439 résultats
190382425Nuevo mundo 1903. hardcover. Bueno. Madrid 1903-1907. Revista Blanco y negro: Nº 806-811- 827- 837- 845- 849-Extra Procesiones de Semana Santa 1906 extra Regiones Españolas correspondientes a los años 1906 y 1907. Periódico Nuevo Mundo: nº 496- 506- 552-563 Años 19031904. Nº 616 1905. Nº 616- 627-628-630-631-636-637-641- 646 -647- 648- 650- 651- 653- 669- 671- 676- 677. Extra mayo 1906 Bodas Reales. Contiene Noticias y crónicas de Nuevo Mundo de 1903 a 1906. Muy ilustrado. En blanco y negro y color. Ex -libris anterior propietario. Encuadernado en un solo volumen. Cartoné lomo piel.Contiene publicidad de la época. Nuevo mundo hardcover
1916112749Blanco y Negro 1916. hardcover. Bueno. Madrid 1916. Blanco y Negro. Holandesa lomo piel con dorados. 28x22. Ilustrado. Todos encuadernados en 1 solo volumen. Cantos algo rozados y alguna marca en cubiertas. Primer semestre. Encuadernado de finales de marzo a junio seguido de enero al resto de marzo. Blanco y Negro hardcover
1941173141941. Bureau of Educational Research Howard University Washington DC. The Journal of Negro Education A Quarterly Review of Problems Incident to the Education of Negroes Racial Minorities and the Present International Crisis. July 1941. In original wrappers. 622 pages. Tear on spine toning on covers. Some foxing in interior and some wormholing on blank margin in bottom right of text block but absolutely legible. Fair to good condition. An interesting historical snapshot of world events through a Black lens. unknown
1864196771864. African American The Negro Race in America. Edinburgh Review 1864. First Edition. Rebound in lavender wrappers. Original 39 page article with 5 headings extracted from the Edinburgh Review of January 1864. Octavo. An intricate look in 1860's into the transition from slavery to emancipation to reintegration in Western society. Topics covered within follow the "character and probable destiny of the negroes quite apart from the merits and demerits of the classes or parties brought by parties whose strifes they have been brought into by their present position". The author surfaces critical notions on the Black experience more specifically chartering the detrimental effects of enslavement and the difficulties of reintegration. An important text in very good condition. unknown
2007BN101170Baden : Hier Jetzt Verlag 2007. 2007. Hotel des Alpes. Storie di alberghi ed albergatori dalla Savoia al Tirolo - Historische Gastlichkeit von Savoyen bis Tirol. <br/><br/>Hotel des Alpes. Storie di alberghi ed albergatori dalla Savoia al Tirolo - Historische Gastlichkeit von Savoyen bis Tirol. Baden : Hier + Jetzt Verlag unknown
BN318182Société d'études et de recherches archéologiques et historiques. Softcover. Vu du ciel : La photographie aérienne par cerf-volant <br/><br/>Vu du ciel : La photographie aérienne par cerf-volant Serge Nègre Hélène Mesple et Mabel Odessey Société d'études et de recherches archéologiques et historiques paperback
BN324429Canopé - CRDP de Franche-Comté. L'obésité des Jeunes : Faut qu'on en Parle 1DVD <br/><br/>L'obésité des Jeunes : Faut qu'on en Parle 1DVD Véronique Nègre et Collectif Canopé - CRDP de Franche-Comté unknown
92820Very Good. Evvelope postmarked Sept. 2 1955. Cover letter issued under the name of Vivian C. Mason National President of the National Council of Negro Woman asks members of the organization for a special "anniversary gift" of ten cents for every years of the organization's existence meaning a gift of $2.00 for 20 years. Local councils reporting 100% participation would get a trophy. Return envelope and a smaller envelope to hold a donation present the small envelope is partially glued to the flap on the return envelope. Single sheet folded twice to create a narrow 6-page brochure 22 cm. outlining 1955 events planned to celebrate their 20th anniversary and to promote gifts. And finally" a printed double-columned fundraising letter dictated by Mary McLeod Bethune on April 11 1955 which says in part: "In your expenditures for every day living where you may use a cheaper cut of meat put that in a bank for the National Council of Negro Women. If you know widowed women who need instructions for placing their funds where they might do good for the great masses of our people think sometimes of the National Council of Negro Women. Some of us could take out a little insurance policy of twenty-five cents a month which upon our death could go the the National Council of Negro Women. unknown
1962220401962. African American Comics Negro Americans: The Early Years Classics Illustrated No. 169. New York: Gilberton Company Inc. 1962. Staplebound with color-illustrated wrappers. A standalone issue of Classics Illustrated devoted entirely to the contributions of Black Americans from the colonial period through the 20th century. Published in 1962 during the height of the Civil Rights Movement this comic-format educational work-unusual in the Classics Illustrated series for focusing on real historical figures rather than literary fiction-was part of a broader mid-century effort to integrate African American history into mainstream curricula. As the cover proclaims the issue was intended to spotlight "the early years" of Black American achievement and in doing so it offers one of the earliest accessible visual histories of Black leaders for a youth audience. Historical figures covered in this issue include Crispus Attucks the first American killed in the Revolutionary War Benjamin Banneker mathematician and surveyor of Washington D.C. James Beckwourth a pioneering scout of the American West Harriet Tubman Frederick Douglass Daniel Hale Williams the first successful heart surgeon Booker T. Washington educator and founder of Tuskegee Institute George Washington Carver agricultural scientist and Matthew Henson co-discoverer of the North Pole.<br /> <br /> The comic also addresses Black contributions to the American Revolutionary War and Civil War with attention to the roles of enslaved people Black regiments and wartime espionage. Notably the "Inventors" section highlights Elijah McCoy lubrication systems Garrett Morgan gas mask and traffic light and Granville T. Woods rail signaling foregrounding underacknowledged Black innovation in American industrial history. Illustrated in full color throughout with strong sequential art emphasizing dignity resilience and ingenuity. Though the terminology "Negro Americans" reflects mid-century nomenclature the tone is respectful and didactic aimed at broad public education. These visual histories played an important role in the representation of African American figures in postwar American youth culture.Light wear and creasing consistent with age and small pen marks to cover but internally clean and complete. A remarkable and visually compelling early effort to narrate African American history to a popular audience. unknown
1829225831829. African AmericanReligionCarribean New Testament in the Negro Tongue. In The Eclectic Review Vol. XLIII No. LXXXVI. London: 1829. Excerpt: pp. 553-564. Disbound 12pp. A rare excerpt reviewing a missionaries' translation of the New Testament into "Negro-English" also called talkee-talkee the Creole language spoken by enslaved and free Black populations in Demerara and Surinam. The British and Foreign Bible Society issued the translation in 1829 for missionary use representing one of the earliest attempts to render the Christian scriptures into an Afro-diasporic Creole tongue of the Caribbean basin. This review in The Eclectic Review a leading 19th-century dissenting religious periodical gives a lengthy discussion of the translation providing contemporary reactions that ranged from grudging acknowledgment to outright racist dismissal.<br /> <br /> The review juxtaposes biblical passages rendered into Creole with commentary often mocking the "mixed speech" as "ridiculously offensively and incurably base." Yet despite its dismissive tone the piece captures critical evidence of how missionaries and colonial observers grappled with African- and Creole-derived linguistic traditions including debates over whether vernacular scripture empowered conversion or threatened white control. The review references Moravian missionary John Latrobe's efforts in Suriname as well as comparisons to African Dutch and Portuguese linguistic influences. Particularly striking are verbatim transcriptions of gospel passages in Creole offering researchers a rare contemporaneous witness to early printed Afro-Caribbean language. Light toning disbound with clean margins preserved; pages complete and supple. A rare document of the intersection of race religion and language in the British Caribbean revealing both the efforts made by missionaries to connect through Creole scripture and the entrenched racism of the colonial intellectual establishment. unknown
50963657-nnew. unknown
50963657like new. unknown
BN259710Hützen & Partner Verlag. Jakobsweg Caminho Português - von Lissabon über Porto nach Santiago de Compostela mit Fátima und dem dem Küstenweg <br/><br/>Jakobsweg Caminho Português - von Lissabon über Porto nach Santiago de Compostela mit Fátima und dem dem Küstenweg Hützen Partner Verlag Pero Negro Editions Hützen & Partner Verlag unknown
2011BN72315Hützen & Partner Verlag 2011. 2011. Camino de la Costa / Camino del Norte: Der Jakobsweg für Motorradfahrer. In acht Tagen bis ans Ende der Welt In acht Tagen bis ans Ende der Welt Motorradführer <br/><br/> Hützen & Partner Verlag unknown
2015x-1848217544Iste/Hermes Science Pub 2015. Paperback. New. 1st edition. 92 pages. 9.20x6.10x0.20 inches. Iste/Hermes Science Pub paperback
2022x-0231203705Columbia Univ Pr 2022. Hardcover. New. 265 pages. 9.25x6.25x1.00 inches. Columbia Univ Pr hardcover
19634880Philadelphia 1963. Very good. Broadside 9 x 6 inches. Overall even tanning minor wear. A striking handbill advertising the appearance of Mrs. Gladys Dickson "wife of the former Minister of Defense and now Chairman of Ghana Government Supply Commission" at a "benefit dinner and literary program" presented to "the Negro Public of North Philadelphia." The event was sponsored by the Universal Negro Improvement Association UNIA and included other guests name on the present broadside including Joseph A. Bailey Assistant Attorney general of New York and several musicians who performed at the event. The broadside also names four officials of the United Negro Improvement Association -- A.L. Crawford Assistant President General Miss Alma Golden Secretary General "Mrs. Coleburn" Secretary and Mr. Thomas Harvey President. The Ghana Division of the UNIA was formed the year the present broadside was printed. According to a letter from the group's secretary to W.E.B. Du Bois held at the University of Massachusetts Amherst the organization was formed "with the sole aim of establishing good relationships with honest and sincere Negroes in the United States of America." The UNIA was first formed in 1914 in Jamaica by Marcus Garvey in order to encourage Pan-Africanism. OCLC notes three institutional holdings for the present work at Temple Penn and Texas A&M. unknown
178577397Hartford:: Barlow & Babcock 1785. This is probably the first edition of Part III. old boards with a later old leather backstrip. 18th c. ink ownership signature; genealogical notes to blank areas of two leaves of text; some dampstaining and age-toning to text; short horizontal tears to a few leaves no loss of text; boards chipped and worn. . 12mo. Part III contains "The necessary Rules of reading and speaking and a Variety of Essays Dialogues and declamatory Pieces moral political and entertaining; divided into Lessons for the Use of Children. Barlow & Babcock, hardcover
20154867<p>Stated First Edition. One of 500 copies. Softcover in clear cover 80 pages 24 x 33 cm. In fine condition.</p> Etudes Books paperback
2016x-1137553561Palgrave Macmillan 2016. Hardcover. New. 359 pages. 8.50x6.25x1.00 inches. Palgrave Macmillan hardcover
1987241130LFY0395218Treviso: Vianello Libri 1987. Hardcover. Good Condition. Minimal shelf-wear otherwise in excellent condition. Contents clean and bright. Bindings firm and tight. 79 pp. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilo. Category: Art & Design; Canova Antonio 1757-1822; Italy Possagno; Museo canoviano; Add. Inventory No: 241130LFY0395218. . Vianello Libri hardcover
2012x-8847025796Springer Verlag 2012. Hardcover. New. 2013 edition. 250 pages. 9.25x6.25x0.55 inches. Springer Verlag hardcover
1968SKU-0665AG02004195Microcard Editions 1968. 1. Hardcover. Very Good. Very Good; Hardcover; Very light wear to the covers; Unblemished textblock edges; The endpapers and all text pages are bright and unmarked; The binding is excellent with a straight spine; This book will be shipped in a sturdy cardboard box with foam padding; Medium-Large Format Quatro 9.75" - 10.75" tall; 1.2 lbs; Gray cloth covers with title in black lettering; 1968 Microcard Editions; 160 pages; "Unwritten History of Slavery Autobiographical Accounts of Negro Ex-Slaves" by Negro Ex Slaves. Microcard Editions hardcover
11502491-nnew. unknown
1970209241970. African American Black World: A Johnson Publication. Chicago: Johnson Publishing Company 588 pages total. Five magazine issues in library binding 1970. Contains individual magazine covers in book binding. A five issue set of Black World from the months of May to October of 1970. The magazine was initially called Negro Digest and was founded by John H. Johnson in order to provide an African-American alternative to the broadly white focused Reader's Digest. Founded in 1942 the magazine experienced a collapse in 1950s but was revived in the 1960s as Black World. Reflecting the influence of the Black Power movement of the time the magazine shifted its focus towards political economic and social issues effecting the black community at the time. The five volumes contained within this book contain poetry short stories reflections on pan-Africanism examinations of racism Swahili language studies and continental African politics. Much of the content of the issues reflects a wider change at the apex of the Black Power movement in which the magazine pivoted towards the politics of continental Africa and the Caribbean broadening the scope of the movement itself. Overall very good condition pages 57-62 of September volume missing. Ultimately the issues demonstrate a new moment in African-American politics following the Civil Rights Movement. unknown