31 résultats
1922261991Milan: Libreria Editrice 1922. Pamphlet. 54p. wraps 5x7.5 inches evenly toned wraps edge worn and fragile head of spine chipped front wrap soiled with a few small stains leaves unopened. Text in Italian. Only 5 copies found in OCLC as of 1/2021. The Italian anarchist contrasts anarchism with state Communism. Appendix consists of Malatesta's article "Ancora su Comunism e Anarchia" reprinted from the newspaper "Umanita Nova" of September 2 1920. Libreria Editrice unknown books
1929257147Paris: La Fraternelle 1929. 132p. paperback protruding cover edges worn with some chipping; second edition. The anarchist poet an advocate of free love writes here of the political tumult and painful aftermath of the failure of the socialist revolutionary movement in Italy. First published in 1922. D'Andrea had by this time settled in the United States; her work was banned under the fascist government of her homeland. In 1933 she died of breast cancer at the age of 45 in New York. La Fraternelle unknown books
1929257148Paris: La Fraternelle 1929. 132p. paperback cover soiled some foxing; second edition. The anarchist poet an advocate of free love writes here of the political tumult and painful aftermath of the failure of the socialist revolutionary movement in Italy. First published in 1922. D'Andrea had by this time settled in the United States; her work was banned under the fascist government of her homeland. In 1933 she died of breast cancer at the age of 45 in New York. La Fraternelle unknown books
192774562Paris: L. Chauvet 1927. 32p. staplebound pamphlet very good. Edizioni Gruppo Studi Sociali. One of the pamphlets issued in response to the 1926 "Organizational Platform of the General Union of Anarchists" a controversial proposal from the Group of Russian Anarchists Abroad. The Platformists including Nestor Makhno called for a degree of organization in the international anarchist movement that they believed would give it greater resilience taking lessons from the defeat of anarchists by the Bolsheviks after the Russian Revolution. Critics including the authors of this piece believed that this level of organized federation would be a betrayal of anarchist ideals. L. Chauvet unknown books
1922264<i>LIBERTAD Y COMUNISMO</i>. Barcelona: Tierra Y Libertad Imp. Salvat Duch y Ferré Viladomat 108 1922. 21 cm 165 pages plus index. Selections by P. Delesalle R. Mella A. Girard C. Cafiero E. Malatesta and P. Kropotkine. "El communism y la anarquia" is credited to the Grupo Estud. S.R.I. de Paris. "Definiciones" and "Origines" are anonymous. OCLC records one copy in the Netherlands at the International Institute of Social History. Paper wrapper slight fold separation at the foot of a chipped spine. A well-read copy still usable paper aging but not disintegrating. Tierra Y Libertad, Imp. Salvat, Duch y Ferré, Viladomat 108. paperback books
192246511Bologna: Edizioni di "Volontà 1922. First Edition. Octavo 19.5cm.; publisher's cream card wrappers printed in orange and black; 118pp. Spine rather significantly cocked some wear to extremities; still quite a Very Good fresh copy of a scarce edition. A series of fictional conversations and debates between a student a "borghese" an anarchist-socialist a judge and a merchant. Divided into chapters the "characters" discuss a socialist constitution economics communism government laws and communist anarchism. The first ten conversations were written in 1897 before Malatesta fled Italy and were based on his experiences as the frequenter of "a café that was not usually the haunt of subversives such as himself.Anarchism would almost certainly have been one of the topics of conversation since the anarchists of the city Ancona constantly bombarded their fellow townspeople with a barrage of propaganda" Robin Healey "Italian Literature Before 1900 in English Translation" 0584 citing the 2005 translation. Only upon his return to Ancona in 1913 did Malatesta revisit the conversations publishing the first ten in his new journal "Volontà " though they were not fully completed until after the end of World War I in 1920 shortly before the author's arrest. Though his home was searched and arms and explosives discovered the manuscript was either missed or ignored and published in its entirey for the first time in this edition with a short afterword by Luigi Fabbri co-editor with Malatesta of the journal "L'Agitazione." See Paul Nursey-Bray's introduction to the 2005 translation. Exceedingly rare: no copies in the trade as of October 2019; Smith College and the IISH only in OCLC. Edizioni di "Volontà unknown books