Verlag: Berkeley Anarchists, 1970
Anbieter: Singing Saw Books, Portland, OR, USA
Erstausgabe
Paperback. Zustand: Very Good. First Edition. 4 pp. Pamphlet. Selection of quotes on government from various anarchist authors. Folded a little askew, creased corner.
Verlag: Cora, Wien, 2006
Anbieter: Der Ziegelbrenner - Medienversand, Bremen, Deutschland
durchgehend feuchtigkeitswellig und knickspurig, 23 S., DIN A 4, Klammerheftung Deutsche Ausgabe. Texte und Interviews zu Anarchismus, Kriegsdienstverweigerung und gewaltfreiem Widerstand in Israel/ Palästina, die aus verschiedenen libertären Zeitschriften und dem Internet zusammengestellt und ins Deutsche übersetzt wurden. Gramm 600.
Verlag: Minneapolis, Mn. : North Country Anarchists and Anarcha-Feminists, 1975
Anbieter: MW Books, New York, NY, USA
Erstausgabe
First Edition. Very good paperback copy; edges slightly dust-dulled and nicked. Remains particularly well-preserved overall; tight, bright, and clean. Physical description:; 1 volume : illustrations ; 19 cm. Subject; Anarchists -- Minnesota -- Minneapolis. 1 Kg.
Verlag: Minneapolis, Mn. : North Country Anarchists and Anarcha-Feminists, 1975
Anbieter: MW Books, New York, NY, USA
Erstausgabe
First Edition. Very good paperback copy; edges slightly dust-dulled and nicked. Remains particularly well-preserved overall; tight, bright, and clean. Physical description:; 1 volume : illustrations ; 19 cm. Subject; Anarchists -- Minnesota -- Minneapolis. 1 Kg.
Verlag: (Aurora) nd, (Madison, WI)
Anbieter: Brian Cassidy Books at Type Punch Matrix, Silver Spring, MD, USA
Zustand: Very good +. Reprint. Pamphlet containing a review of the 1973 Italian film LOVE AND ANARCHY, originally distributed in San Francisco by a group of anarchists after the film's screenings; this a "republished" edition from Madison, WI's Aurora Press. Printed throughout with variously colored stock and inks. One copy found by OCLC. A charming edition. Wraps. 8vo. Saddle-stapled self-wraps. Very good plus with mild soiling near spine, touches of handling wear. Clean and bright throughout. [8]pp.
Verlag: Silent, 1994
Sprache: Deutsch
Anbieter: Druckwaren Antiquariat, Salzwedel, Deutschland
Verbandsmitglied: GIAQ
14,1 x 12,6 x 1,4 cm, Audio CD. Zustand: Gut. 8 tracks. Disc mit leichten , oberflächlichen Gebrauchsspuren. LÄUFT! Sprache: Deutsch Gewicht in Gramm: 550.
Verlag: Hastings: Local Anarchists, UK, 1989
Anbieter: Marcus Campbell Art Books, London, Vereinigtes Königreich
Erstausgabe
EUR 35,07
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbFirst Edition. 29.5 x 21cm. Stapled xerox-style double-sided A4 sheets, 10pp. Stapled in top-left corner. Includes loose A4 poster replicating the cover. An anarchist, ecologically-orientated tract critical of Thatcher's Britain, military industrial complex, etc. Very rare. (ref: 089).
Verlag: Benj. R. Tucker, Boston, 1884
Anbieter: Lorne Bair Rare Books, ABAA, Winchester, VA, USA
Erstausgabe
First thus. Small square quarto (17cm.); original japan vellum over cardstock wrappers; 30pp. Unopened. Slight browning to edges, else a neat, unworn copy. Scarce printing (possibly unauthorized) of Blunt's anti-Imperialist polemic, attacking British policy in the Sudan. Though Tucker generally limited his publishing ventures to projects that explicity furthered his individualist anarchist views, he occasionally found time for projects such as this; finely printed in two colors throughout and attractively bound in japan vellum.
Verlag: Introduction by Daniel A. Taylor Chief Legal Counsel The Commonwealth of Massachusetts Executive Department State House Boston dated 13 July, 1977
Anbieter: Richard M. Ford Ltd, London, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 157,82
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den Warenkorb[1] + 38pp., 4to. Stapled in brown printed wraps. In good condition, lightly aged and worn. In his introduction Taylor explains: 'The accompanying Report has been prepared under the auspices of the Office of the Governor's Legal Counsel in response to your questions: first, as to whether there are substantial grounds for believing - at least in light of the criminal justice standards of today - that Sacco and Vanzetti were unfairly convicted and executed, and, second, if so, what action can now appropriately be taken. It is my conclusion that there are substantial, indeed compelling, grounds for believing that the Sacco and Vanzetti legal proceedings were permeated with unfairness, and that a proclamation issued by you would be appropriate.' Loosely inserted are two items. First, a Typed Letter from Veda Paoletta of the Governor's Press Office to Lucille McMahon of Wellesley Free Library, enclosing a copy of the report. 1p., 8vo. 15 November 1977. Second, a photostat (1p., 8vo) of Dukakis's 1977 proclamation removing 'any stigma and disgrace' from the men's names. Now scarce: no copies found on COPAC. WorldCat lists six locations in the USA.
Verlag: Mother Earth Publishing Association, New York, 1911
Anbieter: Ken Sanders Rare Books, ABAA, Salt Lake City, UT, USA
Signiert
Hardcover. Zustand: Good. SIGNED. 277pp. plus 8pp. of publisher's advertisements at the rear. Duodecimo [19 cm] Beige cloth over boards, with a black ink stamped title on the backstrip and front board, and black ink stamped single-ruled borders on the front board. Reproduced photographic frontispiece portrait of the author by T. Kajiwara. Prominent toning to the spine and a large section of the rear board. Cloth a bit frayed at the edges, with the underlying boards at times peeking through. Endpapers split along the hinges. Text block cracked at the title page. Name in pencil on the title page. Very occasional brief markings (mostly in the form of hatching) in pencil and colored pencil. With two newspaper clippings pertaining to Emma Goldman ("Red Emma") laid in. A classic of radical literature. Third edition printed on front cover. Emma Goldman was once viewed as "the most dangerous woman in America," and was a thinker so far ahead of her time that even today, her views seem strikingly revolutionary. This collection of essays is a magnificent introduction to her thoughts: ranging from her views on women's suffrage and emancipation, patriotism's menace to liberty, the psychology of political violence, the prison system ("a social crime and failure"), the hypocrisy of Puritanism, and the strategies of dissent. These writings all reflect her fearless joyousness, her radical dedication to the idea that life is meant to be a source of delight- and that avoiding the meaningless grind of everyday life must be achieved in any way possible. This copy is inscribed (not to a specific person) by Emma Goldman on the front free endpaper: "Emma Goldman / Portland August / 1916." Emma Goldman (1869-1940) was born in Kovno (now Kaunas, Lithuania). She grew up in what is now Kaliningrad, Russia, and in St. Petersburg. Her formal education was limited, but she read widely, and in St. Petersburg became involved with a radical student circle. She immigrated to the United States in 1885, first settling in Rochester, New York, then in New Haven, Connecticut, where she worked in clothing factories and came into contact with socialist and anarchist groups. Subsequently, she moved to New York City, where in 1893, she was jailed for inciting a riot when a group of unemployed workers reacted to a fiery speech she had delivered. In 1895, upon her release, Goldman began lecturing throughout Europe and the United States, and later, in 1906, Goldman founded Mother Earth, a periodical that she edited until its suppression in 1917. Goldman's naturalization as a U.S. citizen was revoked by a legal stratagem in 1908. Two years later she published Anarchism and Other Essays. An early edition of Goldman's famous essays, signed by the much revered revolutionary activist author just under a year before she was sentenced to two years in prison for her opposition to the U.S. involvement in World War I and for agitating against mandatory military service. Third edition (Second revised edition on title page).
Verlag: N.d., but ca. 1890, N.p., 1890
Anbieter: Lorne Bair Rare Books, ABAA, Winchester, VA, USA
Small octavo (19.5cm.); sewn pamphlet; printed self-wraps; 24pp. Front cover soiled, with faint institutional hand-stamp; text clean and unmarked. An early work by the prominent Anarchist, utopian novelist, and eugenicist; a criticism of top-down social reform measures, encouraging would-be philanthropists to "repent of their crimes against the toilers.withdraw from corrupting alliances with caste and cultivation, and . become Socialists, Anarchists, revolutionists." No date, but mentions the University Settlement of New York (founded in 1886) as "embryonic.".
Verlag: Sacco-Vanzetti National League, New York, 1927
Anbieter: Lorne Bair Rare Books, ABAA, Winchester, VA, USA
Erstausgabe
First Separate Edition. Single, unfolded sheet, printed to make 4pp. Mild toning at margins, still about Fine. Unissued copy of Millay's scarce leaflet, reprinting an essay originally published in "The Outlook." This was one of a number of pieces from prominent authors, commissioned by the Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee to raise funds for the defense.
Verlag: 'The Anarchist. Vol. 2 - No. 18. June' Printed and Published by David Nicholl 7 Broomhall Street Sheffield, 1895
Anbieter: Richard M. Ford Ltd, London, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 140,28
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den Warenkorb16pp., 12mo. Disbound without covers. In good condition, on lightly-aged paper, with reverse of last leaf browned. Separate title-page, with only the following on it: 'SENSATIONAL REVELATIONS! | Life in | ENGLISH | PRISONS. | ONE PENNY.' Drophead title on p.3 with details of 'The Anarchist'. Duncan's article runs from p.4 to p.8, and is titled: 'Life in English Prisons. | The First Night in the Cells. | Tricks of Detectives - How "Confessions" are obtained from Prisoners - Insanitary Police Cells - The "Black Maria" - A Living Tomb - A Peep through a Prison Window - The Silent System' and 'The Political Superstition'. Pp.3-4 carry a piece on 'West End Scandals', pp.8 to 11: 'The Political Superstition', p.11: 'Sheffield Anarchist Group', pp.12-13: 'The Walsall Anarchists. | A Letter from Prison'; p.13: 'The Suppression of Anarchy'; p.14: 'May Day Celebrations'; pp.14-16 (ending 'To be concluded'): 'The Featherstone Massacre'. The reverse of the title carries a publisher's list of 'Anarchist Pamphlets'. Scarce: no copy of this item on COPAC. A few years later Nicholl published a similar piece: 'Life in English prisons : Mysteries of Scotland Yard - Startling Revelations.'.
Verlag: Benj. R. Tucker, Boston, 1890
Anbieter: Lorne Bair Rare Books, ABAA, Winchester, VA, USA
Erstausgabe
First English Language Edition. Octavo (19.5cm.); publisher's red gilt-lettered cloth; 312,[3](ads)pp.; added color lithographic title page. Light shelf wear, miniscule damp spot to upper cover, spine a shade darkened, contemporary ownership signature to front free endpaper and bookplate to front pastedown, late 20th-century bookseller's ticket to front pastedown, else Very Good or better. Though first published in France in 1843, "Mon Oncle Benjamin" was not previously available to an English-speaking readership before individualist anarchist publisher Benjamin R. Tucker's translation, which appeared just in time for Christmas, 1890. The novel, which is set in the last days of the reign of Louis XV and into that of the doomed Louis XVI, recounts the exploits of a hapless doctor, the eponymous Uncle Benjamin, who takes poorly to the administering of medicine but excels at drinking and accruing unpaid debts. Like many novels Tucker chose to translate and publish, "My Uncle Benjamin" is not overtly anarchist, though as one early review notes, "very little thought [is given] sometimes for the sensibilities of the pious or the delicate reader, but with tender regard to the sacredness of human rights and feelings" (from "The Brooklyn Daily Eagle" (under the header "A Virile Old French Novel"), December 28, 1890).
Verlag: Edizione Curata da Vecchi Lettori di Cronaca Sovversiva, [Newark], 1925
Anbieter: Lorne Bair Rare Books, ABAA, Winchester, VA, USA
Erstausgabe
First Edition. 12mo (18.5cm.); original grey pictorial wrappers printed in blue and dark grey; x,[2],130pp.; facsimile of Galleani's handwriting. Slightly worn from handling, else Very Good to Near Fine. Lengthy essay in response to the former anarchist author and attorney Francesco Saverio Merlino after his conversion to socialism and his statement in an interview titled "La Fine dell'Anarchismo" in the Italian daily La Stampa that anarchism was dead. Galleani's response, titled "La Fine dell'Anarchismo?," first appeared in ten installments in his newspaper the Cronaca Sovversiva, from April, 1907, to January, 1908. This, the first collected edition, did not appear until six years after Galleani's deportation from the United States, in 1919. PERICONI 53.
Verlag: Benj. R. Tucker, Boston, 1890
Anbieter: Lorne Bair Rare Books, ABAA, Winchester, VA, USA
Erstausgabe
First American Edition. 12mo (17cm.); publisher's orange decorative card wrappers; 143pp. Some wear to wrapper extremities including shallow chips at spine ends, faint dampstain to top edge of upper cover not bleeding into textblock, else a Very Good, tight and unfaded copy. Though Tolstoy never considered himself an anarchist, he was among the American movement's literary darlings due to his sympathetic portrayals of the peasant class and anti-militarist views. The present translation, by radical publisher and individualist anarchist Benjamin R. Tucker, was his major bestseller (62,000 copies reported) and ran into multiple printings despite being banned from the mails under the Comstock Act for indecency (the novella portrays a man whose jealousy leads him to murder his wife). The only other copies of this title currently on the market (November, 2018) are later printings. Reference: Candace Falk, ed. "Emma Goldman: A Documentary History of the American Years," Vol. 1, p. 559. No priority established between this and the first London edition, both first appearing in June, 1890 (see "Bibliography of Russian Literature in English Translation to 1945," p. 42). See also Roger E. Stoddard, "'Liberty's Library': Benj. R. Tucker's Imprint, 1875-1912," in Essays in Honor of William B. Todd (1991), p. 165, citing a reprint.