Sprache: Spanisch
Verlag: Haz, 1953
Anbieter: Librería El Pez Volador, Rosario, SF, Argentinien
Encuadernación de tapa blanda. Zustand: Muy Bien. Hojas amarillentas por el paso del tiempo. (M).
Verlag: Buenos Aires 1940, 1940
Anbieter: Dedalus-Libros, Madrid, M, Spanien
94 p 23 cm Sello de anterior poseedor en la cubierta. Encuadernación editorial en rústica. Estado de conservación: Bien.
Verlag: Haz, Buenos Aires, 1953
Anbieter: Librería Monte Sarmiento, Santiago, SANTI, Chile
Erstausgabe
Encuadernación de tapa blanda. Zustand: Bien. 1ª Edición. 136 p. ; 19x13 cms. Intonso. Sello de librería ( A-61 ).
Verlag: Bs.As., Haz, 1953., 1953
Anbieter: AQUILANTI. Libros Antiguos & Modernos (A.L.A.D.A), Ciudad De Buenos Aires, CABA, Argentinien
Verbandsmitglied: ALADA
136 páginas. 8vo., rústica.
Verlag: Buenos Aires, 1941
Anbieter: Chaco 4ever Books, Montevideo, MO, Uruguay
Magazin / Zeitschrift
Encuadernación de tapa dura. Zustand: Muy bien. Folio. #1 Jan 1941 - #18 Feb 1943. (Complete set). Bound in half Bound in half gray cloth. Collaborators : Constancio C. Vigil, Alfredo Lino Palacios, A. P. Justo, Enrique Ruiz Giñazu, Agustin Camara, Julian Sancerni Jimenez, Belisario Roldan, Bonifasio lastra, among others. Rare nationalist and anti-Semitic newspaper, informal organ of the Republican League founded by Laferrere in 1929, this newspaper focuses on the anti-immigration campaign that associates foreigners with denationalization, the extreme occurs with the mockery of the Jewish gauchos "Gauchos Arquintinos" who It responds to the Isrelite stereotype or #16 where they put on the cover "New Census : 36 Jews have been expelled from the country who entered through the window, What a relief there are only 836,224 . With #18 this newspaper concluded and this last number missing most of the collections. Roberto de Laferrere is the most interesting case in which to study the passage from a Francophile nationalist to a neutralist nationalist, who, while hating Communism, opposed British imperialism and resisted Jewish immigration, but also did not accept any kind of link with Nazi groups: "Today our worst enemies are the English and the Jews. Tomorrow it could be the Yankees and the Germans", he maintained in February 1941. Washington Pereyra T4,p319.