6 502 résultats
192398891923. Includes a 4-page brochure 6 copies of another brochure with subscription form advertising sheet for Women of 1923 and International Who's Who edited by Ida Clyde Clarke 3 page mechanically copied press release on the organization of the service with 2 more pieces of advertising ephemera. unknown books
17107Clarke Ida Clyde Editor Women of 1924 International. New York: The Women's News Service Inc. 1924. Octavo original red pebbled boards gilt titles to cover. 386 pages. A remarkable compilation of women's achievement internationally. As the editor writes "The record this book contains is presented to the public with no apologies. The editors believe it is one of which women throughout the world may well be proud . "The object of the editor in compiling and presenting this book to the public has been threefold; first to place in permanent form an accurate record of women's part in making the world a better place in which to live; second to furnish information as basis for bigger and better work on the part of women; third to encourage and stimulate women to higher finer more purposeful effort." In near fine condition. Only 9 held in any libraries and institutions worldwide per OCLC Worldcat. unknown books
16739Women's Fight for Employment Equality. "Lowell Offering. Written Edited and Published by Female Operatives Employed in the Mills." 1844. Pamphlet. The Lowell Offering was a monthly publication run by women working in the Lowell Textile Mill from 1840-1845. Featuring the women's poetry essays and other literary efforts the magazine gave female factory workers the opportunity to share their creative endeavors; for the women who edited and published the periodical the Lowell Offering also provided demonstrable and employable skills in publishing and journalism. This 1844 edition comes from the penultimate year of the publication. It is the earliest piece in the collection. <br/><br/>Lowell solved the problem of labor at his mills by employing young women between the ages of 15 and 35 who became known as "mill girls". Unlike European industries which had access to "large landless urban populations whose reliance on the wage system gave them few economic choices" American companies had to grapple with a small labor supply because the population was small and most preferred farming their own land and the economic independence that came with it. In order to persuade these young women to work at a mill they were paid in cash once "every week or two weeks". In line with the Boston Associates' worldview the mill girls were encouraged to educate themselves and pursue intellectual activities. They attended free lectures by Ralph Waldo Emerson and John Quincy Adams and read books they borrowed from circulating libraries. They were also encouraged to join "improvement circles" that promoted creative writing and public discussion. unknown books
197065517Johannesburg: Black Sash 1970. Paperback. Very Good. 20p. Wrapper. 25cm. A few red ink underlinings & notes. James Michener's ownership stamp. <br/><br/> Black Sash paperback books
1994130799Washington DC: National Museum of Women in the Arts 1994. Softcover. NF. Pale color-illustrated stapled wraps. Approx. 32 pp. 28 color photos of ikebana works and numerous b/w portraits. In Japanese and English. Catalogue for an exhibition held Sept. 28-Oct. 1 1994. National Museum of Women in the Arts unknown books
57807Los Angeles CA: Council of National and State Defense. Six typed sheets 8-1/2 x 11 plus a small leaflet folded twice. Sheets little chipped at edges rear two showing insect damage. Good. Council of National and State Defense unknown books
197556605Buffalo NY: Patricia Budd Kepler 1975. Broadside 17x22 inches printed in blue and red folded twice. Two small rust stains o/w a VG clean copy. Patricia Budd Kepler unknown books
196948259N.p.: National Council of Churches 1969. First Edition. Quarto ca. 28cm.; side-stapled self-wrappers; 4pp. printed mimeograph. Light toning to extremities else Very Good. Statement made by women of the Church on the Women's Caucus concluding "we reiterate our support for the effort to liberate women" p. 4. Not separately catalogued in OCLC as of April 2020. National Council of Churches unknown books
192639273Tashkent Uzbekistan: Women of the Central Asian Office of the Organizational Bureau of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union 1926. Quarto 30.5cm.; publisher's white pictorial staplebound wrappers printed in red blue purple and black; 30pp.; text illus. throughout including photographs and a 2-pp. comic strip printed in red blue and black. Some minor wear and dust-soil to wrapper extremities else a Very Good or better bright and unopened copy. Quite an attractive Communist women's liberation journal published in Tashkent in the Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic promoting women's education and generously illustrated with political cartoons and comics. Women of the Central Asian Office of the Organizational Bureau of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Uni unknown books
195943493Cambridge: Independent Service for Information on the Vienna Youth Festival 1959. First Edition. 12mo 15cm.; publisher's blue printed staplebound card wrappers; 84pp. Wrappers a bit toned else Very Good or better. Having struggled to find work in New York City 25-year-old Gloria Steinem moved to Cambridge in 1959 to assume the position of co-director of the anti-Communist program the Independent Service for Information on the Vienna Youth Festival. The Service masquerading as a private enterprise whose aim was to send democracy- and capitalism-loving American youth to the communist-run Festival was funded by an anonymous donor later revealed to be the CIA though Steinem would have been aware of this from the start. The present pamphlet was issued a month before the Festival began and provides a detailed critique of the quality of Soviet literature: "The trouble with Soviet literature as Ilya Ehrenburg sees it is that Soviet writers say things they do not believe" p. 5. Independent Service for Information on the Vienna Youth Festival unknown books
1970169073New York: Center for United Labor Action CULA 1970. 27p. contemporary snapshot and a few period photoillustrations staplebound 11x8.5 inch wraps somewhat handled has some dog-ears else good condition. Sections on the exploitation of waitressing hospital work "hired house slaves" housekeepers and other professions. Center for United Labor Action [CULA] unknown books
19001968Estes Park CO 1900. Large format gelatin silver photograph 17 cm x 12 cm on a plain gray mount 25 cm x 20 cm view chipped at upper left corner and coming up from mount on the left side. Image of two women and a boy in jaunty hats sitting atop of a rock ledge with a forested canyon beneath them.<br/><br/>Manuscript note on the reverse "Hat rock above McLeod cabin at Shenstone 19 Keith McLeod Bertha McLeod Aunt Florence Stewart. unknown books
19001967Estes Park CO 1900. Large format gelatin silver photograph 17 cm x 12 cm on a plain gray mount 25 cm x 20 cm Very good. Image of two women and a boy standing among and atop of rocks in a canyon.<br/><br/>Manuscript note on the reverse "Rocks back of McLeod Cabin Shenstone - Big Thompson Canon - 'Perfect Tree' Aunt Florence Stewart Bertha McLeod Keith McLeod. unknown books
17000Original WW II Poster from 1942 reads "Women in the War We Can't Win Without Them" Extra large size poster 29" x 41" in. Shows a woman factory worker wearing overalls or apron riveting with both hands a weapon that looks like a torpedo. This highly visual poster was promoting women in the wartime workforce it was produced in 1942 by the War Manpower Commission. At the time "Women in the War" was one of the most widely distributed images of a woman laboring in war production. The poster is in red blue and black poster. Publisher was the United States. Government Printing Office. Place of Publication: "Washington D.C." By 1943 when the labor shortage was most acute the two agencies worked together in concerted campaigns targeting employers to hire women and women to become 'production soldiers'" Yellin Our Mothers' War p. 44. Women laboring in factories even in the service of the war effort was controversial. "Despite the tide of public opinion against working wives War Manpower Commission director Paul McNutt concentrated on on patriotism. The campaigns glamorized war work always showing that women could maintain their femininity and still be useful" Yellin pp. 45-46. Examples of this important poster are held at numerous institutions including the Library of Congress and MOMA. At lower left corner of sheet: "War Manpower Commission Washington D.C." Copies in very good condition like this one are uncommon. unknown books
19963406V.p. 1996. A collection of 410 titles concerning Women in the West. Condition Statement: Overall most of the books in the collection are in "good" or "good" condition which typically describes a book that is sufficiently worn the binding soiled scuffed stained or spotted and may have loose joints hinges pages etc. To a lesser extent there are books in "fair" condition namely a well-worn book that has complete text pages including those with maps or plates but may lack endpapers half-title etc. The binding and/or jacket may also be worn. Women in the American West: Books and Ephemera from the Collection of Dorothy Sloan. SEE DETAILED FINDING AID on our website. <br/><br/>Dorothy Sloan b. 1943 is justly considered to be one of great scholar-booksellers of Western Americana Texana and Latin Americana. Dorothy Sloan Rare Books auction catalogues are recognized as models of their kind and feature an unusually broad array of printed books maps manuscripts and ephemera and are particularly strong in 19th-century materials. In many instances Sloan's bibliographic descriptions have become the description of record.<br/>She began her career at John Howell in San Francisco and thence to Jenkins Company in Austin. She issued her first rare book catalogue in 1984 and her first auction catalogue in 1994. Suffice it to say that as a woman she was literally a pioneer in such an endeavor. <br/><br/>Over the years she built a collection of Women in the West which is described in the 29-page Inventory below. Here is a collection of both women authors and women as the subject of historical and literary narrative. Most of the collection was kept in storage for the last twenty-eight years awaiting cataloguing and eventual sale. As we all know "Life" often interferes with our plans particularly as we grow older. <br/><br/>When Dorothy retired last year we acquired the collection of Women in the West. We are pleased to offer it en bloc for the price of $8200 which includes free shipping in the Continental United States. <br/><br/>Of the 410 titles in the collection nearly 25% are more than a century old. The earliest book in the collection is Sally Hastings' Poems on different subjects. To which is added a descriptive account of a family tour to the West. Lancaster 1808. The author describes her travels from Lancaster County to Washington PA. through the Alleghenies and gives an account of the Ohio River at Pittsburgh.<br/><br/>Only a handful of titles in the collection were published in the last 30 years the "newest" one dated 1996 namely: Anne Butler and Ona Siporin Uncommon common women. which contains culturally and ethnically diverse accounts of women who lived in the American West.<br/><br/>The physical size of the collection is considerable. Without any packing material it would encompass 15 large boxes. There are photographs gum cards engravings various inscribed books plays of the California Gold Rush memoirs and captivity narratives travelogues captivity narratives autobiographies Western novels pamphlets private press material a few 'zines journals catalogues and magazines. It is the culmination of decades of labor spanning all genres in the Western Americana tradition. The collection represents women's voices of a myriad of ethnicities including various Native American tribes African and African-American women Hispanic women prostitutes madams cowgirls ranchers pioneers and their struggles in the face of physical social and cultural adversity. <br/><br/>We are reluctant to mention "highlights" as it would suggest that "lowlights" do not merit attention from scholars and bibliophiles alike. We invite readers to peruse the Inventory of the collection capably prepared by Hunter Corb to allow readers to make that determination for themselves. <br/><br/>Included is the first edition of Miriam Colt's autobiography which describes her ill-fated expedition to Kansas Went to Kansas 1862 in which she traveled more than 1300 miles to establish a communal vegetarian colony. Colt provides vivid and frightening details of a family's ordeals on the frontier landscape including severe illness and encounters with lawless gangs. Defrauded of their investment in the Vegetarian Settlement Company the Colts left Kansas in the fall of 1856. Colt's husband and son died en route leaving only mother and daughter to return to New York. <br/><br/>Another work of interest is Sarah Hopkins's Life Among the Piutes an autobiography written at the encouragement of Ralph Waldo Emerson. This is considered to be the first book written and published in English by a Native American woman. It provides "extensive information about pre-White northern Paiute culture the types of foods marriage and other social practices as well as political leadership" Paher while simultaneously increasing awareness and sympathy for the plight of Native Americans. <br/><br/>Melinda Rankin's Twenty Years Among the Mexicans describes her missionary labor in south Texas and Mexico. Herein are depicted the experiences of the first Protestant woman missionary in Latin America. Although laws in Mexico at the time forbade the introduction of any form of Protestantism into the country Rankin traveled there in 1852 and established the first Protestant mission in Northern Mexico continuing her work there for a few decades before returning to the United States due to health problems. This narrative describes not just Rankin's missionary labors but also many dramatic events in Texas and Mexico including revolutionary turmoil the American Civil War and her capture by the notorious military leader rancher and outlaw Juan Cortina.<br/><br/>From early settlers of the West during and shortly after the American Revolution; to ranchers and pioneering women in the early days of the Republic of Texas and the fight for independence; to overland travels in covered wagons on the famed Oregon Trail at the outset of the American Civil War; to excursions into Mexico and Latin America at the end of the 19th and into the 20th centuries. Over two hundred years of women's experiences can be found within this collection and as such there is something for every student and subject matter.<br/><br/>SEE DETAILED FINDING AID ON OUR WEBSITE which enumerates each and every one of the 410 titles:<br/><br/>https://www.michaellaird.com/cat.phpid=307. unknown books
1994256744npl: Women Against Military Madness 1994. vii 130p. wraps 6x9 inches gift inscription on title page else very good condition. Women Against Military Madness unknown books
2001SKU1036680Wimmer Cookbooks Inc 2001-10-01. Hardcover. Very Good. 0971131902 Christmas inscription dated 2001 is written inside- no other marks or notations. Clean has a good binding. Ships from our bookstore in West Columbia S.C.! Wimmer Cookbooks, Inc hardcover books
186944744Boston: Woman's Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church 1869-72. First Edition. Quarto 18cm. Bound volume of 25 consecutive monthly issues comprising the entirety of the first two years of publication. Mild external scuffing and wear; occasional spotting and soil within; Very Good. The official monthly organ of the Woman's Foreign Missionary Society. In addition to financial reports and notices of internal affairs includes much of interest on women's welfare in less-developed regions of the world primarily the Indian subcontinent where the Society's activities were the most prolific but also other regions of Southeast Asia China and North Africa. Woman's Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church unknown books
9876unknown books
197918622Washington DC: Smithsonian Institution 1979. Paperback. Very Good. 25 page exhibition catalog in stapled wraps. <br/><br/> Smithsonian Institution paperback books
1901116721901. Small 8vo pp. 27. Lacking about 1/3 of the front wrap. Clean otherwise with 2 photos. Includes a detailed report of the activities of the Ybor City Missionary school and reports from chapters throughout Florida. unknown books
18954174Geneva NY: Press of W. F. Humphrey 1895. First Edition. Near Fine. Original gold and white publisher's cloth binding with title and decorative motif stamped in blue to the front board. Gentle rubbing to boards but externally pleasing overall. Front hinge cracked and rear starting but both holding well. Contemporary ownership signature of "Edith E. Dunning. Auburn NY" to front endpaper. Some pages bear slight chipping or toning to the edges not affecting text; a clean about Near Fine copy internally with none of the expected signs of kitchen use. Contemporary advertisements throughout. Includes 8 pages of contemporary handwritten recipes and a calling card inserted loosely at the front; notation in pencil to verso of rear endpaper else unmarked. An excellent and research rich copy of this rare charitable cookery book which is currently the only one known on the market. OCLC reports only 5 examples at institutions worldwide. <br/><br/>First and only edition of this charitable women's cookery which was produced "for the instruction of women in Culinary Science" with the goal "not only to increase the fund already in the Treasury which ultimately is to be appropriated for the equipment of that institution but also to contribute a book which shall be of practical use to all house-keepers." Clearly a group of educated women the Board compiling the cook book viewed house-keeping as an occupation that required knowledge and scientific workability. They reveal in the preface that all advice and recipes were researched and vetted to ensure that they created "a work of real merit" and their title page contains an epigram from Ruskin praising women's roles as sorcerers chemists and "loaf-givers." Including a range of recipes from breads and cheeses to chafing dish meals to meats sauces and salads the book also contains advice on different service for lunch and dinner. The recipes' clear and easy to follow instructions suggest its compilers recognized the busy lives of women running homes and that they opted to assist in making domestic cookery straightforward and efficient. Notably the Geneva Hospital which the Woman's Board supported was connected to Geneva Medical College which only 45 years prior had made history by granting an M.D. to Elizabeth Blackwell the first degreed female doctor in the U.S. This connection signals that the women of the organization also hoped to ensure updated equipment and a solid infrastructure for an institution that had welcomed in students of their own sex. <br/><br/>Charitable Cook Books Collection of Helen Evans Brown 197. Near Fine. Press of W. F. Humphrey unknown books
190531253Honolulu: Mercantile Printing Co. Ltd. 1905. 86 2 blanks pp. Stitched in original printed wrappers. Scattered light foxing. Several blank margins have a wormhole. Good.<br/><br/> Constitution By-Laws Officers Missions Members doings at the Annual Meeting Reports of various committees. Mercantile Printing Co., Ltd. unknown books
19201500Lowell MA c. 1920. Hardcover. 68 pages. 23 x 15 cm. Prefaced by the poem - A Recipe For a Day. Boards rubbed and bumped. BROWN 1433. <br/><br/> hardcover books
1993104866.1New York / New Haven / London: The Metropolitan Museum of Art / Yale University Press 1993. Softbound. VG small label inside front cover. Color illustrated wraps. 560 pp. 181 bw and 259 vivid color plates. A sumptuous catalogue of 219 works from the more than 4000 that Winthrop bequesthed to his alma matter in 1943. Includes catalogue entries and essays written by more than 60 experts in their respective fields. The Metropolitan Museum of Art / Yale University Press unknown books