatened its existence."<br /></p><p>No institutional holdings found in OCLC. SCARCE.<br /></p><p>CONDITION: Heavily toned folded for mailing some pencil notations. About Very Good.<br /></p> Los Angeles County Communist Party books
191043026New York: Arbeiter Ring aka Workmens Circle 1910. First Edition. Small octavo 18.5cm. Printed thick paper wrappers; 256 pp; 16 unnumbered leaves of plates; illus; portraits. Mild external rubbing and wear; text clean tight and unmarked - a Very Good copy. Text in Yiddish but for a few captions in English. Souvenir book and organizational history issued in conjunction with the tenth anniversary convention of Der Arbeiter Ring aka The Workmens Circle a Jewish-American labor association and mutual-aid society that formed following the massive waves of Yiddish immigration following the Russian and European pogroms of the Eighteen-eighties and Nineties. The Workmens Circle is still in existence as a Jewish cultural and liberal political organization but at the time of this publication the Circle's aims were essentially Marxist in line with those of the left wing of the American Socialist Party with which many of its members were closely affiliated. In keeping with the sense of accomplishment that the organization's members would have felt having survived both Russian pogroms and ten years in a New World barely more sympathetic to Jewish culture than the Old this souvenir book is rather elaborately produced with numerous halftone plates reproducing photographs and drawings as well as many illustrations in text. Arbeiter Ring [aka Workmens Circle] unknown books
191943080Detroit: Literature Bureau of the Workers' International Industrial Union 1919. First Edition. Quarto 30cm. Staple-bound pictorial card wrappers; 40pp; illus. Issue for 1919 ; slightly worn with wrappers darkened and stained contents slightly age-toned with corner-creases and occasional thumb-soil; Just Good. Hand-stamp of the SLP / Detroit to front cover. Annual souvenir of the Workers' International Industrial Union. The WIIU the labor union arm of the Socialist Labor Party was effectively formed in 1908 following the split of the SLP faction from the Industrial Workers of the World; the group identified itself as the 'Detroit IWW' until 1915 at which point the name was changed to Workers International Industrial Union a typically De Leonist mouthful!. The WIIU never throve; its membership probably never numbered above about 2500 workers a number that dropped quickly following the death of Daniel De Leon in 1915. By the 1920s the WIIU was an afterthought and the group was finally disbanded in 1925.<br/><br/>Contents include articles by Michael Altschuler Herman Richter W.J. Dodge and others; literary contributions by Fred H. Hartmann Richard Le Galienne William Morris and Walt Whitman; portraits and reproductions of artworks by Eugene Higgins Jan Styka and Eugene Chaperon. An attractive and rather uncommon American labor souvenir book; OCLC notes 6 physical locations for any issue 2018. Literature Bureau of the Workers' International Industrial Union unknown books
190814628Kenton OH: 1908: S.i. 1908. Original poster ca 35cm x 28cm. Printed recto only in black ink on stiff white poster board; photographic portrait of the candidate halftone at upper left. Brief closed tear at upper margin; minor toning and wear Very Good. Attractive campaign poster in which Wharton a Socialist Candidate for the Ohio State Legislature promises to give his "best endeavor to forwarding the regular Socialist program of all production to the producer" and to ".work early and late for the Repeal of the New Tax Law.and to cut out every useless official in the State and County and reduce all salaries to not over $5.00 per day." Charles E. Wharton's 1908 campaign appears to have gained some national notoriety; a 1908 New York Times article describes him as a "wealthy socialist" whose campaign was to be assisted by twelve stump speeches by the Countess of Warwick "one of the most famous of English Socialists. S.i. unknown books