929 résultats
1997R160214843Groupe des Droites Européennes. 1997. In-8. Broché. Etat d'usage, Tâchée, Agrafes rouillées, Intérieur acceptable. 37 pages agrafées. . . . Classification Dewey : 305.8-Racisme
1980194751980. Paris Éditions du Seuil 1980 e.o. (pas de grand papier) - Broché 14 cm x 20 5 cm 216 pages - Texte de Alain Finkielkraut envoi de l'auteur à Manès Sperber - Bon état
ROD0027938Maison de la Bonne Presse. 195è. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 93 p.. . . . Classification Dewey : 305.8-Racisme
2007LFA-126722175Un ouvrage de 257 pages, format 140 x 210 mm, broché, publié en 2007, Editions Mithra, bon état, rare
13126Editions de l'Université de Bruxelles, 1987 16 x 24, 156 pp., broché, état neuf
1988R260116652LA PENSEE UNIVERSELLE. 1988. In-12. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 150 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 305.8-Racisme
in-8°, 315 pages, 2 cartes, notes, broche, couverture illustree plast. à rabats. Bel exemplaire [HI-6][NAN-4]
1967R320130487Albin Michel. 1967. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 315 pages - couverture contrepliée.. . . . Classification Dewey : 305.8-Racisme
55993Paris, L'Harmattan, 2004. 13 x 21, 209 pp., broché, très bon état.
66735Presses Universitaires de Grenoble, 1979, 464 pp., broché, couverture un peu déraîchieet partiellement dépelliculée, pli de lecture sur le dos, tache sur la tranche supérieure, état correct.
1843188631843. Paris Revue des Deux Mondes 1843 - Broché couv. factice muette 15 cm x 23 5 cm 5 pages - Extrait pré-original de la pièce intitulée « Les Esclaves » de Alphonse de Lamartine ; c'est le discours de Toussaint-Louverture aux noirs de Saint-Domingue - Bon état
1930168141930. Brazzaville (Congo) Imprimerie du Gouvernement Général n°11 1930- Broché 15 5 cm x 24 cm 147 pages - Textes de Allys (Monographie de la tribu des Dzems) Even (Quelques coutumes des populations de la Haute-Sangha) Le Testu (Les coutumes indigènes de la circonscription de la Nyanga Gabon suite) Bruel (Mohamed-es-Senoussi et ses Etats - lettre de rectification) Badier (Notes sur la tribu des Bangangoulous) capitaine Goulette (notes sur la mission Goulette) G. de Ramecourt (Chasse au rhinocéros et au lion dans le Mayo-Kebbi) Barberot (La Bouenza au point de vue touristique et ses chutes et ses rapides) Abbé André Walker (proverbes Ivilis)- Bon état
2 volumes in-16° brochés. Bel ensemble. [LP-6]
1992R240130863PAX CHRISTI. 1992. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 35 pages agrafées.. . . . Classification Dewey : 305.8-Racisme
19578896Club du Livre Religieux 1957 330 pages in8. 1957. reliure editeur pleine toile. 330 pages. Le roman suit le révérend Stephen Kumalo un pasteur noir d'un village d'Afrique du Sud qui se rend à Johannesburg pour aider sa sœur en difficulté. À travers son voyage l'œuvre explore les divisions raciales et sociales du pays sous l'apartheid tout en cherchant des thèmes d'espoir et de réconciliation. Publié en 1948 ce roman est devenu une œuvre majeure de la littérature engagée contre le racisme
2003R320039754GALLIMARD. 2003. In-12. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 34 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 305.8-Racisme
1971RO30036055EDITIONS MINERVA. 1971. In-8. Cartonné. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 151 pages. Nombreux dessins, fac-similé en noir et blanc dans le texte et hors texte. Bords de quelques pages abîmées.. Avec Jaquette. . . Classification Dewey : 305.8-Racisme
Book shows light wear to covers. Binding is solid and square, text/interior is clean and free of marking of any kind except for two pages with marking, previous owners name inside front cover. 265 pages.
Book shows wear to covers. Binding is solid and square, text/interior is clean and free of marking of any kind. 265 pages. Previous owner's name or sticker in front section of the book. Contents by the above authors include: Souls of black folk, investigate lynchings, In love with Harlem, Revolt of the evil fairies, A choice of weapons, the white4 problem in America, Not poor, just broke, Why I eulogized Malcolm X, The potential of a minority revolution, etc.
fort vol. in-8°, 523 pages, ill. in-t., broche, couverture illustree plast. à rabats. Tres bel exemplaire. [CA30-2][NAN-2-]
1974168193San Francisco: the Committee 1974. Single 8.5x11 inch sheet printed both sides browned along one edge date penned on front else very good condition. Calls for massive community presence at a Board of Education meeting on school integration after recent meetings which had been attended by Nazis in full regalia. Presents three demands including exclusion of National Socialist White People's Party representatives from meetings banning Nazi youth organizations form public schools and protecting teachers from discipline who had protested Nazi presence at a recent school board meeting. the Committee unknown books
1956RO20021304Casterman. 1956. In-8. Cartonné. Etat d'usage, Couv. défraîchie, Dos frotté, Intérieur bon état. 304 pages.. Avec Jaquette. . . Classification Dewey : 305.8-Racisme
186425614<p>The second in a series of four racist political cartoons published in 1864 by Bromley & Company which was closely affiliated with the Copperhead New York <i>World</i> newspaper. These prints sought to undermine Abraham Lincoln's chances for reelection by branding him as a "miscegenationist" and playing on white fears of "race-mixing." The cartoon scene pictures several interracial couples enjoying a day at the park eating ice cream discussing wedding plans and a woman's upcoming lecture. Two African American families have white employees a carriage driver and footmen and a babysitter.</p><p>The only other example traced at auction brought $7800 in 2010.</p> <b>ABRAHAM LINCOLN. RACISM.</b>Print. "Miscegenation or the Millennium of Abolitionism." Political Cartoon. New York: Bromley & Co. 1864. 1 p. 20¾ x 13â… in.<p><br /></p><p>American politics had long played on fears of sexual relationships between races. A powerful new word for "race-mixing" was coined in an anonymous December 1863 pamphlet entitled <i>Miscegenation: The Theory of the Blending of the Races Applied to the American White Man and Negro</i> published in New York. Purporting to advocate the virtues of the "blending of the white and black races on this continent" it was a literary forgery prepared by <i>The World</i> managing editor David Goodman Croly and reporter George Wakeman. The authors were unsuccessful in their attempt to trick President Lincoln into endorsing the work.</p><p>At the far left of the image Abraham Lincoln declares "<i>I shall be proud to number among my intimate friends any member of the Squash family especially the little Squashes.</i>" The African American woman to whom he is speaking replies "<i>I'se 'quainted wid Missus Linkum I is washed far her 'fore de hebenly Miscegenation times was cum. Dont do nuffin now but gallevant 'round wid de white gem'men! he-ah! he-ah! he-ah!</i>"</p><p>Senator Charles Sumner says "<i>Mr. President! Allow me the honor of introducing my very dear friend Miss Dinah Arabella Aramintha Squash.</i>" A white carriage driver complains in the background "<i>Gla-a-ang there 240t! White driver white footmen niggers inside my heys! I wanted a situation when I took this one</i>" while a black man in the carriage tells his companion "<i>Phillis de_ah dars Sumner. We must not cut him if he is walking.</i>" A black woman at a table tells a white man with her "<i>Ah! Horace its-its-its-bully 'specially de cream</i>" and he replies "<i>Ah! my dear Miss Snowball we have at last reached our political and social Paradise. Isn't it extatic</i>"</p><p>To the right are two couples embracing each a white woman and an African American man. The first white women tells her partner "<i>Oh! You dear creature. I am so agitated! Go and ask Pa</i>" to which he replies "<i>Lubly Julia Anna name de day when Brodder Beecher shall make us one!</i>" The second white woman says "<i>Adolphus now you'll be sure to come to my lecture to morrow night won't you</i>" to which he answers "<i>I'll be there Honey on de front seat sure!</i>" In the background are various immigrant minorities viewing the scene. One exclaims "<i>Most hextwadinary! Aw neva witnessed the like in all me life if I did dem me!</i>" and another adds "<i>Mine Got vat a guntry vat a beebles!</i>" An Irish girl complains "<i>And is it to drag nagur babies that I left old Ireland Bad luck to me.</i>"</p><p>Manton Marble the editor of <i>The World</i> collaborated with printmaker Bromley & Company to issue a series of four anti-Lincoln "Political Caricatures." The present example was the No. 2 in that series. No. 1 was "The Grave of the Union or Major Jack Downing's Dream"; No. 3 "The Abolition Catastrophe Or the November Smash-up"; and No. 4 "The Miscegenation Ball."</p><p>Republicans responded by trying to turn the "miscegenation" charge against the Democrats. A Republican print "The Political "Siamese" Twins: The Offspring of Chicago Miscegenation" pictures McClellan and Pendleton joined together despite their very different ideas on ending the war.</p><p>Although Abraham Lincoln won New York states' electoral votes in 1860 Stephen Douglas had carried New York City and its environs. Financial elites fearing that civil war would ruin business and recent immigrants fearing competition with free black labor supported Douglas. Lincoln's unpopularity in New York City during the Civil War was a factor in the deadly 1863 Draft Riots.</p><p>In 1864 Lincoln again won the states' electoral votes while New York City favored his Democratic opponent McClellan. In fact Lincoln's majority dropped from 50136 votes in 1860 to only 7373 votes in 1864 with approximately 50000 more total votes cast than in 1860.</p><p>Bromley and Company continued to sell the caricatures after the election as this January 1865 advertisement from an Ohio newspaper makes clear. Another advertisement assured purchasers that the set of four prints available for $1 were "sent on wooden rollers to insure safe carriage."</p><p><b><i>The World</i></b> 1860-1931 a daily independent newspaper was published in New York City. Alexander Cummings founded it as a religious Republican outlet in 1860. August Belmont and others purchased it in 1862 changing the editorial focus. With editor Manton Marble 1834-1917 <i>The World</i> soon became the country's leading Democratic newspaper. In 1864 Union authorities shut down <i>The World</i>and another paper for three days after they published forged documents purportedly written by Lincoln that were really part of a hoax to manipulate the price of gold. The paper actively supported George B. McClellan against Lincoln in 1864.</p><p><b>Condition</b></p><p>Fine for exhibit despite flaws. Cropped with loss of "Political Caricature No. 2" from top edge and part of printed pricing information from bottom edge publisher's name rubbed out from the copyright statement lacking ½" from lower left corners a few short tape repairs by the edges a 2" closed tear through the second dialogue bubble along the top edge and a 3" closed tear parallel to the right edge. Mount remnants on verso.</p> books
1933168191933. Brazzaville (Congo) Imprimerie du Gouvernement Général n°18 1933- Broché 15 5 cm x 24 cm 122 pages - Textes de A. de Rouville (Amélioration de la signalisation maritime sur les côtes françaises du Golfe de Guinée) E. Blancou (Contribution à l'étude de la faune sauvage de l'Oubangui-Chari) docteur Berny (La lèpre et la création d'un village de lépreux en Haute-Sangha) Ad. En Chef Eboué (Les peuples de l'Oubangui-Chari. Essai d'ethnographie de linguistique et d'économie sociale - suite et fin) R.-L. Joly (Le Vétyver) A. Even (La circoncision chez les Babambas-Mindassas d'Okondja) l'entomologie au Congo Français Abbé André Walker (La tribu des Ishogo ou Mitsogo ; Proverbes Mitsogo ; le caméléon tue sa mère pour une affaire de champignons; divers- Bon état
171962577Erie PA: Erie Litho & Printing Co. March 17 1923. Large double atlas folio dual-sided broadside printed on newsprint sized 9.25 x 42 in. photo & woodcut engraving illustrations recto & verso toning to paper some chipping & edgewear paper repairs to closed tears still a G- copy. First edition thus of this advertising broadside for Erickson’s “J.W. Johnson’s Old Reliable Virginia Minstrels World’s best colored show. . . “ which touts their supposed 15 year history and appear to have either been reformed from the “Alabama Minstrels†show which played throughout the West and Midwest from 1905-1914 or simply taken over some of their acts. The contortionist fire king Hi Henry Hunt who appears in this broadside regularly performed with the “Alabama Minstrels†from 1905-1913. The silver voiced tenor A.J. McFarland and Grace Arniot Royal Entertainer depicted on the broadside also appear to have been African-American rather than black face performers. The name appears to have been drawn from the 19th-Century original “Virginia Minstrels†or the “Melodious Ethiopian Band†which featured Billy Whitlokc Dick Pelham Frank Brower and Dan Emmett performing in New York’s Bowery Amphitheater in 1843 and launched the minstrelsy form of entertainment. Emmett is perhaps best remembered as the author of “Dixie†which ironically would become the Confederate States unofficial anthem. Assorted versions dating 1920-1924 with different content & sizing appear in 6 libraries Harvard DLC 3 versions Middle Tenn. State Lib. of VA; See: Dr. Karl Koenig The History & Music of the Minstrels Rue Basin Source for Historical Jazz 2024. Erie Litho & Printing Co., unknown