Complexe 1994 In-4 relié 29 cm sur 24. 268 pages. Très bon état d’occasion.
Reference : 77516
ISBN : 2870275226 9782870275221
Très bon état d’occasion
Librairie de l'Avenue
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Gallimard 1965 397 pages in8. 1965. broché. 397 pages. Sept fois sept jours d'Emmanuel d'Astier est un témoignage historique sur la Résistance en France couvrant les événements de Londres l'Amérique Alger et la Libération de Paris vu depuis des postes de commandement par l'auteur qui fut commissaire à l'Intérieur à la Libération
Très bon état
Club du livre d'histoire 549 pages in8. Sans date. reliure editeur dos à nerfs. 549 pages. Cet ouvrage de Robert Aron retrace en détail la libération de la France de juin 1944 à mai 1945 en suivant les progrès des Alliés et le reflux de l'armée allemande. Il s'inscrit dans la continuité de son 'Histoire de Vichy' et constitue un outil de compréhension indispensable pour cette période sensible et controversée
Le Félin 1998 238 pages 23x16x4cm. 1998. Broché. 238 pages. Francis-Louis Closon livre son témoignage personnel sur son engagement dans la Résistance française pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale. Ce récit considéré comme un classique décrit la vie périlleuse des résistants depuis sa rencontre avec Jean Moulin à Londres jusqu'à la Libération en 1944
Très bon état
Université de Toulouse-Le Mirail 1979 346 pages in8. 1979. broché. 346 pages. Actes du colloque international tenu en novembre 1978 à Toulouse dédié à la mémoire de Juan Marinello et Noël Salomon explorant les étapes de la libération de Cuba
Très bon état
Paris 1970 | 19.50 x 30 cm | une photographie
- Paris 1970, 19.5x30cm, 15 photographs. - On June 28, 1970, I attended New York's first Gay Pride celebration. The date corresponds to the first anniversary of the Stonewall riots, which launched the LGBTQ+ liberation movement in the United States. We set off from Christopher Street, a hotbed of gay culture in Greenwich Village, and made our way up 6th Avenue to Central Park. To round off the day, a contest for the longest kiss was held in the middle of the park! It was a great moment of joy, love and freedom. This couple, who kissed for hours under an umbrella, clearly didn't care about photographers!" (Interview with Clément Thierry, 2021) Exceptional pictorial history of 15 original black & white silver photographs from the period, signed on the back by the artist. All are stamped on verso by Jean-Pierre Laffont for the Gamma agency, and some have long mimeographed captions in French. The original prints of these photographs are extremely rare, as museums and galleries only possess reprints. This collection is a moving testimony to the beginnings of the now-famous Marche des fiertés, in the aftermath of the Stonewall riots, the first milestone in the emergence of the LGBTQ+ movement in the United States and around the world. On June 28, 1969, police raided Stonewall, a Greenwich Village dance bar run by the mob and catering mainly to homosexuals and transgender people. At the time, the United States prohibited establishments from serving alcohol to homosexuals, who were often victims of police violence. That night at Stonewall was one too many: the police, cornered by the customers, were forced to retreat inside the bar, and the riot lasted seven days. It would be fifty years, on June 6, 2019, before the New York City Police Department apologized to the LGBT community. The events of Stonewall, now considered the founders of gay liberation, led to the formation of some of the first radical homosexual activist groups, such as the Gay Liberation Front and Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries (better known by the acronym STAR and founded by two of the most famous transgender activists: Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera). The challenge was to transform this moment into a movement. With this in mind, the Christopher Street Liberation Day March was held on June 28, 1970, one year to the day after the Stonewall riots. The parade, made up of just a few courageous groups at the start in Sheridan Square (Greenwich village), saw its ranks swell by the time it reached Sheep Meadow (Central Park), bringing together over 10,000 demonstrators. This demonstration was to take place every summer, in New York and other major American cities, before spreading to other continents a few years later, becoming today a marker of democratic societies around the world. Our set of photographs shows the diversity of participants brandishing placards with slogans such as "Smash Sexism" or "Perverts' union for gay liberation". Others sport T-shirts with committed messages - "Femme / Butch", "Master / Slave" - or are in their simplest garb. Some marchers wear black T-shirts emblazoned with the Greek letter lambda (?), chosen by the Gay Activist Alliance (GAA) because it stands for liberation and can easily be confused with the insignia of American college fraternities. It was officially recognized as the international gay and lesbian symbol at the International Gay Law Congress in Edinburgh in 1974. The Reverend Robert Clement can be recognized in two shots in his religious vestments. "On June 28, 1970, I attended the first New York Gay Pride celebration. The date corresponds to the first anniversary of the Stonewall riots, which launched the LGBTQ+ liberation movement in the United States. We set off from Christopher Street, a hotbed of gay culture in Greenwich Village, and made our way up 6th Avenue to Central Park. To round off the day, a contest for the longest kiss was held in the middle of the park! It was a great moment of joy, love and f
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