1 071 résultats
0866563067.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1985Q-0866564543Routledge 1985-01-01. paperback. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Routledge paperback
0866564543.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1985DADAX0866564543Routledge 1985-01-01. 1. paperback. New. 5.98x0.34x8.35. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Routledge paperback
A9780866563062Hardback. New. hardcover
1988LFA-126739820N° 46 (Juin 1988) 66 pages, format 205 x 285 mm, illustré, broché couverture couleurs, bon état
1947145729Culver City CA: RKO Radio Pictures 1947. Vintage photograph of songwriter-pianist Hoagy Carmichael from the 1947 film. With a mimeo snipe holograph annotations and photographer and agency rubber stamps on the verso. <br/><br/>Cathy Mallory Merle Oberon a beautiful socialite falls in love with a blind pianist Dan Evans Dana Andrews who plays in Chick Morgan's Hoagy Carmichael swing band. She fakes her own blindness in order to get closer to him. <br/><br/>Shot on location in New York City San Francisco and San Bernardino California. <br/><br/>10 x 8 inches. Near Fine. RKO Radio Pictures unknown books
1947162361Culver City CA: RKO Radio Pictures 1947. Vintage reference photograph from the 1947 film showing actors Hoagy Carmichael Dana Andrews and Merle Oberon. RKO Radio Pictures stamp specific to the film's French release on the verso.<br /> <br /> A beautiful socialite falls in love with a blind nightclub pianist deciding to fake her own blindness in order to get closer to him.<br /> <br /> Shot on location in New York San Francisco and San Bernardino.<br /> <br /> 10 x 8 inches. Near Fine. RKO Radio Pictures unknown
1947145729Culver City CA: RKO Radio Pictures 1947. Vintage photograph of songwriter-pianist Hoagy Carmichael from the 1947 film. With a mimeo snipe manuscript annotations and photographer and agency stamps on the verso.<br /> <br /> A beautiful socialite falls in love with a blind nightclub pianist deciding to fake her own blindness in order to get closer to him.<br /> <br /> Shot on location in New York San Francisco and San Bernardino.<br /> <br /> 10 x 8 inches. Near Fine. RKO Radio Pictures unknown
1947164242Culver City CA: RKO Radio Pictures 1947. Vintage reference photograph from the 1947 film showing actors Merle Oberon and Hoagy Carmichael on the set with director John Cromwell. RKO Radio Pictures stamp on the verso crediting photographer Oliver Sigurdson. <br /> <br /> A beautiful socialite falls in love with a blind nightclub pianist deciding to fake her own blindness in order to get closer to him.<br /> <br /> Shot on location in New York San Francisco and San Bernardino.<br /> <br /> 10 x 8 inches. Near Fine. RKO Radio Pictures unknown
2009Atlantic-9780745328935Pluto 2009. Paperback. New. Pluto paperback
2009Atlantic-9780745328935Pluto 2009. Paperback. New. Pluto paperback
1359231919.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
a87736Nashville 1955 first edition Vanderbilt. Hardcover. Octavo 415p. blue cloth. Near Fine just slightest bit of bumping on corners in Good plus DJ some edge fraying and light toning of spine. . hardcover
1333678991.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
0365202452.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
19141239221914. Signed. CROMWELL Adelaide CROMWELL John Wesley. The Negro in American History. Men and Women Eminent in the Evolution of the American of African Descent. Washington: American Negro Academy 1914. Octavo original gilt-lettered green cloth. $3200.First edition of Cromwell's paramount African American history that ""broke fresh ground"" in its defining biographies of leaders such as Frederick Douglass and Phillis Wheatley a major biography of Reconstruction congressman Robert B. Elliot who crafted a core argument against the 1873 decision in the Slaughter-House Cases along with accounts of the lives and influence of Henry Highland Garnet Denmark Vesey Nat Turner and many more. This important association copy stands within that tradition in its owner signature of Cromwell's granddaughter historian and scholar Dr. Adelaide Cromwell co-founder of the African Studies program at Boston University.Born enslaved in 1846 Cromwell became a teacher before enrolling in Howard University's law school. Admitted to the bar in 1874 in 1876 he founded the newspaper People's Advocate and became a voice for Black education in all-Black schools founding the Bethel Literary and Historical Association and playing a vital role in establishing the American Negro Academy. Cromwell's early writings and leadership were quickly seen as crucial and in 1887 he was profiled in Simmons' Men of Mark alongside Frederick Douglass and Crispus Attucks. Simmons asserted: ""If you ask me for the best English scholar in the United States I would unhesitatingly refer you to John Wesley Cromwell"" Smithsonian. Cromwell's Negro in American History his ""first full-length monograph"" documents the ""history of African Americans from the slave trade through Reconstruction and its aftermath"" ANB. Early recognized as a ""very important work"" it features lengthy biographies of Phillis Wheatley Sojourner Truth Frederick Douglass and Booker T. Washington as well as figures such as Reconstruction attorney Robert B. Elliott ""who helped draft legislation to fight the KKK in the South"" Smithsonian. Negro in American History is especially significant in its attention to slave revolts as ""a constant menace to the safety and security of slavery."" Cromwell saw Denmark Vesey and Nat Turner as folk heroes and ""maintained that before the American Revolution along approximately 25 insurrections had occurred."" The work of Black historians such as Cromwell ""broke fresh ground by focusing on the slaves' responses to captivity"" and by evincing pride for a Black past that ""laid the foundation for Black protest"": raising questions and ""themes that did not become popular among historians until the 1960s"" Smith Different View of Slavery 303-4. In his life and writings Cromwell combined ""advocacy for the collective uplift of African Americans with a belief in educational advancement and intellectual achievement. His historical work placed him at the nexus of the pre-professional and professional milieus in African American scholarship"" ANB. First edition first printing. With frontispiece and eleven full-page illustrations. This distinctive association copy possesses the owner signature of Adelaide M. Cromwell the granddaughter of its author John Wesley Cromwell and the niece of Dr. Otelia Cromwell the first African American woman to earn a doctorate from Yale. Following in their footsteps Dr. Adelaide Cromwell also broke ground in African American history serving as a distinguished professor at Boston University and pivotal co-founder of its African Studies Programonly the second in the country. In addition to authoring major works on Black history she also became the first African American appointed Library Commissioner in Massachusetts.Interior quite fresh expert repair to rear inner hinge and a sopt at top of rear board. hardcover
19031245491903. First Edition. Signed. DU BOIS W. E. Burghardt. The Negro Church. Report of a Social Study made under the direction of Atlanta University; together with the Proceedings of the Eighth Conference for the Study of the Negro Problems held at Atlanta University May 26th 1903. Atlanta: Atlanta University Press 1903. Octavo original printed gray self-wrappers respined; pp. 212. $2800.First edition of a rare association copy of Du Bois' groundbreaking work on the Black Church with owner signature of Adelaide M. Cromwell influential scholar and granddaughter of renowned 19th-century Black historian John Wesley Cromwell a peer of Du Bois this 1903 work published the same year as his famed ""Talented Tenth"" manifesto key in affirming Du Bois' role in moving ""the Atlantic University Studies to the frontier of social science research virtually single-handedly.""The year Du Bois arrived in Atlanta in 1897 to begin his tenure at Atlanta University he became director of the annual series of conferences and primary editor of the accompanying publications. Particularly ""in both Negro Church 1903 and Negro Family 1908 Du Bois would push the Atlantic University Studies to the frontier of American social science research virtually single-handedly"" Levering Lewis W.E.B. Du Bois 160. There and in his own early writings ""Du Bois created sociological and historical works of lasting significance that set wholly new standards for the sociological study of Black Americans"" New York Times. In Atlanta already ""one of the 20th century's intellectual heavyweights"" he stood in ""the vanguard of social science scholarship in America"" but remained ignored by the academy as the critically underfunded Atlanta University was routinely bypassed by white philanthropists Levering Lewis 713 162.It was in Atlanta that Du Bois created ""the first American school of sociology"" Wright First American School of Sociology 80. Yet in 1910 when he realized ""his presence on the faculty of Atlanta University negatively affected the school's philanthropic outreach efforts he chose to resign from the faculty."" Du Bois increasingly ""saw that 'the cure wasn't simply telling people the truth it was inducing them to act on the truth.' It was not enough to determine truth scientifically; it had to be implemented politically."" This became a cornerstone of his often tumultuous always consequential life and career. Nearly five decades after leaving Atlanta the news of his death across the world in Ghana caused the 250000 Americans gathered at the 1963 March on Washington to grow suddenly silenta ""moment almost cinematic in its poignancy""as Roy Wilkins declared: ""his was the voice calling you to gather today in this cause"" Levering Lewis 162 2. First edition first printing: Atlanta University Publications No. 8; with numerous in-text charts and graphs. Partington 2332. Work 408. Not in Blockson. With owner signature of Adelaide M. Cromwell tipped in from the library binding it was bound into at one time this association copy belonged to the prominent Black historian and sociologist who followed in the footsteps of her grandfather John Wesley Cromwell a pioneering 19th-century lawyer author and civil rights activist. Dr. Cromwell Hill an influential scholar and activist was a distinguished professor at Boston University and pivotal co-founder of its African Studies Programonly the second in the country. In addition to authoring major works on Black history she also served as the first African American appointed Library Commissioner in Massachusetts. Text very fresh expert restoration to original wrappers. unknown
18643602NY: Tousey 1864. First edn. small 4to Pp. 36. Cloth backed boards a BPL duplicate. This satire of life in New York City has the bookplate of Henry B Anthony journalist Governor and US Senator1858-84 from Rhode Island. In verse. Tousey unknown books
186469794New York: John Bradburn successor to M. Doolady 49 Walker Street 1864. First edition 8vo pp. 36; original green cloth-backed blue paper-covered boards stamped in gilt on upper cover; rear endpaper creased at the top corner; all else very good sound and clean. The book appears under at least two imprints Sinclair Tousey being the other. Sabin 5790 not citing an author although Cromwell is the copyright holder. John Bradburn, (successor to M. Doolady) 49 Walker Street unknown
1359546936.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
V16152Leipzig (Insel) o.J. (= Insel-Bücherei 237 und 238). 8°, 2 Bände Originalkarton (Hardcover), 73 S. + 66 S.,
2008048049Kestrel Books Ltd 2008. Book. Very Good. Paperback. Signed by Authors. Scarce. Signed by author mild edge and cover wear. 173pp. Kestrel Books Ltd Paperback
0816743207.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1936169429New York: David Kemp 1936. First Edition. First Edition. <br /> <br /> Spine lean topstain faded a couple small splashes to the bottom page and board edges overall Very Good in a Very Good plus dust jacket. Jacket with a vertical crease to the spine light and even fading to same and some light rubbing to the rear panel and flap folds. David Kemp unknown