Editore: Nick Brandt, London
Da: Left On The Shelf (PBFA), Kendal, Regno Unito
Membro dell'associazione: PBFA
EUR 8,35
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloPamphlet. Condizione: Good. 18pp.
Editore: Privately Published., Berkeley, California,, 1977
Prima edizione
EUR 28,64
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloPaperback. Condizione: Very Good. First Edition. Wraps. 8vo. Wraps. pp 11. A translation of Compte- rendu, 1976. Written from Paris. Translated by Gina Rosenberg. Very good.
Editore: Gina Rosenberg, Berkeley, CA, 1977
Da: Bolerium Books Inc., San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Broadside. 11x17 inch broadside, all text, neatly creased from having been folded into quarters, printed on tan paper. Bloch's text, a selection from "All things considered," argues that "Revolutionary activity as it is still practiced today is too masculine, still contains too many criteria to which women can submit.".
Editore: Gina Rosenberg, Berkeley, CA, 1977
Da: Bolerium Books Inc., San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
11x17 inch broadside, all text, neatly creased from having been folded into quarters, printed on blue paper. Bloch's text, a selection from "All things considered," argues that "Revolutionary activity as it is still practiced today is too masculine, still contains too many criteria to which women can submit.".
Da: Chiron Media, Wallingford, Regno Unito
EUR 257,95
Quantità: 5 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloHardcover. Condizione: New.
Editore: Gina Rosenberg, Berkeley, 1977
Da: Brian Cassidy Books at Type Punch Matrix, Silver Spring, MD, U.S.A.
Condizione: Fine. Broadside printing an excerpt from Bloch's book ALL THINGS CONSIDERED, 1976, published by Gina Rosenberg (Berkeley: Gina Rosenberg, 1977). Originally published in French as COMPTE-RENDU 1976, the text offers a feminist critique of the Situationist International and subsequent "pro-situ" movements. "At the center of the alienation of women one finds both their need to submit to men and their criteria, and the contempt that women have for themselves. [.] It is significant that the participants (all men) in the Orientation Debate of the SI never stopped posing the question of the appropriate of their theory by the workers, of the necessary interaction between the theory they formulated and this appropriation, without ever even citing this same question for women." One copy found through OCLC at the University of Kansas. 11" by 17" inch off-pink sheet, printed recto only in blue, and folded in quarters as issued. About fine; crisp, bright, sharp, and vivid.