103 résultats
1932204716New York: Socialist Labor Party of America 1932. Evenly toned; gentle horizontal fold; one short edge tear. Four page leaflet printed on a single bifolium approx. 9 X 10-3/4 inches. Delicate newsprint leaflet outlining the party's program adopted at its national convention in 1932 and advancing the Industrial Unionism advocated by its founder Daniel De Leon. Socialist Labor Party of America unknown
190373140Chicago: Charles H. Kerr Compnay 1903. First edition. Small octavo. 64 pp. Publisher's printed buff wrappers. A very good copy.For socialism Ernest Untermann and others; For single tax Louis F. Post and others. Untermann was a member of the Socialist Labor Party of America SLP in the 1890s before leaving to join the Socialist Party of America SPA.Untermann was a regular contributor to Algie Simons' dissident SLP newspaper The Workers Call published in Chicago. When Simons moved to Chicago to assume the editorship of International Socialist Review in 1900 a monthly published by the pioneer American Marxist publishing house Charles H. Kerr & Co. Untermann became a frequent contributor to that publication as well. Untermann earned his keep as an associate editor for J.A. Wayland's mass circulation socialist weekly The Appeal to Reason in 1903. Untermann was the first American translator of Karl Marx's Das Kapital beginning work on the massive project in the spring of 1905 while living on a chicken farm in Orlando Florida and completing translations of volumes 2 and 3 for Kerr in 1907 and 1909 respectively. He also translated other socialist works for an American audience including the memoirs of Wilhelm Liebknecht and August Bebel as well as The Origin of the Family Private Property and the State by Frederick Engels. In addition to translations from German and Italian Untermann wrote original works on Economics and Natural History. Untermann's books included Science and Revolution 1905 The World's Revolutions 1906 Marxian Economics: A Popular Introduction to the Three Volumes of Marx's Capital 1907. Charles H. Kerr Compnay unknown
19302279Moscow: Various Publishers 1930s. <br /><br />Thirty black-and-white postcards each measuring 5 3/4 x 3 7/8 inches 147 x 98 mm all unused and unmounted. <br /><br />A collection of postcards depicting scenes in Moscow during the tumultuous 1930s when Stalin was expanding his power and killing off his opponents. The scenes include workers' houses hotels department stores and cathedrals that the Bolsheviks closed and turned into museums. Other scenes show Arbat Square Pushkin's monument the race course Dynamo stadium the Izvestia building Moscow University and more. <br /><br />Seventeen of the cards have brief captions in English and sometimes in French and German in addition to Russian. <br /><br />A wonderful series of vibrant images of Moscow in one of the most significant decades in Soviet history. <br /><br />CONDITION: One card lightly trimmed at the edges a few minor stains to the versos of some cards. Overall Very Good or better. Various Publishers