41 résultats
Societe D'Ethnographie Paris 1986, Revue L'ethnographie, tome LXXXIII, n° 100-101, 328 pp., broché, très légères traces d'usage, bon état.
270X215 mm. 67 pages. Hardcover. Cover corners worn. Cover stained. Spine slightly damaged. Spine edge missing. Gilt spine. Ex library copy with usual marks. Several pages age stained - no damage to text. Stickers on rear inner cover and last white page. Several pages loose. Pages yellowing. Else in good condition.
A clean, unmarked book with a tight binding. Edge wear and small creases to cover. 8 3/8"w x 10 3/8"h. 190 pages. Many photos and illustrations.
Book is in excellent condition. Binding is solid and square, covers have sharp corners, exterior shows no blemishes, text/interior is clean and free of marking of any kind. Dust jacket is as new, now wrapped in clear protective cover. Previous owner's name or sticker in front section of the book. 286 pages with some b&w photos and illus. Contents include: Socailism and spectator sports, Watching games before the revolution, Early rituals of stalinist sport, Soviet soccer's golden age, Birth of Soviet hockey, Impact of television, Soviet sports fans, Ways of watching: old and new, etc.
Book is in excellent condition. Binding is solid and square, covers have sharp corners, crease on back cover, price inked out, previous owner's name or sticker in front section of the book. text/interior is clean and free of marking of any kind. 181 pages.
134 pages. Bilingual English/Vietnamese. Beautiful colour photography throughout. Features: Festivals in Springtime; Tet Rituals; Photo Essay on Festivals; Tet in the City - a summary of preparations for and significance of New Year's celebration; Celebrate Sticky! - Banh Chung; Chinese Flavor Hits Hanoi; The Kitchen Gods; Nguyen Tu Nghiem; Vietnamese Contemporary Art; Water Puppets - Phan Van Ngai; Fog Season in the Highlands; APEC 14 - The Imprint of Vietnam; and more. Clean and unmarked with light wear. A quality copy. Magazine
Contains b&w illustrations. 155x230 mm. 116 pages. Cover missing [instead, the book is wrapped in simple paper cover]. Binding visible in several places throughout the pages. Pages yellowing, page edges slightly worn. Else in good condition.
155x230 mm. 116 pages. Softcover. Contains B/W plates. Cover is worn, slightly torn and yellowing at edges and margins. Spine is worn and torn in several places. Binding is visible in several places between pages. Pages are yellowing and slightly worn and torn at edges. In fair condition.
127 pages. Bibliography. Contents include: The Rituals and Their Distribution; Ceremonial Elements or Complexes and Their Distribution. Usual library markings. Average wear. Binding intact. A sound working copy. Book
35 pages. Features: Marketing an Image - mass production of handicrafts has conditioned the public image of Indians; Fencepost Sitting and How I Fell Off To One Side - by Joy Asham Fedorick; Bob Boyer - and exhibition of paintings and drawings; Native Art Happens at SAW; Contemporary Rituals - article by Ken Strange; Resurgence of West Coast traditional weaving; and more. Average wear. Unmarked. Binding intact. A sound copy. Book
Book is in excellent condition. Binding is solid and square, covers have sharp corners, exterior shows no blemishes, text/interior is clean and free of marking of any kind. Dust jacket shows the slightest signs of shelf wear only, no tears. 96 full page, full color photo prints.
xv, 374 pages. Bibliography, glossary and index. Black and white reproductions of photos. "Provides the first comprehensive introduction in the English language to the Jaina experience." - dust jacket. Book clean, bright and unmarked with light wear. Above-average wear to dust jacket now preserved in archival-grade Brodart. A sound copy. Book
136 pages. Features: The Muz Tagh Ata Expedition - Formidable Mountains and Little-Known Peoples; A Robert Bateman Wildlife Portfolio; Petit Forte - Newfoundland returns from official oblivion; Birthright of the Barren Ground - Ten Years Among the Great Caribou Herds; Primal Deeds - Battles and Rituals of the Autumn Rut; Cumberland - a profile of Canada's high Victorian architect and his Toronto landmarks; Artful Arthropods - Evolutionary dazzle and deception in the insect world; Deep Tech - Small but sophisticated submersibles sweep the waters of industry and science. Average wear. Unmarked. Sound copy. Book
This listing consists of pages 1-4, and 17-20 of this issue which measures 23.5"x17". Contents include: spectacular destruction of three of the Bedaux Canadian Expedition's caterpillar cars; photo of rock formation in the Whiteshell Forest Reserve where Indians practice pagan rituals - Canada's Stonehenge?; Evidence shows Germany storing up war material; Request for survey of sanitary conditions in Saanich district; Ad for Oak Bay home - $2,625!; Editorial page; Cartoon page (missing two-inch strip along edge with partial loss to 3 cartoon strips; two pages of classified ads; large fashion ad for David Spencer Limited; Assorted additional vintage ads. Average wear and soiling. A great heirloom from earlier days in Victoria, B.C. Newspaper
2 v. in l. fronts., plates. 20 cm. Hardcover Very good condition, small stain in lower margin at end
Very Good Greek, Modern (post 1453) Contemporary fine leather bdg. Demy 8vo. (22 x 15 cm). In Greek. 1118 p., richly illustrated (b/w ills.). Period bindery label of E. Watson in London. Ex-library copy on fourth blank page. Otherwise a very good copy. First and extremely rare translation into Greek of Taxil's 'Myste`res de la Franc-Mac?onnerie'. Mysteries of Freemasonry. Marie Joseph Gabriel Antoine Jogand-Pagès, better known by the pen name Léo Taxil was a French writer and journalist who became known for his strong anti-Catholic and anti-clerical views. He is also known for the Taxil hoax, a spurious expose of Freemasonry and the Roman Catholic Church's opposition to it. Marie Joseph Gabriel Antoine Jogand-Pagès was born in Marseille, and at the age of five, he was placed into a Jesuit seminary. After spending his childhood years in the seminary, he became disillusioned with the Catholic faith and began to see the religious ideology as socially harmful. Taxil first became known for writing anti-Clerical or anti-Catholic books, notably "La Bible amusante" (The Amusing Bible) and "La Vie de Jesus" (The Life of Jesus), in which Taxil satirically pointed out inconsistencies, errors, and false beliefs presented in these religious works. In his other books Les Debauches d'un confesseur (with Karl Milo), Les Pornographes sacrés: la confession et les confesseurs, and Les Maîtresses du Pape, Taxil portrays leaders of the Catholic Church as hedonistic creatures exploring their fetishes in the manner of the Marquis de Sade. In 1879, he was tried at the Seine Assizes for writing a pamphlet A Bas la Calotte ("Down with the Cloth"), which was accused of insulting a religion recognized by the state, but he was acquitted. In 1885, he professed conversion to Catholicism, was solemnly received into the church, and renounced his earlier works. In the 1890s, he wrote a series of pamphlets and books denouncing Freemasonry, charging their lodges with worshiping the devil and alleging that Diana Vaughan had written for him her confessions of the Satanic "Palladist" cult. The book had great sales among Catholics, although Diana Vaughan never appeared in public. In 1892, Taxil also began to publish a paper, La France chrétienne anti-maçonnique (Christian Antimasonic France), with his staunch anti-Masonic publishing friend, Abel Clarin de la Rive. In 1887, he had an audience with Pope Leo XIII, who rebuked the bishop of Charleston for denouncing the anti-Masonic confessions as a fraud and, in 1896, sent his blessing to an anti-Masonic Congress of Trent. Doubts about Vaughan's veracity and even her existence began to grow, and finally, Taxil promised to produce her at a lecture to be delivered by him on 19 April 1897. To the amazement of the audience (which included a number of priests), he announced that Diana was one of a series of hoaxes. He had begun, he said, by persuading the commandant of Marseille that the harbor was infested with sharks, and a ship was sent to destroy them. Next, he invented an underwater city in Lake Geneva, drawing tourists and archaeologists to the spot. He thanked the bishops and Catholic newspapers for facilitating his crowning hoax, namely his conversion, which had exposed the anti-Masonic fanaticism of many Catholics. Diana Vaughan was revealed to be a simple typist in his employ, who laughingly allowed her name to be used by him.The audience received these revelations with indignation and contempt. Afterwards, Taxil left the hall, where policemen escorted him to a neighboring café. He then moved away from Paris. He died in Sceaux in 1907. First Greek Edition. Rare. Only one copy in OCLC: 758917323.