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Editore: Ridge Press/ Random House,New York, 1967
ISBN 10: 0394429354ISBN 13: 9780394429359
Da: Friends of the Curtis Memorial Library, Brunswick, ME, U.S.A.
Membro dell'associazione: MABA
Libro Prima edizione
Hardcover. Condizione: Fine. Condizione sovraccoperta: Fine. 1st Edition. The book is bound in fine stiff cotton linen with title stamped in gilt on the front cover; title and author in bright gilt on the spine. Corners are sharp and the binding is tight. Black and white photographs on the endpapers. Pages are pristine, smooth and unmarked. The dust jacket is in fine condition with the original price-"$10.00" on the front flap. The author was a gifted young South African photographer who took these startling apartheid photographs with him when he left the country. The book explores the cruelty and oppression of daily life suffered under apartheid and was later banned in South Africa.
Editore: Ridge Press / Random House, 1967
Da: Arroyo Seco Books, Pasadena, Member IOBA, Pasadena, CA, U.S.A.
Membro dell'associazione: IOBA
Libro Prima edizione
Hardcover. Condizione: Fine. Condizione sovraccoperta: Fine. Photographs (illustratore). 1st Edition. 192 Pp. Beige Linen, Gilt. First Us Printing, 1967. Fine In Fine Dust Jacket Priced $10.00. The Other Side Of European Colonialism, Here Depicted In South Africa.
Editore: Random House, New York, 1967
Da: Raptis Rare Books, Palm Beach, FL, U.S.A.
Prima edizione Copia autografata
First edition of this classic work. Quarto, original cloth, pictorial endpapers, illustrated. Signed by both "Ernest Cole" and Pulitzer Prize-winning author "Joseph Lelyveld 9.18.14" on the title page. Introduction by Joseph Lelyveld. Text written with Thomas Flaherty. Fine in a near fine dust jacket. Rare and desirable signed. "A searing exposé of the social and economic effects of apartheid on South Africa's black population, House of Bondage was banned by the governmentAuthored by a self-taught black South African photojournalist, Ernest Cole, [it] shows his experience of apartheid from the inside. To do this, Cole managed to get himself officially reclassified as 'coloured' rather than 'black gaining for himself more freedom of movement to carry out his self-imposed assignment" (Parr & Badger II:93, 106).