3 418 résultats
Features/Photos: in colour - the new Forth Road bridge, and other subjects; Queen Mary seamen and crew strike; The first U.N. troops in Katanga - a peaceful entry; The Royal visit to Orkney and Shetland Islands - a British monarch's first visit to the Shetlands for 700 years; teaching the Australian aboriginals to live in a modern world; American military inventions - up-to-date equipment in the United States Army; Karabel in Lycia; An American space triumph - the 13th Discoverer satellite; and more. Clean and unmarked with moderate wear. Sound copy. Book
Features/Photos: Macmillan visits South Africa; Excavations at Hasanlu, near Lake Urmia - Part II; Traffic easing ideas; the 1,000 mile walk of Dr. Moore, aged 56; Chaos on London's underground - the discomfort of many cuased by the unofficial action of a few; London rush-hour in the rain during a futile unofficial strike; and more. Clean and unmarked with moderate wear. Sound copy. Book
Features: Terror tactics of a strike - Pilkington's; The Stock and Loan Scandal; Recipe for a fake antique; Healey fights a phantom ware - east of Suez; Miss Grundy - Postmistress of Footle-on-the-Crouch; City in the sky; Perfection in the city of slaves - ancient Athens; Edinburgh - an idea expressed in stone; Japan - a country with no illusions; The Roast Beef of Old France; The man who gave kingdoms away - Charles V; Was this the birthplace of the Greeks?; The signs that spelled protection; Britain's national wardrobe; and more. Average wear. Clean and unmarked. Sound copy. Magazine
Photos and illustrations include: Sketches at the closing of the Fisheries Exhibition, The Luther Celebration in Germany, Sketches in Yellowstone Park, Sketches at Drury Lane and the Adelphi, The Proposed Courts of Justice Central Hotel, Strand, The earthquake in Asia Minor, Prince Albert Victor at Cambridge University, and more. Two supplements loose but present. Above-average but not excessive wear. Book
20054Brussel, Paleis der Academien, 1952 Gebrocheerd, papieromslag, 180 x 260mm., 28pp.
19922Brussel, Paleis der Academien, 1943 Gebrocheerd, papieromslag, 180 x 260mm., 40pp., tekeningen en grafieken.
20093Brussel, Paleis der Academien, 1950 Gebrocheerd, papieromslag, 180 x 260mm., 9pp.
19929Brussel, Paleis der Academien, 1950 Gebrocheerd, papieromslag, 180 x 260mm., 16pp.
19912Brussel, Paleis der Academien, 1950 Gebrocheerd, papieromslag, 180 x 260mm., 17pp.
198616206ABPisa/Roma, Pacini; Hamburg u. Berlin: Paul Parey, 1986. 25 cm. 199 S. mit zahlr. Ill. (z.T. farb.). Illustrierter Pappband (Hardcover). Kopfschnitt minimal angestaubt, ansonsten tadelloses Exemplar. Mit einer Widmung des Verfassers auf dem Titel.
9786555861778-11-73864FisicalBook. New. FisicalBook unknown
654567393Djof Publishing pp. 220 . Papeback. Used. Djof Publishing unknown
033180252X.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
048332566X.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
189419950Washington: G. P. O. 1894. First Edition. hard cover. Very Good/No jacket. Washington: Government Printing Office. 1895. 681pp. Hard bound. 1/4 leather. A very good tight clean copy. Report upon the controversies which arose between the Illinois Central Railroad Company and the Chicago Rock Island and Pacific Railway Company in June 1894.S336. Washington: G. P. O. hardcover
1937234461937. Labor Organization Chrysler strike press photo archive documenting the 1937 sit down strikes and picketing campaigns at Dodge Main and other Chrysler facilities in Detroit and Highland Park Michigan during the decisive phase of industrial unionization in the American automobile industry. The archive records workers occupying plants mass picket mobilizations outside factory gates anti injunction demonstrations and violence connected to the struggle between Chrysler management the United Automobile Workers and competing independent unions. These events unfolded only weeks after the February 1937 settlement of the Flint sit down strike against General Motors which established the UAW as a major industrial union and accelerated organizing efforts across Detroit's auto plants. Chrysler initially resisted recognition obtaining court injunctions ordering workers to evacuate occupied factories while thousands of laborers remained inside the plants or formed flying squadrons to block strikebreakers from entering. The scenes here capture the atmosphere of confrontation in Depression era industrial labor conflict at a time when mass production workers forced some of the largest corporations in the United States to negotiate with organized labor.<br /> <br /> Photo archive of 6 silver gelatin press photographs from 6 x 8 inches to 8 x 10 inches Detroit and Highland Park Michigan 1937. Affixed captions on versos with filing stamps dated March and August 1937. Crowds of striking workers gather outside Dodge Division and Chrysler factory gates beneath signs reading "Dodge Division of Chrysler Corporation Employment Office" and "We Are Here To Stay Dept. 82." Several men hold placards reading "82 is Sittin Too" "Spirit of 1937" and "Fence Jumper" while an effigy labeled "Injunction" hangs over the crowd in open defiance of a court order directing workers to vacate occupied plants. A large calendar board records the passing days of the sit down occupation beginning March 8 1937. Another scene shows relatives and supporters communicating with occupying workers through numbered department cards hung along the perimeter fence after union organizers established an improvised locating system for men inside the plant. One caption identifies "flying squadrons" directing picket activity outside Chrysler headquarters. The latest photograph records Frank A. Dillon identified as president of an independent Chrysler union receiving questioning from Detective Sergeant Harry Scher after an alleged beating connected to union violence that led Chrysler officials to temporarily close a plant pending investigation.<br /> <br /> The Chrysler strike formed part of the larger wave of industrial labor upheaval that reshaped American manufacturing during the New Deal. Passage of the Wagner Act in 1935 legally protected collective bargaining but enforcement depended on workers physically preventing corporations from continuing production with replacement labor. Sit down strikes became one of the most controversial tactics of the era because occupying workers halted machinery while denying employers access to their own factories. The archive preserves not only the mechanics of strike organization but also the public theater of industrial conflict in Depression era Detroit: marching pickets improvised communication systems anti injunction symbolism and massive worker assemblies outside factory gates. Moderate surface wear occasional creasing editorial markings and toning to versos with captions firmly affixed; images remain sharp and highly legible. Overall very good condition. unknown
1938234231938. Labor Organizing United Auto Workers and CIO labor photograph archive documenting strike action union leadership and collective bargaining negotiations during the expansion of organized labor in the American automobile industry 1938-1949. The archive traces the period immediately following the 1935 Wagner Act when unions gained federal legal protection for collective bargaining but still faced violent resistance from corporations police departments and municipal governments. Several scenes connect directly to the years surrounding the 1937 Battle of the Overpass in Dearborn when Ford security men beat UAW organizers attempting to distribute union literature outside the River Rouge complex and to the broader wave of sit-down strikes and factory shutdowns that forced General Motors Chrysler and eventually Ford into formal negotiations with the UAW. The captions identify senior labor figures including Walter Reuther R. J. Thomas George Addes and Richard T. Leonard establishing the archive as documentation not merely of rank-and-file unrest but of the institutional consolidation of the UAW-CIO into one of the most powerful industrial unions in the United States. The material also records how labor disputes extended beyond factory gates into courts city halls state legislatures and police jurisdictions revealing the political dimensions of industrial unionism during the New Deal and early Cold War years.<br /> <br /> Photo archive of 12 Large silver gelatin press photographs one large panorama measuring 9.5 x 16.5 inches 11 press photos ranging from 6 x 8 inches to 8 x 10 inches primarily Detroit Dearborn South Gate and Atlantic City circa 1938-1949. A large-format scene dated 1939 records tear gas and street violence during a UAW strike at the Fisher Body plant with clouds of gas spreading across trolley tracks as helmeted police advance toward crowds of fleeing workers and spectators. Another image shows hundreds of demonstrators carrying a massive American flag through downtown Detroit toward City Hall during protests following clashes between union pickets and police at Federal Screw Works; the verso caption notes approximately forty injuries and references accusations of "police brutality" raised before city council. Additional photographs show UAW-CIO officials seated at conference tables negotiating contracts and appearing in municipal hearing rooms beneath desk microphones and courthouse lighting. Captions identify figures including Walter Reuther George Addes and R. J. Thomas while a 1940 Dearborn caption records the arrest of union leaders for distributing handbills asserting workers' rights under the National Labor Relations Act. South Gate strike scenes outside a General Motors facility show workers carrying placards demanding a thirty percent wage increase while Rev. Louis R. Loe conducts prayer services along the picket line. Convention and leadership photographs from Atlantic City and Washington document labor leaders gathered under the authority of Samuel Gompers and later CIO leadership structures linking local strike activity to national labor organization.<br /> <br /> The archive illustrates the transformation of the automobile industry from one of the nation's most violently anti-union industrial sectors into the center of postwar collective bargaining power. Ford Motor Company resisted union recognition longer than General Motors or Chrysler relying on private security forces local police cooperation labor espionage and anti-handbill ordinances to suppress organizing inside and outside its plants. Several captions directly reference these legal confrontations including arrests tied to leaflet distribution and disputes over municipal authority to restrict labor organizing in public space. By the late 1940s many of the same figures shown here were negotiating contracts that established wage standards pensions grievance procedures and health benefits that reshaped industrial employment across the United States. Creasing edge wear scattered minor losses adhesive residue and newsroom markings to versos; images remain clear and intact overall. Overall good condition. unknown
2009BN28529Halem 2009. 2009. Softcover. 214 x 14 x 18 cm. Kunst ist tiefsinnig einzigartig und intelligent Unterhaltung ist trivial frisst Lebenszeit und führt zur Verdummung meist beschäftigen sich die Kulturwissenschaften immer noch aus dieser Perspektive mit der Unterhaltung und bestärken so ihre eigenen Vorurteile.Hans-Otto Hügel hat in seinen Arbeiten stets einen anderen Blick auf Unterhaltung gewagt und hat selbst als langjähriger Literatur- und Medienexperte bei Wim Thoelkes Der große Preis die Grenze zwischen Theorie und Praxis überschritten. In seinen Arbeiten unternimmt er mit der Formel von der ästhetischen Zweideutigkeit fortwährend den Versuch der Unterhaltung im Besonderen und der Populären Kultur im Allgemeinen genau die Spannung zurückzugeben die ihr sowohl von ihren Verächtern als auch von vielen Medienwissenschaftlern und Medienpädagogen abgesprochen wird.Dieser Band vereint in Anlehnung an Hügels Forschung so vielfältige Themen wie die Flut von Kochsendungen im deutschen Fernsehen die Kommerzialisierung der Neuen Deutschen Welle James Bonds Rolle als Indikator gesellschaftlicher Veränderungen einen unvollendeten Roman von Friedrich Schiller oder Trickfilme aus Legosteinen.Autoren dieses Bandes sind Udo Göttlich Werner Greve Barbara Hornberger Christian Kortmann Stefan Krankenhagen Stephen Lowry Kaspar Maase Mathias Mertens Eggo Müller Jörg-Uwe Nieland Stephan Porombka Felix Reisel Ingrid Tomkowiak und Volker Wortmann. Massenkultur Unterhaltung Aufsatzsammlung Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie Anthropologie Freizeitgestaltung Darstellende Kunst <br/><br/>Massenkultur Unterhaltung Aufsatzsammlung Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie Anthropologie Freizeitgestaltung Darstellende Kunst Trickfilm Kunst ist tiefsinnig einzigartig und intelligent Unterhaltung ist trivial frisst Lebenszeit und führt zur Verdummung meist beschäftigen sich die Kulturwissenschaften immer noch aus dieser Perspektive mit der Unterhaltung und bestärken so ihre eigenen Vorurteile.Hans-Otto Hügel hat in seinen Arbeiten stets einen anderen Blick auf Unterhaltung gewagt und hat selbst als langjähriger Literatur- und Medienexperte bei Wim Thoelkes Der große Preis die Grenze zwischen Theorie und Praxis überschritten. In seinen Arbeiten unternimmt er mit der Formel von der ästhetischen Zweideutigkeit fortwährend den Versuch der Unterhaltung im Besonderen und der Populären Kultur im Allgemeinen genau die Spannung zurückzugeben die ihr sowohl von ihren Verächtern als auch von vielen Medienwissenschaftlern und Medienpädagogen abgesprochen wird.Dieser Band vereint in Anlehnung an Hügels Forschung so vielfältige Themen wie die Flut von Kochsendungen im deutschen Fernsehen die Kommerzialisierung der Neuen Deutschen Welle James Bonds Rolle als Indikator gesellschaftlicher Veränderungen einen unvollendeten Roman von Friedrich Schiller oder Trickfilme aus Legosteinen.Autoren dieses Bandes sind Udo Göttlich Werner Greve Barbara Hornberger Christian Kortmann Stefan Krankenhagen Stephen Lowry Kaspar Maase Mathias Mertens Eggo Müller Jörg-Uwe Nieland Stephan Porombka Felix Reisel Ingrid Tomkowiak und Volker Wortmann. Halem paperback
1969165747Los Angeles: UCLA Strike Coordinating Committee 1969. 1p 8.5 x 11 inches folded lengthwise mild discoloration at bottom calls for UC-wide strike in aftermath of People's Park demonstrations and occupation of UC Berkeley by National Guard. UCLA Strike Coordinating Committee unknown books
2005Q-0727914464BMJ Books 2005-04-01. Hardcover. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! BMJ Books hardcover
2012163522New York: Bruce Silverstein Gallery 2012. First edition. Softcover. Exhibition catalog for a show that ran September 6 through October 20 2012. Essay by Carol Troyen. Includes illustrations of works by Charles Demuth Arthur Dove Marsden Hartley John Marin Georgia O'Keeffe Alfred Stieglitz and Paul Strand. A near fine copy in French style wrappers. A nicely printed catalog. Bruce Silverstein Gallery unknown books
198348081Praha, Verlag Artia, 1983. Neubearbeitete Auflage 341 Seiten , 30 cm , Hardcover/Pappeinband
1989ECONO32320320Paris, Editions La Découverte, "Textes à l'appui", 1989, 13,8 x 22, 258 pages sous couverture illustrée.
46916513like new. unknown
Editions Fayard 1971, in-8 broché, 206 pages, bon état.