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Verlag: Treptow bei Berlin, Bernhard Zacks Verlag 1922., 1922
Anbieter: Versandantiquariat Peter Kardos, Zürich, Schweiz
Neue Ausgabe mit einem Nachwort. 8°. 30 Seiten, 1 Blatt. Original-Broschüre. Ecke unten rechts mit minimer Fehlstelle bestossen, Heftblock papierbedingt durchgehend vergilbt, sonst sauberes, ordentliches Exemplar. "Propaganda des individualistischen Anarchismus in deutscher Sprache. Begründet und geleitet von John Henry Mackay".
Verlag: Verlag von B. Zack, Berlin, 1899
Anbieter: Lorne Bair Rare Books, ABAA, Winchester, VA, USA
Erstausgabe
First German Edition. 12mo (18.5cm.); publisher's staplebound self-wrappers; 16pp. Very light toning, else Fine. Text entirely in blackletter. German translation of individual anarchist Tucker's 1890 address "The Relation of the State to the Individual." Later editions name John Henry Mackay as the translator.
Verlag: Treptow, Bernhard Zack, 1922, Neue Ausgabe, 7.-16. Tsd.,., 1922
Anbieter: Antiquariat Walter Markov, Bonn, Deutschland
Buch
30 S., 1 Bl., Übersetzt v. George Schumm. Vorbemerkung v. John Henry Mackay. Mit ein em Nachwort des Autors von 1911. Der Text wurde 1886 geschrieben und im März 1888 erstmalig in "Liberty" abgedruckt. Auf deutsch erschien die Broschüre erstmals 1895. *-*-*-*- SHIPPING COSTS to other EU-COUNTRIES occasionally may be less than indicated. To OTHER COUNTRIES IN THE WORLD they may be different (often less or rarely more, according to the weight and wether you wish insurance). -*-*-*-* Sprache: Deutsch Gewicht in Gramm: 30 OBr., Umschlag lichtrandig, Heftklammern etwas angerostet, durchgehend Wasserrand im unteren Viertel, Rückseite am Rand mit leichter rötlicher Abfärbung, Titelblatt mit Stempel der "Alarm" Buchhandlung, Hamburg.
Verlag: Amsterdam, J. Sterringa, [1897]., 1897
Anbieter: Antiquariat Frank Albrecht (VDA / ILAB), Schriesheim, Deutschland
Erstausgabe
In hoever zij overeenstemmen en waarin zij zich onderscheiden. OBrosch. (fleckig, hinterer Deckel geknickt). 16 SS. Sprache: Nierderländisch, Erste holländische Ausgabe. - Tucker's theoretisches Hauptwerk. - Stammhammer II, 328. - Selten.
Verlag: New York, self published, f., 1906
Anbieter: Rödner Versandantiquariat, Den Haag, Niederlande
Erstausgabe
3 vols., Kl.8°, ca. 60 pag. + ads., stapled wraps, small traces of use, stamp of former owner; good copies. Anarchist Bi-monthly. Present are: issue February 1906 (year XV, no.1) and April, May 1907 (year XVI, no.1 & 2). Contents include articles on Ibsen, Stirner, Shaw, religion, democracy, Russia etc. Advertisements for books by Multatuli, Mackay a.o.; Stammhammer III, 202; Goldwater, 139. Sprache: Englisch.
Verlag: Benj. R. Tucker, New York, 1897
Anbieter: Lorne Bair Rare Books, ABAA, Winchester, VA, USA
Second Edition. Octavo. Publisher's blue-gray cloth boards, lettered in gilt on spine; blind-stamped decorative borders to front board; red edge-stain; frontispiece portrait; x,[1]-512,[1]pp. A slightly worn copy; boards evenly rubbed and soiled, with board exposure at upper corner-tips and rubbing to cloth at spine ends; both hinges thinly cracked (but holding); text clean and unmarked. A sound, Good or better copy. Perhaps the clearest exposition ever published of individualist anarchism, written by the movement's foremost exponent in America. The work is comprised of selections from Tucker's voluminous, incisive, often acidic articles in his long-running journal Liberty. These are arranged thematically, in chapters such as "The Individual, Society, and the State;" "Money and Interest;" "Land and Rent;" "Socialism;" "Communism;" etc. Tucker, who had a reputation for not questioning the fallibility of his own ideas, clearly intended the book to be used as a sort of "Bible" of anarchism, a notion alluded to in Paul Avrich's 1973 interview with Tucker's daughter Oriole, who stated, ".the whole family lived an anarchistic life. When I asked a question - like how in the world would we get along without police - Father would say look it up on page so and so of Instead of a Book." (Avrich, Anarchist Portraits. Princeton: 1988 p.151). This second edition is on noticeably inferior paper (the 1893 edition bulks a full quarter inch thicker) and is rather more commonly seen in commerce than the moderately scarce first. Still, a presentable copy of a cornerstone work in the American anarchist canon. NURSEY-BRAY (Anarchist Thinkers & Thought: An Annotated Bibliography) 928.
Verlag: Benj. R. Tucker, Publisher, New York, 1893
Anbieter: ReadInk, ABAA/IOBA, Los Angeles, CA, USA
Erstausgabe
Hardcover. Zustand: Very Good-. First Edition. (no dust jacket) [moderate wear to edges and extremities, slight exposure of boards at lower corners, previous owner's stamp and another previous owner's signature on ffep (the two sharing a last name, probably a father and son; see notes)]. (B&W photo frontispiece of the author) Primarily an anthology of writings (articles, essays, letters to the editor) from the publication "Liberty," founded in 1881 by Tucker and published by him until 1908. Per scholar Wendy McElroy, it's "widely considered to be the finest individualist-anarchist periodical ever issued in the English language," and (per Wikipedia) "was instrumental in developing and formalizing the individualist anarchist philosophy through publishing essays and serving as a format for debate." The writings of Tucker (1854-1939), an anarchist and socialist, (again quoting Wikipedia) "contributed to the development of both left-libertarian and right-libertarian political theory in the United States and were often reprinted in early libertarian journals." The book opens with an essay, "State Socialism and Anarchism: How Far They Agree and Wherein They Differ"; the remainder of its contents are organized under the following headings: The Individual, Society, and the State; Money and Interest; Land and Rent; Socialism; Communism; Methods; and Miscellaneous. 512 pages, including the Index, plus two pages of advertisements in the back: one for "Liberty" itself ('The Pioneer Organ of Anarchism in America"; subscription two dollars a year), the other a list of a dozen works of "Anarchistic Literature" that could be mail-ordered from Mr. Tucker. The book was published in London in 1895 and Tucker himself issued a second edition in 1897, but this 1893 printing was the first; library holdings are plentiful enough, per OCLC, but quite scarce in commerce. The ownership stamp on the ffep is that of Frank E. Hartung, a long-serving (1942-1978) professor of sociology at Wayne State University; the signature, just beneath it, is of Dr. Urban L. Hartung, Sr., presumably Prof. Hartung's father.