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1931201021931. Paris Éditions Gallimard 1931 e. o. sur papier velin pur fil Lafuma 1/30 exemplaires (n°805) d'auteur hors-commerce numérotés de 776 à 805. Broché 12 cm x 19 cm 267 pages. Texte de Jean Giono. Bien complet de la vignette « Exemplaire réservé à Mr Rosny jeune » quelques rousseurs sinon très bon état
491Issy-les-Moulineaux. Rédacteur en chef : Régis Messac. Ensemble de 17 numéros. 1930-1933. ( N° 11. 13. 16. 18. 21. 23. 26. 27. 30. 31. 32. 34. 35. 39. 41. 42. 43.). Exemplaires propres.
197261845Nyack NY: CONAME ca 1972. 5 manila envelopes 12"x9" with printed labels containing a total of 29 reprinted articles and 6 introductory sheets. All housed within large manila envelope 13"x9.5" labeled in manuscript. External envelope rubbed and worn with some dustsoil: Good only. Internal manila envelopes slightly rubbed with minor rust to metal closures; enclosed articles with mild foxing and browning one or two bent corners only gently rubbed: overall Very Good. <br /> <br /> An information packet distributed by the Committee On New Alternatives in the Middle East CONAME a pacifist organization founded in 1969 by a group of Jewish-Americans among them Noam Chomsky. Their aim was to pursue peace in the Middle East by promoting peaceful dialogue in the U.S. "Founding director Allan Solomonow described it as 'a forum and a resource for peace-seeking alternatives to the currently internecine status quo; we are the gadfly to the consciences of the resigned of the apathetic of those mired in propaganda and dogma.' To that end the organization's principal work was educational: disseminating articles touring speakers and organizing Middle East delegations to mitigate "the pervasive polarization of opinion that has characterized the Middle East crisis'". <br /> <br /> This is one of the informational packets CONAME assembled and distributed probably in 1972. It contains reprints of previously published articles dating from 1969-1972 organized in envelopes labeled as follows: <br /> <br /> 1. Who Are the Palestinians 6 articles<br /> 2. The Israeli Peace Movement 4<br /> 3. Israel's Arab Minority 5<br /> 4. Alternatives for Middle East Peace 9<br /> 5. In Search of Middle East Information 5<br /> <br /> Article authors include Edward Said Alan Dershowitz Ahmed Khalidi Atallah Mansour M. Cherif Bassiouni Nora Levin Edward Said Shlomo Avineri Amos Kenan Siach Amnon Rubinstein Israel Shahak and Sabri Jiryis. The packets also contain copies of a few periodicals e.g. New Outlook and The Middle East News Review. <br /> <br /> Though this example equivocates about possible resolutions to the conflict and prioritizes providing background information CONAME eventually advocated for Israeli-Palestianian dialogue and a two-state solution. The organization collaborated with other American pacifist organizations such as the Jewish Peace Fellowship War Resisters League Quaker Action Group and Women Strike for Peace. However after the founding of Breira and the Fellowship of Reconciliation CONAME's Executive Director and Assistant Director departed and the organization dissolved in 1975. See the article on CONAME on btvshalom. org the website for the Jewish Alliance for Justice & Peace. <br /> <br /> An ephemeral and uncommon survival; we have traced no similar examples. #61845. CONAME unknown
194960676Ahmedabad: Navajivan Publishing House 1949. First Edition. First Impression one of 5000 copies. Octavo 22.25cm; pale green printed paper-covered boards and light grey cloth backstrip with titles stamped in black on spine; dustjacket; xvi4031pp. Gentle sunning to spine ends and board edges light wear to lower corners some offsetting to endpapers with a shallow indentation to right edge of rear board; subtle tanning to text edges as is common with the cheap quality of the paper stock else clean throughout; Very Good. In the original dustjacket priced 5 Rupees on the spine; modest wear gentle sunning to spine light dust-soil with a few small nicks tears and creases to extremities; three tears on front panel have been neatly and archivally mended on verso; an attractive Very Good example. Well-preserved copy of the second volume of Gandhi's major statement on non-violence - a collection of 221 short essays and writings on pacificsm in the face of world struggle written chiefly between Fall 1946-1948. Contains a glossary of non-English words and their meanings and an introduction by editor Bharatan Kumarappa. Navajivan Publishing House unknown
In-12 (160 x 95 mm), broché, couverture de papier de livraison ancien, vj, [-7], 84 p., faux-titre et titre compris. Rare édition publiée l'année de l'originale de cet essai qui s'inscrit dans un projet conçu par Rousseau visant à publier un abrégé commenté des principales oeuvres de l'abbé de Saint-Pierre, projet qui ne vit jamais le jour. En tête du volume figure une lettre de Rousseau à son éditeur Louis de Bastide, dans laquelle il annonce l'envoi du manuscrit et expose les raisons pour lesquelles il abandonne le dessein de publier cet abrégé intégral. L'ouvrage s'achève, à partir de la page 79, par un article critique acerbe de Voltaire: "Rescrit de l'Empereur de la Chine", d'abord publiée dans le "Journal encyclopédique" du 1er mai 1761. (Dufour, n°131. Cette édition en 84 pages ne figure pas dans la bibliographie pourtant très complète de Gagnebin [Pléiade, III, p.1874-1876]). WorldCat ne recense que 5 exemplaires dans le monde, aucun dans les bibliothèques françaises. Très bon exemplaire, très frais, imprimé sur papier azuré.
235538Paris, Capelle, 1842 in-8, XVI-456 pp., demi-chagrin noir, dos lisse, filets dorés et à froid, couv. cons. (reliure de l'époque). Rousseurs. Mors supérieur un peu frotté.
141955423London: Union of Democratic Control 1914-1921. Collection of 63 publications including 25 numbered pamphlets ca 12-32pp each and 38 leaflets 1-16pp each. Generally ca 20cm x 14cm with slight variations; printed paper wrappers. Variable light to moderate wear but complete Good or better overall. <br /> <br /> A comprehensive collection of materials published under the auspices of the Union of Democratic Control a British political advocacy group which sought during the years of the First World War and its aftermath to increase the role of democratic processes and parliamentary control in British government especially with regards to its foreign relations. During the Great War the UDC stopped short of outright pacifism; after 1918 the organization plotted a more intentionally anti-war course ultimately publishing its pacifist manifesto Arthur Ponsonby's Now is the Time in 1925 not included here. The Union's members included many of the most prominent liberal and labour politicians and intellectuals of the era including Arthur Ponsonby Bertrand Russell Norman Angell Ramsay MacDonald and others. Given the prominence of its members the Union exerted considerable influence on British foreign policy in the interwar period and though its influence waned steeply after the Thirties the Union survived well into the post-WW2 era finally dissolving in 1966. While UDC publications are not generically rare this is the largest collection of their publications we have encountered at one time offering a representative view of the group's political advocacy over its most active period. A catalog of the collection follows all published London: Union of Democratic Control unless otherwise specified:. Pamphlet Series: <br /> <br /> 1. The Morrow of the War. 16pp. n.d. 1914<br /> 2. Angell Norman. Shall This War End German Militarism 24pp. n.d. 1914<br /> 3. Russell Bertrand. War: the Offspring of Fear. n.d. 16pp. 1914<br /> 4. Brailsford H.N. The Origins of the Great War. 24pp. 1914<br /> 5. Ponsonby Arthur. Parliament and Foreign Policy. 12pp. n.d. 1914 <br /> 5a. Ponsonby Arthur. The Control of Foreign Policy. 16pp. 1918 <br /> 6. Asquith H.H.; Winston Churchill Edward Grey et al. The National Policy As Set Forth By. 16pp. 1914 <br /> 7. The International Industry of War. n.d. 16pp. <br /> 8. MacDonald J. Ramsay. War and the Workers: a Plea for Democratic Control. 20pp. n.d. 1915 <br /> 9. Why we should state Terms of Settlement. 8pp. n.d. <br /> 10. Rolland Romain et al. Towards an International Understanding. Being the Opinions of some Allied & Neutral Writers. 28pp. n.d. <br /> 11. Swanwick H.M. Women and War. 16pp. NOTE: Covers detached but present. 1915. <br /> 12. By "A Pole." The Polish Problem. 20pp. n.d. <br /> 13. Angell Norman. The Prussian in our Midst. 28pp. 1915<br /> 14a. The Balance of Power. 2nd Edition. 24pp. 1915. <br /> 15a. Hobson J.A. A League of Nations. 20pp. 1915. <br /> 16a. Hobson J.A. Labour and the Costs of War. 16pp. 1916. <br /> 18a. Brailsford H.N. Turkey and the Roads of the East. 24pp. 1916. <br /> 19a. Dickinson G. Lowes. Economic War After the War. 20pp. 1916. <br /> 20a. Angell Norman. America and the Cause of the Allies. 16pp. 1916. <br /> 21a. "By a Soldier." The War to End War: a Plea to Soldiers by a Soldier. 20pp. 1917. <br /> 22a. Morel E.D. The African Problem and the Peace Settlement. 32pp. 1917. <br /> 23a. Gooch G.P. The Races of Austria-Hungary. 24pp. 1917. <br /> 27a. Peace Overtures and Their Rejection December 1916 - March 1918. 21pp. 1918. <br /> 42a. Demartial M. Georges. Patriotism Truth and War Guilt. 30pp. 1921. <br /> <br /> Leaflet Series: <br /> <br /> Unnumbered. Fundraising Prospectus. Broadside 1pp. N.d. ca 1914-15. Signed in print by E.A. Morel. <br /> <br /> No. 3: Why Have the People take no Interest in Foreign Affairs. Broadside 1pp. n.d. 1914 <br /> No. 4: What is the Balance of Power Broadside 1pp. n.d. 1914 <br /> No. 5: "Crushing Germany". 4pp. n.d. 1914 <br /> No. 6: What is a Treaty Broadside 1pp. n.d. 1914 <br /> No. 8: Our Soldiers and the Union of Democratic Control. Letters from Officers and Men. 4pp. 1915. <br /> No. 9: Do Nations Want to Fight Broadsheet 2pp. n.d. 1915 <br /> No. 10. Ponsonby Arthur. Why We Should Think About Peace. 4pp. n.d. 1915 <br /> No. 11. Morel E.D. War and Diplomacy. Being a Speech delivered at a Public Meeting.May 14th 1915. 12pp. 1915. <br /> No. 14b. The Union of Democratic Control What It Is and What It Is Not. Second Edition. Broadsheet 2pp. 1915. <br /> No. 15b. Mr. Ponsonby and Mr. Trevelyan in the House of Commons. 11pp. 1915. <br /> No. 16b. Earl Loreburn & Lord Courtney of Penwith in the House of Lords. 8pp. 1915. <br /> No. 17b. What the Press Now Says: More Support for the U.D.C. Broadsheet 2pp. 1915. <br /> No. 18b. Terms of Peace. Mr. C.R. Buxton on a Basis for Discussion. 4pp. n.d. 1915. <br /> No. 19b. Secret Diplomacy a Menace to the Security of the State. The National and Imperial Problem. 8pp. 1915 <br /> No. 20b. The Attack upon Freedom of Speech. The Broken-Up Meeting at the Memorial Hall 29th November 1915. 3rd ed. 24pp. 1915<br /> No. 21b. The Attack upon Freedom of Speech. Astound Official Defence. House of Commons Sequel to the Broken up Meeting. 2nd ed. 28pp. 1915. <br /> No. 22b. Our Ultimate Objects in the War. From a Speech by Mr. E.D. Morel.November 22nd 1915. 4pp. 1915 <br /> No. 26b. The Prime Minister's Declaration. Its Effect on Germany. 4pp. 1916 <br /> No. 27b. Trevelyan Charles. The Case for Negotiation. 4pp. 1916. <br /> No. 28b. What Our Allies Think About Economic War. 8pp. 1916. <br /> No. 29b. Ponsonby Arthur. Why Must the War Go On 4pp. 1916. <br /> No. 30b. Resolutions Passed at the Second Annual Meeting of the General Council of the Union of Democratic Control. Broadside 1p. 1916. <br /> No. 31b. America and Permanent Peace. Speech of President Wilson to the American League to Enforce Peace.4pp. 1916. <br /> No. 32b. Must the War go on till Russia gets Constantinople Broadside 1pp. 1916. <br /> No. 33b. President Wilson's Message to the World. 8pp. 1917 <br /> No. 34b. British Working-Men - Observe! French Workers Support Wilson. Broadside 1pp. 1917 <br /> No. 35b. French Members of Parliament and the "Knock-out Blow." Broadside 1pp. 1917<br /> No. 36b. Manifesto of Russian Workers & Soldiers. Broadside 1pp. 1917 <br /> No. 37b. Free Russia and the Union of Democratic Control. A Common Policy. 4pp. 1917 <br /> No. 38b. Then Why Go On Broadside 1pp. 1917<br /> No. 39b. Russia's Real Aims: an Appeal to British Democracy. By the Minister of Agriculture in the Russian Provisional Government. Broadsheet 2pp. 1917. No. 40b. Secret Diplomacy No. 1. Lies That Helped to Make the War. 4pp. 1917. <br /> No. 41b. Secret Diplomacy No. 2. Peace Proposals: What are the Real Facts. Broadsheet 2pp. 1917 <br /> No. 42b. Vindication of Mr. Morel in the House of Commons. 4pp. 1917<br /> No. 43b. Secret Diplomacy No. 3. Secret Treaties Between the Allies. 4pp. 1917. <br /> No. 44b. How to Get a Permanent Peace. Being a short statement of the objects and policy of the Union of Democratic Control. 16pp. 1917. <br /> No. 45b. How to Get Permanent Peace.With Full Particulars Showing You How You Can Help. 14pp. 1917. Union of Democratic Control unknown
39406In-8 (190 x 125 mm), demi-veau havane, dos lisse orné dun riche décor de compartiments garnis des doubles filets en place des nerfs, fer spécial répété au centre et palettes en tête et pied, pièces dauteur et de titre de maroquin havane et bronze (rel. Devauchelle dans le goût de lépoque), xviij, 19-112 pages. Paris, Adrien Égron, Delaunay, 8bre 1814.
In -8°, due voll. mezza pelle e carta marmorizzata; cc. (2), 195, (1); (1), 196-413, (2). Interessante manoscritto inedito di Edmond Tardif, outsider e intellettuale provenzale, che nel 1908 lo presenta in forma di manoscritto (così rilegato) all’amico Joseph (de Fabre) de Mazan. Nella prefazione si specifica che lo scritto (o comunque un suo precedente analogo) aveva trovato editore e stava per essere pubblicato: “Je venai en 1894 d’achever un livre sur la question du militarisme; les accords étaient presque conclus avec l’éditeur et l’ouvrage était déjà annoncée, quand l’anarchiste Vaillant lança une bombe dans la chambre des députés”. L’attentato spinge le autorità a prendere misure “energiche” e lo scritto viene valutato come suscettibile di censura. Il trattato è socio-politico e s’inscrive in un dibattito molto vivace all’epoca, in Francia, su militarismo e antimilitarismo (con sbilanciamento in favore del secondo) e che comprende dissertazioni su anarchia e socialismo, economia, politica internazionale e obbligo di leva, analizzato in questo ampio scritto anche sotto il punto di vista economico. Scritto pregevole e originale, da studiare: il manoscritto è molto chiaro e privo di correzioni, l’aspetto è di una versione definitiva pronta alla pubblicazione. An interesting unpublished manuscript bu Edmond Tardif, an outisider french writer, who in 1908 is sending it (in this binding) to a friend, Joseph de Mazan. In the introduction it’s specified that an earlier version of the work was to be published in 1894, but because of an attack (a bomb put by an anarchist in French Parliament) the work is judged as at censorship risk by the publisher. The socio-politic treaty is part of a wide debate at the time very vibrant, about militarism and anti-militarism (Tardif is unbalanced towards the latter think), including dissertations on socialism, anarchy, economy, international politics. An original and interesting work, to be studied, the manuscript is very clear and readable, and almost lacking corrections; the appearance is of a definitive version, ready to be published.
178911350S.l., s.n., 1789 ; in-8 ; demi-chagrin rouge à petits coins, dos à nerfs, titre doré (reliure moderne) ; 206 pp. y compris le faux-titre et le titre (INED, 578 ; Barbier, I-531).