1 560 résultats
1377493Paris: Editions Demi-Lune & ASA Editions, 2005 in-4, 189-(3) pages, riche illustration. Glossaire, chronologie, bibliographie, discographie, filmographie. Cartonnage illustré d'éd., très bon état. Collection "Danses du monde".
238672Paris, chez les directeurs de l'Imprimerie du Cercle social, 1793 fort volin-8, 614 pp., 3 pp. [Déclaration de l'auteur de l'ouvrage intitulé, Des Insurrections], demi-veau vert, dos lisse orné de filets, guirlande losangée et larges fleurons dorés, tranches marbrées (reliure de la Restauration). Dos uniformément insolé et passé, petite galerie de vers pp. 59-82, 209-226, 257-274, avec perte de quelques lettres.
1836WRCAM52765N.p. likely Augusta 1836. 62pp. Folded sheets stitched. Minor foxing and toning. Very good. Untrimmed. A rare Maine slip-bill document resolving that the citizens from Maine and other states should not interfere with the issue of slavery in slave-holding states. The legislature writes: "Any interference therefore of a State or the inhabitants of a State with the domestic concerns of another State is dangerous as having a direct tendency to create jealousies between the States and thereby weakening the attachment to the Union which is our only security against domestic dissensions and foreign aggressions." <br> <br> This is a somewhat surprising position for the state of Maine to have taken at the time. Maine came into the Union in 1820 as a free state to balance the admission of the slave- owning state of Missouri. Also Maine opposed the admission of the Republic of Texas in 1836 the same year the present document was printed on the basis of Texas' position on slavery. It is curious that they would take two seemingly opposite positions in the same year. Still the legislature printed the resolution and authorized copies to be sent to the four southern slave-owning states mentioned in the title. unknown books
199412564JULLIARD 1994 252 pages 2x23x14cm. 1994. Broché. 252 pages. Le roman 'L'Étoile noire' de Michèle Maillet raconte l'histoire de Sidonie une Antillaise chrétienne et de ses jumeaux arrêtés à Bordeaux en 1943 et déportés à Auschwitz en raison de leur couleur de peau. Il met en lumière un aspect méconnu de la Seconde Guerre mondiale : la persécution et la déportation des Noirs par les nazis
1971ZNF-496Collection L'histoire sans frontières, dirigée par Denis Richet, éditions Arthème Fayard, 1971. Traduit de l'américain (Race mixture, 1967) et préfacé par Henri Favre.
1960RO20000211ITINIERAIRE N°46 DE SEPTEMBRE 1960. 1960. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. défraîchie, Agraffes rouillées, Intérieur bon état. 26 pp. - Articles de la constitution de l'U.R.S.S.. . . . Classification Dewey : 326-Esclavage
1961R320038216ITINERAIRES CHRONIQUES ET DOCUMENTS. 1961. In-8. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 108 pages augmentées de quelques articles de presse.. . . . Classification Dewey : 326-Esclavage
1980109682Les Belles Lettres, Annales littéraires de l'Université de Besançon, 1980, gr. in-8°, 219 pp, broché, couv. illustrée, bon état
1981RO20002397Stock. 1981. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 257 p.. . . . Classification Dewey : 326-Esclavage
1894RO20188429POUSSIELGUE. 1894. In-8. Cartonné. Bon état, Plats abîmés, Dos abîmé, Intérieur frais. 240 pages - nombreuses gravures et cartes en noir et blanc dans et hors texte - frontispice en noir et blanc - plats desolidarisé - dos manquant.. . . . Classification Dewey : 326-Esclavage
188622325Bastia, Bulletin de La Société des Sciences Historiques & Naturelles de la Corse , Imprimerie et Librairie Ollagnier, 1886. Reliure rouge, pièces de titre dorées, demi-basane, couverture conservée, 16,5 cm x 25 cm, 218 (162+ 53 pages pour le texte en français). Texte italien revu par MM. Lucciana Frères, texte français revu par M. le conseiller de Caraffa, noms des esclaves rachetés. Traits dans les marges du texte en français sinon très bon état
1789R240004234IMP D'AIME DE LA ROCHE. 1789. In-4. Relié demi-cuir. Etat d'usage, Plats abîmés, Dos abîmé, Mouillures. 367 pages. Dos cuir marron avec filets et pièce de titre (manquante) doré. Manque coiffe en tête et en pied, revêtement sur le 1er platde couverture.. . . . Classification Dewey : 326-Esclavage
123859nd Barbou Frères, Imprimeurs-Libraires, Limoges - Bibliothèque Chrétienne et Morale approuvée par Monseigneur l'Evêque de Limoges - non daté - In-8, reliure plein percaline, titre et décors en dorés sur les plats et au dos, frontispice - 148 pages
199917941999 Fort-de-France, Conseil général de la Martinique, 1999. 2 volumes in-8 brochés, V - 1001 pp. en pagination continue.
1836216961836. Slavery & Abolition CHILD Lydia Marie. An Appeal in Favor of That Class of Americans Called Africans. New York: Published by John S. Taylor 1836. Second edition. Illustrated with 2 plates. Coleridge quote on title page. In original blue cloth boards with embossing and gilt to spine. 8vo 216 pages. Child was a vocal abolitionist women's rights activist anti-American expansionist and proponent of racial equality amongst African and Native Americans. An Appeal in Favor of That Class of Americans Called Africans was the first written by a white woman in support of the immediate emancipation of slaves without compensation to their enslavers. Child begins by writing about the history of the slave trade as well as harrowing stories on it's detrimental and immoral faculties in order to engage readers to action. One illustrated plate showcases shackles and chains used on enslaved individuals. First published in 1833 Child's work was a prominent contribution to the abolitionist movement and her writing influenced many notable figures including Harriet Beecher Stowe and Frederick Douglass. Missing frontispiece some foxing to pages some wear to covers. Small tear affecting a few words in the fist first sentence on page 127. Binding is tight and text is clean and legible. Overall very good condition. unknown
1998R240166932Fabre Domergue. 1998. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 48 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 326-Esclavage
1881505Paris, Guillaumin et cie, 1881. Seule et unique édition. Plaquette in-8, 14 x 22 cm pour 92 pp. Reliure postérieure demi-chagrin tabac, dos à trois nerfs, nom d'auteur, titre et année en caractères dorés sur la reliure, plats marbrés chocolat, tranchefile. Couverture préservée, en partie coupée et montée sur un papier plus récent. Publié quelques années avant l'abolition définitive de l'esclavage au Brésil, ce document est le fruit d'un débat entre deux personnalités de l'époque : Louis Couty, professeur polytechnicien en poste à Rio de Janeiro, et Victor Schœlcher, sénateur anti-esclavagiste. Le second s'étant montré particulièrement virulent contre un empire brésilien à qui il reprochait d'avoir encore des esclaves sur ses terres, Couty, connaisseur et ami du Brésil, tient à défendre les efforts du gouvernement brésilien pour l'abolition. En creux, il dessine l'une des premières sociologies en français du pays. La défense de Couty est suivie d'une lettre de Victor Schœlcher. Un document rare et qui marque un jalon en termes d'histoire brésilienne vue de France.
With the ownership name to titlepage, ink notes, and underlining, of Julius Moravcsik (one of the contributors). Else minor shelfwear. ; Xxii, 351pp. This volume addresses a wide variety of moral concerns regarding slavery as an institutionalized social practice. By considering the slave's critical appropriation of the natural rights doctrine, the ambiguous implications of various notions of consent and liberty are examined. The authors assume that, although slavery is undoubtedly an evil social practice, its moral assessment stands in need of a more nuanced treatment. They address the question of what is wrong with slavery by critically examining, and in some cases endorsing, certain principles derived from communitarianism, paternalism, utilitarianism, and jurisprudence. ; 351 pages; Signed by Contributor
24264ONE: ‘Coloured Emigrants from United States’ Downing Street 16 October 1850. TWO: ‘Immigration’ Downing Street 30 October 1850. Two interesting items from the period leading up to the American Civil War. Both items are scarce: no other copy of either traced. In good condition lightly aged. Extracted from a volume of Parliamentary Circulars with the ownership signature "Frederick Peel" Member of Parliament from Feb. 1849 dated 1839-1851 very good condition. The context makes it plain that this Circular was sent to all Colonial Governors a gap in the text indicating where the name of a specific Governor would appear in MS. Disbound from a volume and paginated in manuscript.Both printed in copperplate font. ONE: Printed ‘Circular’ dated from Downing Street 16 October 1850. Headed in manuscript ‘Colonial Emigrants from United States’. In manuscript at end not in Grey’s hand ‘/sd/ Grey’. 2pp 8vo. Paginated in manuscript 239-240. Begins: ‘Sir / I have to acquaint you that it has been suggested to me that a desirable Class of Emigrants for the West India Colonies might be induced to come to them from among the Black and Colored Population of the United States whose arrival and location if they chose to come would I have no doubt be advantageous to themselves and to the Colonies.’ TWO: Printed ‘Circular’ dated Downing Street 30 October 1850. Headed in manuscript ‘Immigration’. In manuscript at end again not in Grey’s hand: ‘/sd/ Grey’. 7pp 8vo. Not paginated in type; paginated in manuscript 239-245. Divided into eleven numbered sections the first of which reads: ‘In the course of the long correspondence which it has devolved upon me to conduct with the Governors of the Sugar Colonies and others on the subject of the Immigration of Labourers it has been my endeavour to promote the establishment of such laws and regulations respecting Immigrants introduced at the public expence as should make the Immigration most conducive to the well being of the Immigrants themselves of the Colonists by whom their labour was required and of the Populations at large of the Colonies in which they were to be placed.’ The chief ‘descriptions of Immigrants’ discussed in the correspondence are: ‘1st Coolies brought or about to be brought from the East Indies to some of the West Indian Colonies by the aid of Colonial Revenues or Loans raised by the Colonies and guaranteed by this Country. - 2nd. Kroomen or Africans from Sierra Leone and those parts of Africa where Slavery does not exist brought to the West Indies by the same means. - 3rd. Africans taken from captured Slavers liberated under sentences of the Mixed Commission Courts and brought to the West Indies at the sole cost of this Country.’Printed ‘Circular’ dated from Downing Street 16 December 1842. Headed in manuscript ‘Crime in the high Seas’. At bottom in manuscript not Stanley’s hand: ‘/sd/ Stanley’. Twenty-nine lines in copperplate font. The first of four paragraphs reads: ‘The attention of Her Majesty’s Government has been recently called to various Laws enacted in the British Colonies for the prevention regulation or punishment of acts done in the High Seas as on the Seas within one League of the Shore of the Colonies in which such Laws have originated. After consultation with the Queen’s Advocate and the Attorney and Solicitor General Her Majesty’s Government have adopted the following conclusions on the subject.’ ONE: ‘Coloured Emigrants from United States’, Downing Street, 16 October 1850. TWO: ‘Immigration’, Downing Street, 30 Oc unknown
Book is 1/4 cloth with flower print paper over HB covers with worn corners, gilt filligree in cloth section and spine, 6" high. Binding is solid and square, interior is clean and free of marking of any kind, 1" tear top page 141. small open tear at contents page, 303 pages. Contents include Voices of the Night, Earlier Poems: Autumn, Woods in Winter, Sunride on the Hills, Burial of the Minnisink etc. Translations: Coplas de Manrique, The Good Shepherd, The Dead, The Wave, etc. Ballads, Children of the Lord's Supper, Poems on Slavery, Songs, Sonnets, etc.
Broch?. 268 pages. Rousseurs. Couverture d?fra?chie.
1823423251London: Printed by Ellerton and Henderson Gough Square 1823. Near Fine. Folio 21.5 x 33 cm / 8½" x 13â€. pp. 1 2-3 4 blank. Light vertical and horizontal center folds three short tears at the horizontal fold near fine with a contemporary drawing of a few survey lines and diagrams very lightly sketched in ink and pencil on the final blank page. The Society states its case against slavery in the Colonies of Great Britain where "there are at this moment upwards of 800000 human beings in a state of degrading personal slavery." It provides a brief but detailed description of "the immoral inhuman and unjust" nature of the slave trade and of the absolute power of slave owners. Printed by Ellerton and Henderson, Gough Square unknown
1927RO20023284Albin Michel. 1927. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. défraîchie, Coiffe en pied abîmée, Intérieur frais. 260 pp.. . . . Classification Dewey : 326-Esclavage
1932154451932 P. , A. Michel, 1932, in 12 relié demi-basane éditeur, dos lisse orné, 256 pages.
1927176711927 P., Albin Michel, 1927, in 12, broché, 260 pages ; couverture fanée.