521 résultats
2003BN252948Köln ; London ; Los Angeles ; Madrid ; Paris ; Tokyo : Taschen 2003. 2003. Hula : vintage Hawaiian graphics. ed. Jim Heimann. German transl.: Harald Hellmann. French transl.: Patrick Javault Icons <br/><br/>Hula : vintage Hawaiian graphics. ed. Jim Heimann. German transl.: Harald Hellmann. French transl.: Patrick Javault Icons Hawaii / USA / Südsee / - Heimann Jim Köln ; London ; Los Angeles ; Madrid ; Paris ; Tokyo : Taschen unknown
1947CORV-BBP-008341The Hobson Book Press New York 1947. Hardcover. Very Good/Very Good. 0x0x0. Binding firm interior clean and unmarked. DJ has light soiling a bit of edge wear in protective cover. 6 illustrations. 364 pp. Reprint. One of the craziest and funniest books we've ever carried. This is the story of the prince's life in Hawaii his foray into nativist politics his imprisonment in Hale Hulihuli o Hawaii and his discovery of the great principle: 'Take care of your cecal motility and civilization will take care of itself'. Very Good in a Good DJ. The Hobson Book Press, New York hardcover
194742297New York NY: The Hobson Book Press 1947. Book. Very Good. Hardcover. 364 pages 8vo. Out of Print. Very Scarce. First printed and circulated in the United States in 1943. Blue cloth boards with silver-embossed titles along spine and front cover. Includes tan dust-jacket with black titles along spine and front cover illustration on front cover of the Prince. Includes warning a general introduction invitation appreciations fruitage a final word from Prince Moki &c. A very strange book indeed. Shelfwear to DJ: light scuffing along edges and covers many small tears and moderately sized missing pieces along edges light tanning along spine and edges. DJ in mylar. Previous owner's bookplate pasted on inside front cover. Light fading along cloth board edges very light tanning along page edges. Otherwise tightly bound with very clean and crisp pages. No marks. Volume is in Very Good condition. DJ in Good condition. The Hobson Book Press Hardcover
1994272124PN. New. 1994. Soft Cover. Date is original print. This is a reprint edition . PN paperback
192441034New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons 1924. 8vo. ix 1 198 pp. Frntsp. title in green & blk numerous text illusts. Red cloth blk lettrng w/d.j. cover art by Charles K. Stevens chppng hd & ft of spine tear to uppr rt crnr frnt cvr edgewear still a VG/G- copy. First edition of this charming collection of the legends and folklore of the Hawaiian Islands. G.P. Putnam’s Sons, hardcover
1854329930Honolulu: Mission Press 1854. 47pp. 12mo. Original blue wrappers minor browning and chipping. 47pp. 12mo. Scarce pamphlet commemorating the inauguration of Edward G. Beckwith as president of Oahu College giving a complete account of the event. The work includes a history of Oahu College also called Punahou School which was founded in 1841 by missionaries. "The minutes of the Hawaiian Evangelical Association record the edition as 500 copies" Forbes. Forbes 2042 Mission Press unknown
192991958Honolulu 1929. Paperback. Very Good. 14p. Softcover in original wrapper. 20 cm. Rust marks from paper clips on first few pages. Inked note "Clinic - Thursday 9-10 a.m." on front cover. Many of the instructions from this military hospital seem badly dated. Here is the entire section on Crying: <br /> "a. While crying is a baby's way of showing that something dissatisfies it don't be alarmed by a moderate amount of crying. See that the baby doesn't need changing see that it isn't too hot nor to sic cold and that it is in a comfortable position. If these things are satisfactory go away and leave the baby alone. Don't pick it up nor walk the floor with it nor rock it in the arms etc. If it seems to have the colic having it lie face down with a hot water bottle beneath its abdomen is frequently all that it needs. Some of the bad habits of childhood are learned in infancy. A baby learns very quickly that it can get what it wants by crying for it.<br /> b. If your baby is plump pink in color has from 1 to 3 bowel movements a day and nurses well it can't be seriously ill. paperback
1930227421930. Japanese-American Hawaii Japanese American military family photograph album 1930s documenting everyday life of a Nisei household in interwar Hawaii and tracing the transpacific connections linking Japanese American communities with Japan and Japanese occupied Manchuria. The photographs record family relationships social gatherings military friendships and overseas travel at a time when second generation Japanese Americans were negotiating identity within both American and Japanese spheres of influence. Handwritten captions written in the first person suggest the compiler was a Nisei man with associations to the United States Army referring to relatives and companions as "My father" "My sis Chiyo" and identifying a group of men in a tropical field as "China Souza Manuel myself Choy" further captioned "Army Buddies." During the 1930s Japanese Americans faced significant barriers to military advancement on the mainland United States yet Hawaii's National Guard accepted some Nisei soldiers prior to the Second World War due in part to the islands' large Japanese population. The album therefore documents a rare prewar moment when Japanese American military participation and family life intersected within the broader social landscape of Hawaii.<br /> <br /> Photo album compiled during the 1930s containing approximately 103 original silver gelatin photographs mounted to brown paper leaves and annotated in ink identifying individuals and locations. Bound in green pebbled boards titled "Photo Album" in gilt on the cover. Each photo measures approximately 2.5 x 3.5 inches to 5 x 7 inches. Album measures approximately 6 x 9.5 inches. The images depict family gatherings beach excursions on Oahu graduations and informal portraits of relatives and friends. Early pages include a graduation photograph of Edna Omatsu and portraits of family members including Uneiko members of the Takayama family Jeanette Ayako and a military dressed man identified as Rob Ogawa. One family group portrait shows individuals wearing leis with the caption "Honolulu - Hakada's Departure to Japan." Several photographs document military friendships and camp environments including the previously noted "Army Buddies" image. A small sequence captioned "Manchurian Trip" records the family's travels through northern China during the period of Japanese control following the establishment of the Japanese puppet state of Manchukuo in 1932 illustrating the mobility of Japanese diaspora families moving between Hawaii Japan and imperial territories across East Asia.<br /> <br /> Interwar Hawaii contained one of the largest Japanese populations outside Japan with Japanese immigrants and their American born children forming a substantial portion of the islands' workforce and social life during the 1930s. Album spine partially detached at front cover with wear to boards; photographs remain clean and crisp with mostly legible handwritten captions. Overall very good condition. Nisei communities balanced participation in American civic institutions with continuing family linguistic and cultural ties to Japan creating networks that stretched across the Pacific. This album documents those connections through scenes of leisure education military companionship and international travel shortly before the geopolitical tensions that culminated in the Pacific War. unknown
194576709Honolulu: Tongg Publishing Company 1945. Second edition. Twelvemo 3 3/4 x 6 inches. 314 pp. Publisher's blue cloth with printed paper cover label. Front panel of dust jacket laid in. A very good copy.Compiled by Henry P. Judd Mary Kawena Pukui & John F. G. Stokes. Mary Kawena Pukui is rightly regarded as a central figure in the Hawaiian language revival movement of the 20th century. She a native Hawaiian was a driven scholar and spent much of her life in documenting and preserving Hawaiian language folklore proverbs place names and colloquial speech. Aside from her contributions to dictionaries like this one she published numerous books and articles concerning the Hawaiian language & culture. Tongg Publishing Company hardcover
197062747Honolulu HI: Department of Anthropology Bernice P. Bishop Museum County of Hawaii Planning Dept. 1970. 4to. 53 1 pp. Yellow-printed softcovers stapled at gutter margin as issued minor shelfwear scuffing still VG copy w/ faint remnants of former ownership stamp front cover. First edition of this invaluable archaeological and anthropological report prepared during the 1960’s in order to locate identify and interpret Native Hawaiian sites for land developers and businesses as large area were opened for development during the Mid-20th-Century. Of particular interest are the identification and listing of a majority of the finds encompassing petroglyph rock carvings fishing village remnants human remains battle fields burial fields and more. Department of Anthropology, Bernice P. Bishop Museum, County of Hawaii Planning Dept., paperback
2026x-1108720161Cambridge University Press 2026. Paperback. New. 312 pages. 6.00x0.66x9.00 inches. Cambridge University Press paperback
51907019-nnew. unknown
51907019like new. unknown
1998Q-0824821629Univ of Hawaii Pr 1998-10-01. Hardcover. New. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Univ of Hawaii Pr hardcover
1946230681946. Japanese-American Women's Education Postwar Hawaiʻi identified Japanese-American university school girl's photo album. Oʻahu Territory of Hawaiʻi 1946-1950 spanning the years right after World War II. Approximately 260 silver gelatin photographs documenting the daily life friendships education and civic participation of a Japanese American young woman living on Oʻahu in the immediate postwar period. The photographs are mounted in a 9" x 11" woven album with photos cornered in on black board pages. Images range from small snapshot-format prints to larger horizontal photographs. Following Pearl Harbor Hawaii was initially considered a war zone and the Japanese Americans there were subject to heavy surveillance and civil rights violations until the war ended in 1945. This album ranges 1946 to circa 1950 with one loose photograph predating the album by approximately a decade likely depicting the compiler as a child. The compiler is identified by name in captions as Reiko who also went by "Rei" Reiko was a Japanese American college student and Pre-Med Club member residing on Oʻahu.<br /> <br /> This substantial and unusually well-captioned album offers a deeply personal record of Japanese American civilian life in Hawaiʻi following the end of World War II and the lifting of martial law. The first third of the album features extensive handwritten captions frequently identifying individuals locations and events while the latter portion contains fewer annotations but continues the visual narrative of family friendship and place. Reiko's life is documented across academic social and community spheres depicting college friendships Pre-Med Club activities leisure outings and participation in Laulima a Hawaiian community support organization emphasizing mutual aid and collective responsibility. Numerous images record friendships among young women posed confidently in dresses skirts slacks and swimsuits as well as traditional Japanese dress and Hawaiian dress and leis showcasing cross-cultural identity. Family life appears alongside repeated photographs of Lorraine Nakamuta age 2½ likely a relative shown in candid domestic and outdoor scenes some in western attire and a few photos playfully dancing in a straw hula skirt. The album also serves as a visual geographic survey of mid-century Hawaiʻi with identified sites including Halemaʻumaʻu Crater sugar cane fields irrigation infrastructure such as a wooden pipe transporting water Robert Louis Stevenson's hut beaches valleys and residential neighborhoods.<br /> <br /> Public and civic life figure prominently. Several sequences document an Hawaiian beauty pageant as well as floats marching bands and crowds celebrating the Philippine Islands Independence Day Parade July 4 1946 Honolulu situating Japanese American life within Hawaiʻi's broader multiethnic and postcolonial Pacific context. These images underscore the reemergence of public celebration and civic participation after wartime restriction while highlighting interethnic solidarity and shared urban space. Taken together the album constitutes a rare large-scale vernacular record of Japanese American womanhood education and community engagement during the transitional years between World War II and Hawaiʻi's statehood era. The album remains intact and structurally sound with thick board pages and photographs securely attached using original corner mounts. A few photos loose. Minor age-related wear is present including light scuffing to covers. Handwritten captions remain largely legible throughout. Overall very good condition. This album is an exceptional primary-source document for institutional collections offering sustained visual evidence of Japanese American youth culture women's education in the sciences and everyday resilience in postwar Hawaiʻi enriched by named individuals identified locations and detailed contemporaneous annotations. unknown
75-0302Victoria AU: Center Art Galleries - Hawaii Circa 1984. Dealer Catalogue. Quarto. 20 pp. Soft Covers. Very Good. Color plates. Victoria, AU: Center Art Galleries - Hawaii, [Circa 1984]. paperback
1868332700Honolulu: Paiia e Henry M. Whitney 1868. 15 1; 15 1pp. 2 vols. 8vo. Stitched. 15 1; 15 1pp. 2 vols. 8vo. The first two reports of the Sunday School Association of a series of annual reports by the Hawaiian Evangelical Association. Each includes a table in the rear listing statistics for all the religious schools on the island. Scarce. Forbes 2749 Paiia e Henry M. Whitney unknown
193975558San Francisco: Colt Press 1939. First edition. One of 486 copies of which this is one of 90 with the Valenti Angelo designs illuminate in colors. Quarto. 86 2 pp. Publisher's mauve boards with spine lettering anc cover device in white. A very clean and fine copy.Written by Marie Louise Burke this item has become somewhat scarce in the trade. From the librray of Francis P. Farquhar. Colt Press hardcover
193975372San Francisco: The Colt Press 1939. First edition. Illustrated by Mallette Dean. One of 486 copies of which 90 are illuminated as with this copy. Quarto. 86 1 colophon 1 pp. Hand-colored vignettes throughout. Publisher's rose boards with white spine lettering and front cover design. Francis P. Farquhar's copy with his discreet pencil signature. Untrimmed and unopened. Light sunning to spine else an excellent copy. The Colt Press hardcover
1020269960.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1019971975.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
194161420Honolulu: Tongg Publishing Company 1941. First Edition. First printing. Octavo 22cm. Light brown cloth stamped in black in cream dust jacket printed in brown; yellow endpapers; 1591pp; illustrations by Ethelyn Myhre throughout. 1954 owner's name to front pastedown. Bumped at corners otherwise Near Fine. Jacket price-clipped rubbed with a few small chips and tears to edges light dustiness to rear panel generally Very Good. Children's book about life in Hawaii before the arrival of Captain Cook. #61420. Tongg Publishing Company unknown
19802080202102702054Honpo shoseki 1980. Soft Cover. Fine. Size: A3 size Honpo shoseki paperback