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Women's Suffrage. A Short History of a Great Movement

Women's Suffrage. A Short History of a Great Movement by Fawcett, Millicent Garrett

4 to 7 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $15.00
Details
$1,350.00
( US$)
Seller: Whitmore Rare Books
Title
Women's Suffrage. A Short History of a Great Movement
Author
Fawcett, Millicent Garrett
Seller
Whitmore Rare Books (United States)
Condition
Fine
Description
London & Edinburgh: T. C. & E. C. Jack, 1912. First edition. Fine. Small octavo (measures 165 x 107mm). Original green publisher's cloth binding with spine and front board lettered in black. A clean, square, tight copy. Offsetting to front and rear endpapers, else internally a surprisingly fresh, clean-margined copy. Well represented institutionally but uncommon in trade, this title rarely appears in such pleasing condition. "The torch which was lighted by Mary Wollstonecraft was never afterwards extinguished," Fawcett asserts at the beginning of her book, as she considers the early founders of the women's equality movement including Wollestoncraft and Mott. In the face of insult and ignorance, she explains, women have pushed forward to create a more just world through their writing (as in the case of Elizabeth Barrett Browning) or their activism (as in the case of Elizabeth Fry). But Fawcett is not only focused on the history of the movement -- though she does recount its high spots. She is even more interested in its progress, and she details international successes in the pursuit of enfranchisement for women. She believes that the current year of 1912 shows promise for even further gains, particularly in the U.S. and U.K. where suffragists increasingly embraced logical, political campaigns over violence. "He who runs [for office] must read the signs of the times. Everything points to the growing volume and force of the women's movement. Even if victory should be delayed, it cannot be delayed long." Fine.
THE STAGES OF ECONOMIC GROWTH

THE STAGES OF ECONOMIC GROWTH by Rostow, W.W.

5 to 10 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: FREE
Details
$750.00
( US$)
Seller: Type Punch Matrix
Title
THE STAGES OF ECONOMIC GROWTH
Author
Rostow, W.W.
Seller
Type Punch Matrix (United States)
Condition
Very good in near fine dust jacket.
Description
Cambridge: At the University Press, 1960. First edition. Very good in near fine dust jacket.. First printing of the title that established a particularly influential model of historic economic growth, by economist and National Security Advisor W. W. Rostow. In THE STAGES OF ECONOMIC GROWTH, Rostow proposes what would later be known as the Rostovian take-off model of economic growth. This model was shaped by the current status of the Cold War, pitting the state of the US economy against those of Russia and various third world countries to compare their historical trajectories. The success of THE STAGES OF ECONOMIC GROWTH brought Rostow to the attention of John F. Kennedy, who appointed him as an advisor before he became president. During Kennedy's presidency, he was a vocal advocate for the Vietnam War, and after Kennedy's assassination, he served as National Security Advisor to Johnson. An important work in the history of modern economics. 8'' x 5.25''. Original blue cloth binding with gilt spine lettering. Original unclipped ($3.75) dust jacket. 180 pages, including index. Small ink owner name to front pastedown. Underlining in red to the first 48 pages. Jacket with mild edgewear, tiny spot of soil to rear near spine; spine a bit sunned. Front flyleaf with a couple shallow creases to corner, small area of loss to corner of rear flyleaf. Else clean and tight.
Vietnam War Protest Documents Showing Military Dissent, Port Chicago Direct Action, SANE Petitioning, and Women Strike for Peace Budget Critique

Vietnam War Protest Documents Showing Military Dissent, Port Chicago Direct Action, SANE Petitioning, and Women Strike for Peace Budget Critique by Antiwar Protest Movement

2 to 8 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $15.00
Details
$450.00
( US$)
Seller: Max Rambod Inc.
Title
Vietnam War Protest Documents Showing Military Dissent, Port Chicago Direct Action, SANE Petitioning, and Women Strike for Peace Budget Critique
Author
Antiwar Protest Movement
Seller
Max Rambod Inc. (United States)
Description
1965. Student Peace Union, SANE, Women Strike for Peace, and Contra Costa Citizens Against the War in Vietnam antiwar ephemera archive, 1965 and 1966, documents the early system of Vietnam War opposition before mass antiwar demonstrations became the movement's dominant public form. The archive shows the mechanisms of early peace mobilization through enlisted servicemen's testimony, newspaper-ad petitioning, economic argument, congressional criticism, and planned obstruction of military logistics, revealing how dissent moved between elite public statements, women's peace activism, campus networks, and local civil disobedience. In 1965, the antiwar movement remained a loose coalition built around teach-ins, lobbying, persuasion, rallies, picketing, and independent local actions, while radicals increasingly connected the war to domestic injustice and American power; these documents provide primary-source evidence for studying that formative transition from policy dissent to organized resistance. Four antiwar documents dating from 1965 to 1966, issued by or associated with the National Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy, Women Strike for Peace, the Student Peace Union, and Contra Costa Citizens Against the War in Vietnam, with formats including mimeographed circulars, flyers, and broadsides. The materials include a SANE broadside reproducing a February 19, 1965 New York Times advertisement, a double-sided Women Strike for Peace and J. William Fulbright budget-and-war broadside from 1965, a Student Peace Union circular dated April 30, 1966 containing anonymous letters from Marines stationed at Chu Lai, and a Contra Costa protest flyer calling for action at Port Chicago on August 7, 1966. The archive differentiates several strands of early antiwar practice: public appeals by nationally known signatories, women's household-economy critique of military spending, active-duty military dissent circulated through student networks, and locally organized direct action aimed at munitions shipment infrastructure. Port Chicago carried additional historical resonance as a military logistics site associated with the 1944 munitions explosion and subsequent Black sailors' resistance to unsafe loading conditions, making its later use as a Vietnam protest site especially charged within histories of war labor, race, and military discipline. National Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy. Vietnam: America must decide between a full scale war and a negotiated truce. New York: National Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy, 1965. Broadside reproducing a full-page advertisement originally printed in The New York Times on February 19, 1965, warning that escalation in Vietnam could produce "a major war involving the U.S. and China-a war nobody wants and no one can win." The statement, signed by figures including Dr. Benjamin Spock, Linus Pauling, Norman Mailer, I.F. Stone, and clergy, labor, academic, and literary figures, urges ceasefire, negotiation, and public pressure on Congress and the White House, demonstrating how established liberal and pacifist networks converted newspaper advertising into political mobilization. [2] Women Strike for Peace and Fulbright, J. William. Unhappy About High Food Prices? [N.p.]: Women Strike for Peace, 1965. Double-sided broadside connecting the cost of Vietnam to food prices, taxation, and domestic social need, with a pie chart asserting that "3/4 of your tax dollar is spent for military and space purposes" and a "Ballot on the War Budget" stating, "I object. I don't want all that spending for death and destruction." The verso prints an abridged version of Senator J. William Fulbright's October 14, 1965 Kansas State College address, in which he asks whether the United States wants to be "the world's policeman" or "an intelligent and humane society," linking women's peace activism to Senate-level critique from the longtime chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, whose papers document his central role in Vietnam-era foreign policy debate. Student Peace Union. United States Marines Speak Out. [N.p.]: Student Peace Union, 1966. Two-page mimeographed circular dated April 30, 1966, reproducing letters from two anonymous Marines stationed in Chu Lai, South Vietnam, with names withheld for safety. The first Marine writes, "I feel this war is a waste of time, people and money," while the second calls the conflict "a hollow, political, cold war" and pleads, "Let us help these people with kindness not death," offering unusually direct evidence of active-duty moral opposition circulated through student antiwar networks. [4] Contra Costa Citizens Against the War in Vietnam. Port Chicago's Where the Action Is. Contra Costa County: Contra Costa Citizens Against the War in Vietnam, 1966. Green flyer announcing an August 7 day of coordinated protest and civil disobedience at the U.S. Naval Weapons Station at Port Chicago, with instructions to rally at Concord City Park, march to the munitions gate, and maintain a vigil by those "prepared to risk arrest." The text identifies Port Chicago as a site through which ammunition and explosives for Vietnam passed and uses stark language to describe napalm trucks, explosives trucks, and "trainloads of bombs," ending with the slogan "One man / One truck / A thousand lives," showing how local organizers translated antiwar conviction into targeted obstruction of military supply lines. Condition information not supplied in the provided description, and overall condition cannot be responsibly assigned without examination. Substantive early antiwar archive preserving the movement's developing infrastructure of persuasion, dissent, and direct action during the first major phase of Vietnam escalation.
Different Aspects. Frederick Willam Rolfe & The Foreign Office Venice

Different Aspects. Frederick Willam Rolfe & The Foreign Office Venice by [TRAGARA PRESS] Donald WEEKS, editor

3 to 7 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $7.50
Details
$250.00
( US$)
Seller: Riverrun Books & Manuscripts
Title
Different Aspects. Frederick Willam Rolfe & The Foreign Office Venice
Author
[TRAGARA PRESS] Donald WEEKS, editor
Seller
Riverrun Books & Manuscripts (United States)
Description
Edinburgh: Tragara Press, 1976. 8vo. 36 pp. Original printed wrappers. A fine copy. FIRST EDITION, ONE OF ONLY FOUR COPIES on Saunders paper, from an edition of 125.
Not So Much Love of Flowers, Poems 1969-1972

Not So Much Love of Flowers, Poems 1969-1972 by Appel, Allan

4 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $6.50
Details
$45.00
( EU VAT US$0)
Seller: Lorne Bair Rare Books
Title
Not So Much Love of Flowers, Poems 1969-1972
Author
Appel, Allan
Seller
Lorne Bair Rare Books (United States)
Description
West Branch IA: Toothpaste Press, 1975. First edition. One of only 26 copies (of 501 total) issued in hardcover; hand-cased and signed by the author, of which this is Copy C of the 26 lettered and signed copies. Orange-red cloth covers with paper spine label; tall 12mo. Harvard College Library embossed stamp on front end paper, with the library's blind-stamped release mark. A special (and scarce) sample of Toothpaste Press in hardcover. Ex-libris else Very Good. Toothpaste Press began when Allan Kornblum bought a press in 1972 and moved it into Anslem Hollo's garage according to Coffee House publisher Chris Fischbach; a decade or so later Toothpaste became Coffee House.
Complete Amateur Boat Building. In Wood, Glass Fibre and Metal.

Complete Amateur Boat Building. In Wood, Glass Fibre and Metal. by Verney, Michael.

7 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $6.00
Details
$20.00
( EU VAT US$0)
Seller: Ten Pound Island Book Co.
Title
Complete Amateur Boat Building. In Wood, Glass Fibre and Metal.
Author
Verney, Michael.
Seller
Ten Pound Island Book Co. (United States)
Condition
VG, dj.
Description
1963. VG, dj.. 21.5 x 14 cm. 309 pp. b/w illust and plates.