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‎"LUXEMBURG, ROSA.‎

Reference : 53652

(1898)

‎Die industrielle Entwickelung Polens. Inaugural-Dissertation zur Erlangung der staatswissenschaftlichen Doktorwürde der hohen staatswissenschaftlichen Fakultät der Universität Zürich. - [THE FIRST COMPREHENSIVE ECONOMIC HISTORY OF POLAND]‎

‎Leipzig, Duncker und Humblot, 1898. 8vo. Unbound, as issued. Contemporary black cloth backstrip. First and last leaf a bit soiled and dusty. A few nicks to extremities, but otherwise fine. Housed in a custommade green cloth folder. (6), 95, (1) pp.‎


‎Extremely scarce first printing of Rosa Luxemburg's doctoral dissertation, constituting the first comprehensive economic history of Poland and one of the most important pieces of revolutionary politics of the period. It is this foundational work of socialism that once and for all settled the score on the ""Polish question"" and sealed Rosa Luxemburg's fate as an international socialist leader. """"The Industrial Development of Poland"", the first comprehensive economic history of Poland ever published, was Rosa Luxemburg's doctoral thesis, winning her a Doctor of Law degree in 1897 from the University of Zurich. She had been active in revolutionary politics for at least a decade before the thesis was written, and it was both a serious piece of academic research and a salvo against her opponents in the Socialist International, particularly the Polish Socialist Party.While the PSP championed Polish nationalism, Luxemburg's tiny Social Democratic Party of the Kingdom of Poland countered with a platform of class struggle and international working-class solidarity. In the 1890s Luxemburg and her party used the Polish dispute to make a public issue of the International leadership's acceptance of nationalism and gradualism. Her dissertation was a final settling of accounts on the ""Polish question"" as she moved beyond Polish politics to become an international socialist leader operating out of the German Social Democracy - the role that won her a place in socialism's historic pantheon."" (from the preface to the English translation). Rosa Luxemburg (1871-1919) was one of the most influential Marxists of the late 19th century. In her youth, she joined the socialist movement and went to Switzerland in exile in 1889. Here she studied law and economics and developed close connections to the leading members of the Russian socialist party. As opposed to Lenin, she was in complete favour of internationalism and therefore in opposition to the established Russian and Polish socialist parties that supported Polish independence. In 1893, she cofounded what was to be the forerunner of the Polish Communist Party, namely the Socialdemocratic Labour Party of Poland.In 1899, Rosa Luxemburg settled in Berlin and joined the German Socildemocratic Party, SPD and represented the revolutionary wing. She believed strongly in revolutionary mass action, but as opposed to Lenin, she was not completely bound to the revolutionary party and spoke out against movements like the reform union in Germany. ""Rosa Luxemburg was born in the small Polish town of Zamosc on 5 March 1871. From early youth she was active in the socialist movement. She joined a revolutionary party called Proletariat, founded in 1882, some 21 years before the Russian Social Democratic Party (Bolsheviks and Mensheviks) came into being. From the beginning Proletariat was, in principles and programme, many steps ahead of the revolutionary movement in Russia. While the Russian revolutionary movement was still restricted to acts of individual terrorism carried out by a few heroic intellectuals, Proletariat was organising and leading thousands of workers on strike. In 1886, however, Proletariat was practically decapitated by the execution of four of its leaders, the imprisonment of 23 others for long terms of hard labour, and the banishment of about 200 more. Only small circles were saved from the wreck, and it was one of these that Rosa Luxemburg joined at the age of 16. By 1889 the police had caught up with her, and she had to leave Poland, her comrades thinking she could do more useful work abroad than in prison. She went to Switzerland, to Zurich, which was the most important centre of Polish and Russian emigration. There she entered the university where she studied natural sciences, mathematics and economics. She took an active part in the local labour movement and in the intense intellectual life of the revolutionary emigrants.Hardly more than a couple of years later Rosa Luxemburg was already recognised as the theoretical leader of the revolutionary socialist party of Poland. She became the main contributor to the party paper, Sprawa Rabotnicza, published in Paris. In 1894 the name of the party, Proletariat, was changed to become the Social Democratic Party of the Kingdom of Poland" shortly afterwards Lithuania was added to the title. Rosa continued to be the theoretical leader of the party (the SDKPL) till the end of her life.In August 1893 she represented the party at the Congress of the Socialist International. There, a young woman of 22, she had to contend with well-known veterans of another Polish party, the Polish Socialist Party (PPS), whose main plank was the independence of Poland and which claimed the recognition of all the experienced elders of international socialism. Support for the national movement in Poland had the weight of long tradition behind it: Marx and Engels, too, had made it an important plank in their policies. Undaunted by all this, Rosa Luxemburg struck out at the PPS, accusing it of clear nationalistic tendencies and a proneness to diverting the workers from the path of class struggle" and she dared to take a different position to the old masters and oppose the slogan of independence for Poland. (For elaboration on this, see Rosa Luxemburg and the national question below.) Her adversaries heaped abuse on her, some of them, like the veteran disciple and friend of Marx and Engels, Wilhelm Liebknecht, going so far as to accuse her of being an agent of the Tsarist secret police. But she stuck to her point.Intellectually she grew by leaps and bounds. She was drawn irresistibly to the centre of the international labour movement, Germany, where she made her way in 1898."" (Tony Cliff, Rosa Luxemburg Biography).In 1919, she was captured and murdered by reactionary freetroop officers, but her theoretical works remained highly influential throughout almost a century. As late as the 1960'ies and 70'ies, she was still seen as somewhat of a revolutionary her and champion of communism. ""When the First World War broke out, practically all the leaders of the Socialist Party [SPD] were swept into the patriotic tide. On 3 August 1914 the parliamentary group of German Social Democracy decided to vote in favour of war credits for the Kaiser’s government. Of the 111 deputies only 15 showed any desire to vote against. However, after their request for permission to do so had been rejected, they submitted to party discipline, and on 4 August the whole Social Democratic group unanimously voted in favour of the credits. A few months later, on 2 December, Karl Liebknecht flouted party discipline to vote with his conscience. His was the sole vote against war credits.This decision of the party leadership was a cruel blow to Rosa Luxemburg. However, she did not give way to despair. On the same day, 4 August, on which the Social Democratic deputies rallied to the Kaiser’s banner, a small group of socialists met in her apartment and decided to take up the struggle against the war. This group, led by Luxemburg, Karl Liebknecht, Franz Mehring and Clara Zetkin, ultimately became the Spartakus League. For four years, mainly from prison, Rosa continued to lead, inspire and organise the revolutionaries, keeping high the banner of international socialism...The revolution in Russia of February 1917 was a realisation of Rosa Luxemburg’s policy of revolutionary opposition to the war and struggle for the overthrow of imperialist governments. Feverishly she followed the events from prison, studying them closely in order to draw lessons for the future. Unhesitatingly she stated that the February victory was not the end of the struggle but only its beginning, that only workers’ power could assure peace. From prison she issued call after call to the German workers and soldiers to emulate their Russian brethren, overthrow the Junkers and capitalists and thus, while serving the Russian Revolution, at the same time prevent themselves from bleeding to death under the ruins of capitalist barbarism.When the October Revolution broke out, Rosa Luxemburg welcomed it enthusiastically, praising it in the highest terms. At the same time she did not believe that uncritical acceptance of everything the Bolsheviks did would be of service to the labour movement. She clearly foresaw that if the Russian Revolution remained in isolation a number of distortions would cripple its development" and quite early in the development of Soviet Russia she pointed out such distortions, particularly on the question of democracy.On 8 November 1918 the German Revolution freed Rosa Luxemburg from prison. With all her energy and enthusiasm she threw herself into the revolution. Unfortunately the forces of reaction were strong. Right-wing Social Democratic leaders and generals of the old Kaiser’s army joined forces to suppress the revolutionary working class. Thousands of workers were murdered on 15 January 1919 Karl Liebknecht was killed" on the same day a soldier’s rifle butt smashed into Rosa Luxemburg’s skull.With her death the international workers’ movement lost one of its noblest souls. ""The finest brain amongst the scientific successors of Marx and Engels"", as Mehring said, was no more. In her life, as in her death, she gave everything for the liberation of humanity."" (Tony Cliff, Biography of Rosa Luxemburg).‎

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DKK60,000.00 (€8,047.32 )

‎"LUXEMBURG, ROSA.‎

Reference : 53712

(1913)

‎Die Akkumulation des Kapitals. Enin Beitrag zur Ökonomischen Erklärung des Imperialismus. [The Accumulation of Capital]. - [THE NEAREST TO ""CAPITAL"" OF ANY MARXIST WORK]‎

‎Berlin, 1913. Royal 8vo. Uncut and partly unopened in original printed wrappers. A bit of spotting to original printed spine, but overall in magnificent condition. Completely original and as fresh as can be wished for. (8), 446, (2).‎


‎The very rare first edition of Rosa Luxemburg's magnum opus - ""without doubt, one of the most original contributions to Marxist economic doctrine since ""Capital"". In its wealth of knowledge, brilliance of style, trenchancy of analysis and intellectual independence, this book, as Mehring, Marx's biographer, stated, was the nearest to ""Capital"" of any Marxist work. The central problem it studies is of tremendous theoretical and political importance: namely, what effects the extension of capitalism into new, backward territories has on the internal contradictions rending capitalism and on the stability of the system."" (Tony Cliff). Rosa Luxemburg (1871-1919) was one of the most influential Marxists of the late 19th century. In her youth, she joined the socialist movement and went to Switzerland in exile in 1889. Here she studied law and economics and developed close connections to the leading members of the Russian socialist party. As opposed to Lenin, she was in complete favour of internationalism and therefore in opposition to the established Russian and Polish socialist parties that supported Polish independence. In 1893, she co-founded what was to be the forerunner of the Polish Communist Party, namely the Socialdemocratic Labour Party of Poland.In 1899, Rosa Luxemburg settled in Berlin and joined the German Socildemocratic Party, SPD and represented the revolutionary wing. She believed strongly in revolutionary mass action, but as opposed to Lenin, she was not completely bound to the revolutionary party and spoke out against movements like the reform union in Germany. ""Rosa Luxemburg was born in the small Polish town of Zamosc on 5 March 1871. From early youth she was active in the socialist movement. She joined a revolutionary party called Proletariat, founded in 1882, some 21 years before the Russian Social Democratic Party (Bolsheviks and Mensheviks) came into being. From the beginning Proletariat was, in principles and programme, many steps ahead of the revolutionary movement in Russia. While the Russian revolutionary movement was still restricted to acts of individual terrorism carried out by a few heroic intellectuals, Proletariat was organising and leading thousands of workers on strike. In 1886, however, Proletariat was practically decapitated by the execution of four of its leaders, the imprisonment of 23 others for long terms of hard labour, and the banishment of about 200 more. Only small circles were saved from the wreck, and it was one of these that Rosa Luxemburg joined at the age of 16. By 1889 the police had caught up with her, and she had to leave Poland, her comrades thinking she could do more useful work abroad than in prison. She went to Switzerland, to Zurich, which was the most important centre of Polish and Russian emigration. There she entered the university where she studied natural sciences, mathematics and economics. She took an active part in the local labour movement and in the intense intellectual life of the revolutionary emigrants.Hardly more than a couple of years later Rosa Luxemburg was already recognised as the theoretical leader of the revolutionary socialist party of Poland. She became the main contributor to the party paper, Sprawa Rabotnicza, published in Paris. In 1894 the name of the party, Proletariat, was changed to become the Social Democratic Party of the Kingdom of Poland" shortly afterwards Lithuania was added to the title. Rosa continued to be the theoretical leader of the party (the SDKPL) till the end of her life.In August 1893 she represented the party at the Congress of the Socialist International. There, a young woman of 22, she had to contend with well-known veterans of another Polish party, the Polish Socialist Party (PPS), whose main plank was the independence of Poland and which claimed the recognition of all the experienced elders of international socialism. Support for the national movement in Poland had the weight of long tradition behind it: Marx and Engels, too, had made it an important plank in their policies. Undaunted by all this, Rosa Luxemburg struck out at the PPS, accusing it of clear nationalistic tendencies and a proneness to diverting the workers from the path of class struggle" and she dared to take a different position to the old masters and oppose the slogan of independence for Poland. (For elaboration on this, see Rosa Luxemburg and the national question below.) Her adversaries heaped abuse on her, some of them, like the veteran disciple and friend of Marx and Engels, Wilhelm Liebknecht, going so far as to accuse her of being an agent of the Tsarist secret police. But she stuck to her point.Intellectually she grew by leaps and bounds. She was drawn irresistibly to the centre of the international labour movement, Germany, where she made her way in 1898."" (Tony Cliff, Rosa Luxemburg Biography).In 1919, she was captured and murdered by reactionary freetroop officers, but her theoretical works remained highly influential throughout almost a century. As late as the 1960'ies and 70'ies, she was still seen as somewhat of a revolutionary hero and champion of communism. ""When the First World War broke out, practically all the leaders of the Socialist Party [SPD] were swept into the patriotic tide. On 3 August 1914 the parliamentary group of German Social Democracy decided to vote in favour of war credits for the Kaiser’s government. Of the 111 deputies only 15 showed any desire to vote against. However, after their request for permission to do so had been rejected, they submitted to party discipline, and on 4 August the whole Social Democratic group unanimously voted in favour of the credits. A few months later, on 2 December, Karl Liebknecht flouted party discipline to vote with his conscience. His was the sole vote against war credits.This decision of the party leadership was a cruel blow to Rosa Luxemburg. However, she did not give way to despair. On the same day, 4 August, on which the Social Democratic deputies rallied to the Kaiser’s banner, a small group of socialists met in her apartment and decided to take up the struggle against the war. This group, led by Luxemburg, Karl Liebknecht, Franz Mehring and Clara Zetkin, ultimately became the Spartakus League. For four years, mainly from prison, Rosa continued to lead, inspire and organise the revolutionaries, keeping high the banner of international socialism...The revolution in Russia of February 1917 was a realisation of Rosa Luxemburg’s policy of revolutionary opposition to the war and struggle for the overthrow of imperialist governments. Feverishly she followed the events from prison, studying them closely in order to draw lessons for the future. Unhesitatingly she stated that the February victory was not the end of the struggle but only its beginning, that only workers’ power could assure peace. From prison she issued call after call to the German workers and soldiers to emulate their Russian brethren, overthrow the Junkers and capitalists and thus, while serving the Russian Revolution, at the same time prevent themselves from bleeding to death under the ruins of capitalist barbarism.When the October Revolution broke out, Rosa Luxemburg welcomed it enthusiastically, praising it in the highest terms. At the same time she did not believe that uncritical acceptance of everything the Bolsheviks did would be of service to the labour movement. She clearly foresaw that if the Russian Revolution remained in isolation a number of distortions would cripple its development" and quite early in the development of Soviet Russia she pointed out such distortions, particularly on the question of democracy.On 8 November 1918 the German Revolution freed Rosa Luxemburg from prison. With all her energy and enthusiasm she threw herself into the revolution. Unfortunately the forces of reaction were strong. Right-wing Social Democratic leaders and generals of the old Kaiser’s army joined forces to suppress the revolutionary working class. Thousands of workers were murdered on 15 January 1919 Karl Liebknecht was killed" on the same day a soldier’s rifle butt smashed into Rosa Luxemburg’s skull.With her death the international workers’ movement lost one of its noblest souls. ""The finest brain amongst the scientific successors of Marx and Engels"", as Mehring said, was no more. In her life, as in her death, she gave everything for the liberation of humanity."" (Tony Cliff, Biography of Rosa Luxemburg).Sraffa 3560Social Liberation 4066‎

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DKK30,000.00 (€4,023.66 )

‎"LUXEMBURG, ROSA. ‎

Reference : 56002

(1913)

‎Die Akkumulation des Kapitals. Enin Beitrag zur Ökonomischen Erklärung des Imperialismus. [The Accumulation of Capital]. - [THE NEAREST TO ""CAPITAL"" OF ANY MARXIST WORK]‎

‎Berlin, 1913. Royal 8vo. Uncut and partly unopened in original printed wrappers. Soiling to spine, vaguely affecting first and last leaf. Overall in a very fine condition. (8), 446, (2) pp.‎


‎The very rare first edition of Rosa Luxemburg's magnum opus - ""without doubt, one of the most original contributions to Marxist economic doctrine since ""Capital"". In its wealth of knowledge, brilliance of style, trenchancy of analysis and intellectual independence, this book, as Mehring, Marx's biographer, stated, was the nearest to ""Capital"" of any Marxist work. The central problem it studies is of tremendous theoretical and political importance: namely, what effects the extension of capitalism into new, backward territories has on the internal contradictions rending capitalism and on the stability of the system."" (Tony Cliff). Rosa Luxemburg (1871-1919) was one of the most influential Marxists of the late 19th century. In her youth, she joined the socialist movement and went to Switzerland in exile in 1889. Here she studied law and economics and developed close connections to the leading members of the Russian socialist party. As opposed to Lenin, she was in complete favour of internationalism and therefore in opposition to the established Russian and Polish socialist parties that supported Polish independence. In 1893, she co-founded what was to be the forerunner of the Polish Communist Party, namely the Socialdemocratic Labour Party of Poland.In 1899, Rosa Luxemburg settled in Berlin and joined the German Socildemocratic Party, SPD and represented the revolutionary wing. She believed strongly in revolutionary mass action, but as opposed to Lenin, she was not completely bound to the revolutionary party and spoke out against movements like the reform union in Germany. ""Rosa Luxemburg was born in the small Polish town of Zamosc on 5 March 1871. From early youth she was active in the socialist movement. She joined a revolutionary party called Proletariat, founded in 1882, some 21 years before the Russian Social Democratic Party (Bolsheviks and Mensheviks) came into being. From the beginning Proletariat was, in principles and programme, many steps ahead of the revolutionary movement in Russia. While the Russian revolutionary movement was still restricted to acts of individual terrorism carried out by a few heroic intellectuals, Proletariat was organising and leading thousands of workers on strike. In 1886, however, Proletariat was practically decapitated by the execution of four of its leaders, the imprisonment of 23 others for long terms of hard labour, and the banishment of about 200 more. Only small circles were saved from the wreck, and it was one of these that Rosa Luxemburg joined at the age of 16. By 1889 the police had caught up with her, and she had to leave Poland, her comrades thinking she could do more useful work abroad than in prison. She went to Switzerland, to Zurich, which was the most important centre of Polish and Russian emigration. There she entered the university where she studied natural sciences, mathematics and economics. She took an active part in the local labour movement and in the intense intellectual life of the revolutionary emigrants.Hardly more than a couple of years later Rosa Luxemburg was already recognised as the theoretical leader of the revolutionary socialist party of Poland. She became the main contributor to the party paper, Sprawa Rabotnicza, published in Paris. In 1894 the name of the party, Proletariat, was changed to become the Social Democratic Party of the Kingdom of Poland" shortly afterwards Lithuania was added to the title. Rosa continued to be the theoretical leader of the party (the SDKPL) till the end of her life.In August 1893 she represented the party at the Congress of the Socialist International. There, a young woman of 22, she had to contend with well-known veterans of another Polish party, the Polish Socialist Party (PPS), whose main plank was the independence of Poland and which claimed the recognition of all the experienced elders of international socialism. Support for the national movement in Poland had the weight of long tradition behind it: Marx and Engels, too, had made it an important plank in their policies. Undaunted by all this, Rosa Luxemburg struck out at the PPS, accusing it of clear nationalistic tendencies and a proneness to diverting the workers from the path of class struggle" and she dared to take a different position to the old masters and oppose the slogan of independence for Poland. (For elaboration on this, see Rosa Luxemburg and the national question below.) Her adversaries heaped abuse on her, some of them, like the veteran disciple and friend of Marx and Engels, Wilhelm Liebknecht, going so far as to accuse her of being an agent of the Tsarist secret police. But she stuck to her point.Intellectually she grew by leaps and bounds. She was drawn irresistibly to the centre of the international labour movement, Germany, where she made her way in 1898."" (Tony Cliff, Rosa Luxemburg Biography).In 1919, she was captured and murdered by reactionary freetroop officers, but her theoretical works remained highly influential throughout almost a century. As late as the 1960'ies and 70'ies, she was still seen as somewhat of a revolutionary hero and champion of communism. ""When the First World War broke out, practically all the leaders of the Socialist Party [SPD] were swept into the patriotic tide. On 3 August 1914 the parliamentary group of German Social Democracy decided to vote in favour of war credits for the Kaiser’s government. Of the 111 deputies only 15 showed any desire to vote against. However, after their request for permission to do so had been rejected, they submitted to party discipline, and on 4 August the whole Social Democratic group unanimously voted in favour of the credits. A few months later, on 2 December, Karl Liebknecht flouted party discipline to vote with his conscience. His was the sole vote against war credits.This decision of the party leadership was a cruel blow to Rosa Luxemburg. However, she did not give way to despair. On the same day, 4 August, on which the Social Democratic deputies rallied to the Kaiser’s banner, a small group of socialists met in her apartment and decided to take up the struggle against the war. This group, led by Luxemburg, Karl Liebknecht, Franz Mehring and Clara Zetkin, ultimately became the Spartakus League. For four years, mainly from prison, Rosa continued to lead, inspire and organise the revolutionaries, keeping high the banner of international socialism...The revolution in Russia of February 1917 was a realisation of Rosa Luxemburg’s policy of revolutionary opposition to the war and struggle for the overthrow of imperialist governments. Feverishly she followed the events from prison, studying them closely in order to draw lessons for the future. Unhesitatingly she stated that the February victory was not the end of the struggle but only its beginning, that only workers’ power could assure peace. From prison she issued call after call to the German workers and soldiers to emulate their Russian brethren, overthrow the Junkers and capitalists and thus, while serving the Russian Revolution, at the same time prevent themselves from bleeding to death under the ruins of capitalist barbarism.When the October Revolution broke out, Rosa Luxemburg welcomed it enthusiastically, praising it in the highest terms. At the same time she did not believe that uncritical acceptance of everything the Bolsheviks did would be of service to the labour movement. She clearly foresaw that if the Russian Revolution remained in isolation a number of distortions would cripple its development" and quite early in the development of Soviet Russia she pointed out such distortions, particularly on the question of democracy.On 8 November 1918 the German Revolution freed Rosa Luxemburg from prison. With all her energy and enthusiasm she threw herself into the revolution. Unfortunately the forces of reaction were strong. Right-wing Social Democratic leaders and generals of the old Kaiser’s army joined forces to suppress the revolutionary working class. Thousands of workers were murdered on 15 January 1919 Karl Liebknecht was killed" on the same day a soldier’s rifle butt smashed into Rosa Luxemburg’s skull.With her death the international workers’ movement lost one of its noblest souls. ""The finest brain amongst the scientific successors of Marx and Engels"", as Mehring said, was no more. In her life, as in her death, she gave everything for the liberation of humanity."" (Tony Cliff, Biography of Rosa Luxemburg).Sraffa 3560Social Liberation 4066‎

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DKK25,000.00 (€3,353.05 )

‎[Hervé Di Rosa] - ‎ ‎Hervé Di Rosa‎

Reference : 014700

(1983)

‎Hervé Di Rosa‎

‎Paris Galerie Gillespie Laage Salomon - Le Dernier Terrain Vague Jean Seisser 1983 In-4 Cartonnage toilé rouge de l'éditeur ‎


‎Edition originale de cette bande dessinée de Hervé Di ROSA, incluant des photos de Louis Jammes figurant les héros de l'histoire, dont l'artiste lui-même. Préface de BEN et biographie imagée de Di Rosa. UN des 100 PREMIERS EXEMPLAIRES augmentés de huit pages insérées entre les folios 4 et 5, comportant des SERIGRAPHIES avec des INTERVENTIONS graphiques originales à la couleur acrylique par Hervé DI ROSA, ainsi que des estampillages de linogravures. Ce tirage de tête est numéroté, signé et daté par l'artiste qui a ajouté un petit dessin au colophon. >>>> Notre exemplaire est enrichi d'un ENVOI AUTOGRAPHE à pleine page, signé et daté de Di Rosa, avec DESSIN ORIGINAL de l'artiste. Très bon 0‎

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EUR600.00 (€600.00 )

‎Luxembourg (Rosa) - Luxemburg - Spartacus - Berthe Fouchère - Louise Kautsky - sur Sonia Leibknecht‎

Reference : 85670

(1948)

‎La vie héroique de Rosa Luxembourg - La Révolution russe , dans les Cahiers mensuels Spartacus, n° 5 de Mai 1948 (Luxemburg)‎

‎Spartacus Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 1948 Book condition, Etat : Bon broché, sous couverture imprimée éditeur blanche et rouge In-8 1 vol. - 48 pages‎


‎1 portrait de Rosa Luxembourg en frontispice, dessin en noir et blanc 1ere édition, 1948 Contents, Chapitres : Berthe Fouchère : La vie héroïque de Rosa Luxembourg - Louise Kautsky : Les lettres de Rosa Luxembourg - Rosa Luxembourg : Lettres à Louise Kautsky - Lettres à Sonia Leibknecht - La responsabilité politique, texte inédit en français, traduit par Bracke - Rosa Luxemburg, souvent retranscrit en français Rosa Luxembourg, en polonais Róza Luksemburg, née le 5 mars 1871 à Zamosc dans l'Empire russe (actuelle Pologne) et morte assassinée le 15 janvier 1919 à Berlin en Allemagne, est une militante socialiste et communiste, et une théoricienne marxiste. Née sujette polonaise de l'Empire russe, elle s'exile en Suisse pour suivre des études, puis prend la nationalité allemande afin de poursuivre en Allemagne son militantisme socialiste. Figure de l'aile gauche de l'Internationale ouvrière, révolutionnaire et partisane de l'internationalisme, elle s'oppose à la Première Guerre mondiale, ce qui lui vaut d'être exclue du Parti social-démocrate d'Allemagne (SPD). Elle cofonde la Ligue spartakiste, puis le Parti communiste d'Allemagne. Deux semaines après la fondation de ce dernier, elle meurt assassinée à Berlin le 15 janvier 1919 pendant la révolution allemande, lors de la répression de la révolte spartakiste. Ses idées ont inspiré des tendances de la gauche communiste et donné naissance, a posteriori, au courant intellectuel connu sous le nom de luxemburgisme. L'héritage de Rosa Luxemburg a cependant été revendiqué, de manière contradictoire, par des mouvances politiques très diverses. - Rosa Luxemburg a laissé une correspondance importante dune qualité littéraire reconnue. Le satiriste Karl Kraus évoque notamment une lettre écrite à Sonia Liebknecht, depuis la prison pour femmes de Breslau, en ces termes : « ce document dhumanité et de poésie unique en son genre » devrait selon lui figurer dans les manuels scolaires de toute république, entre Goethe et Claudius. En 2006, la comédienne Anouk Grinberg lit des lettres de Rosa Luxemburg à ses amies (Luise Kautsky, Sonia Liebknecht, notamment) pendant ses détentions. (source : Wikipedia) couverture à peine jaunie, sinon bon état, intérieur frais et propre, papier à peine jauni, cela reste un bon exemplaire‎

Librairie Internet Philoscience - Malicorne-sur-Sarthe
EUR12.00 (€12.00 )

‎Luxembourg Rosa‎

Reference : R300278733

(1977)

‎Rosa Luxembourg et sa doctrine - Cahiers mensuels Spartacus Mai 1977 Série B - n°80 - Simon Rubak : Rosa Luxembourg et sa doctrine - Guy Sabatier : La correspondance de Rosa Luxembourg, La vie et les sentiments d'une militante révolutionnaire - Simon Ruba‎

‎Spartacus. 1977. In-8. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. légèrement pliée, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 195 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 947-Europe de l'Est, URSS‎


‎Sommaire : Simon Rubak : Rosa Luxembourg et sa doctrine - Guy Sabatier : La correspondance de Rosa Luxembourg, La vie et les sentiments d'une militante révolutionnaire - Simon Rubak : Réforme sociale ou révolution - Maurice Jaquier : Rosa contre le totalitarisme - Structure et rôle du parti - Masses et chefs - Jean Métery : Spontanéité et conscience de classe, L'expérience belge - Maurice Jaquier : Grève générale, parti et syndicats - Guy Sabatier : La question nationale - J.M. Kay : La croissance capitaliste. L'accumulation du capital. L'apport de Rosa - R. Lefeuvre : Les lettres de Spartacus... Classification Dewey : 947-Europe de l'Est, URSS‎

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EUR19.80 (€19.80 )

‎Rosa Luxemburg (1871-1919), militante socialiste et communiste, théoricienne marxiste, assassinée lors de la répression spartakiste.‎

Reference : 015420

‎Lettre autographe signée à Pierre-Victor Stock‎

‎Rosa Luxemburg (1871-1919), militante socialiste et communiste, théoricienne marxiste, assassinée lors de la répression spartakiste. L.A.S. « Dr Rosa Luxemburg », Berlin, 5 octobre 1906, 2p in-8. A l'éditeur Pierre-Victor Stock (1861-1943), qui édita notamment de nombreux auteurs anarchistes : « Monsieur, A Hambourg vient de paraître une brochure allemande sur la Grève Générale et le Syndicalisme, écrite par moi et fondée sur l'expérience de la Révolution russe. Cette brochure sera traduite prochainement en russe et en hollandais. Mr Victor Mayer me propose de la traduire en français et de vous demander si vous voulez vous charger de l'édition. La dite brochure contient 4 feuilles (à 16) en petit allemand, ce qui fera en français à peu près 7 œ. Veuillez bien me faire savoir si la proposition vous convient et quelles seraient vos conditions. Agréez, Monsieur, mes salutations empressées. Dr Rosa Luxemburg ». Victor Mayer est un juif russe, né le 11 novembre 1878 à Irkoutsk, étudiant à Kiev en 1900, qui émigra avec sa famille, probablement pour fuir l'antisémitisme. Il prit le nom de Victor Remay, fut un orateur remarqué et devint l'orateur de la fédération socialiste de la Seine. Il était donc en lien avec Rosa Luxemburg, qui était elle aussi une juive ayant quitté le territoire russe (elle est né à Zamosc, Pologne actuelle mais alors en Russie). Toutefois Mayer semble n'avoir jamais traduit l'ouvrage et Victor Stock refusa dès réception de la lettre comme l'indique la note « refusé le 8 octobre 1906 ». L'ouvrage fut toutefois traduit en 1910 sous le titre La Grève en Masse, le Parti et les Syndicats (Gand, Société coopérative « Volksdrujjerij », 1910). Cette traduction est l'oeuvre d'Alexandre Bracke-Desrousseaux (1861-1955) qui devient ainsi le premier traducteur de Rosa Luxemburg en français. Ils s'étaient rencontrés lors de congrès socialistes internationaux. Une nouvelle édition eut lieu en 1964 sous le titre Grève de masses, parti et syndicats (Paris, Marpéro, 1964). Intéressant courrier autour de son oeuvre. Les lettres de Rosa Luxemburg sont d'une grande rareté. [353-2] ‎


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‎DI ROSA (Hervé), DI ROSA (Buddy).‎

Reference : 107189

(1991)

‎Hervé Di Rosa. Richard Di Rosa.‎

‎Paris Galerie Jousse-Seguin, Galerie Laage-Salomon, Galerie JGM 1991 1 vol. broché in-4, broché, couverture en couleurs, non paginé, nombreuses reproductions en noir et en couleurs. Bonne condition.‎


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EUR18.00 (€18.00 )

‎DI ROSA (Hervé), DI ROSA (Buddy).‎

Reference : 107190

(1994)

‎Di Rosa, Baj, Di Rosa. 1993-1994.‎

‎Paris Fondation Coprim pour l'art contemporain / Nicolini Editore 1994 1 vol. broché in-4, broché, couverture en couleurs, jaquette en couleurs, 70 pp., nombreuses reproductions en couleurs. Bonne condition.‎


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EUR25.00 (€25.00 )

‎ROUAUD jean, NECTOUX Georges, [DI ROSA Hervé, GUENARD Claude‎

Reference : 2313

‎DANS LES PETITS PAPIERS D’HERVÉ DI ROSA ET DE CLAUDE GUENARD, avec un texte de Jean ROUAUD‎

‎Espace Paul Ricard, Paris 1996‎


‎Un catalogue d’exposition in-4° (réalisé à l’occasion d’une exposiion DI ROSA/ GUENARD à PARIS en 1996), avec des plats illustrés par DI ROSA, très colorés, très dynamiques. L’ouvrage compte 32 pages. Portraits (photographies en noir) des deux peintres en début et en fin de catalogue, deux textes de commentaires et nombreuses reproductions en couleurs d’oeuvres des deux peintres.Un avant propos de Georges NECTOUX ( société RICARD) décrit ainsi DI ROSA: “ Protagoniste majeur de la Figuration libre, mouvement né au début des années 80, Hervé DI ROSA exalte dans sa peinture les couleurs, les chatoiements de la Méditerranée, notre “mer intérieure” etc. La maquette de ce catalogue, tiré à 2000 exemplaires, a été réalisée par Miche CAZA et imprimée en sérigraphie. Exemplaire en TRES BON ETAT.‎

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Phone number : 33 01 43 47 01 20

EUR100.00 (€100.00 )

‎LUXEMBOURG Rosa‎

Reference : 16901

‎Rosa Luxembourg et sa doctrine‎

‎ Cahiers mensuels Spartacus n° 80 Série B (Mai 1977) - In-8 broché de 202 pages - Exemplaire en bon état‎


‎Sommaire : Simon Rubak : Rosa Luxembourg et sa doctrine - Guy Sabatier : La correspondance de Rosa Luxembourg, La vie et les sentiments d'une militante révolutionnaire - Simon Rubak : Réforme sociale ou révolution - Maurice Jaquier : Rosa contre le totalitarisme - Structure et rôle du parti - Masses et chefs - Jean Métery : Spontanéité et conscience de classe, L'expérience belge - Maurice Jaquier : Grève générale, parti et syndicats - Guy Sabatier : La question nationale - J.M. Kay : La croissance capitaliste. L'accumulation du capital. L'apport de Rosa - R. Lefeuvre : Les lettres de Spartacus ‎

Phone number : 06 15 22 89 43

EUR40.00 (€40.00 )

‎[Chéreau] - ‎ ‎ROSA, Salvator ; MARTINET, François-Nicolas‎

Reference : 60151

(1787)

‎[ Recueil de planches : ] Salvator Rosa Invenit (Liber Primus, Secundus, Tertius, Quartus) [ Relié avec : ] [ Recueil de 38 planches en couleurs : Oiseaux par Martinet ]‎

‎1 vol. petit in-8 reliure début XIXe pleine basane racinée, format 17,8 x 11,5 cm (mesures en marges), [ Salvator Rosa : ] A Paris, chez Chéreau rue St Jacques, aux 2 Piliers d'Or, s.d. [ circa 1718-1729 ? ], 60 planches (y compris le titre) ; [Martinet : ], s.n., s.l., s.d. [ circa 1787-1796 ], 38 planches rehaussées en couleurs‎


‎Recueil éclectique portant en pièce de titre la mention "Iconologie", et réunissant la belle suite des 60 gravures de Salvator Rosa dans l'édition publiée par le graveur et éditeur François Chéreau (installé rue St Jacques à partir de 1718), et 38 belles planches d'oiseaux rehaussées en couleur, dessinées par François-Nicolas Martinet et extraites pour certaines (et sans doute la plupart) de son "Histoire des Oiseaux, peints dans tous leurs aspects, apparents et sensibles", publiée de 1787 à 1796. Bon état (reliure lég. frottée avec petites épidermures, marges du Rosa souvent courtes, une planche du Rosa renumérotée "31" à la plume, bon exemplaire par ailleurs). ‎

Phone number : 09 82 20 86 11

EUR2,500.00 (€2,500.00 )

‎[ROSA VIVES] - ‎ ‎MICHEL BUTOR / ROSA VIVES‎

Reference : DMI-641

(1990)

‎L'AJOURÉE‎

‎MICHEL BUTOR / ROSA VIVES L'AJOURÉE Sauveterre-du-Gard, Éditions La Balance, 1990 Livre d'artiste comprenant 1 poème de 5 vers Michel Butor et 1 eau-forte hors texte de Rosa Vives tiré à 52 exemplaires. In-12 oblong, 4 f. non foliotés, 14,8 x 23,5 cm, en feuilles sous couverture imprimée, sur beau papier vélin d’Arches. Tirage : 52 ex. dont 13 ex. nominatifs avec une gravure et une suite de Rosa Vives et 39 ex. avec une gravure de Rosa Vives, tous signés par l’auteur et l’artiste au colophon. Pour le plaisir de quelques amis et aux dépens d’un amateur. Exemplaire 8/36 signé et justifié à la mine de plomb par Michel Butor au colophon et par l'artiste au pied de la gravure. Superbe exemplaire de ce livre d'artiste peu commun tiré à petit nombre avec une superbe gravure de Rosa Vives. ‎


Librairie À la Demi-Lune - Aigues-Vives

Phone number : 06 22 83 47 26

EUR300.00 (€300.00 )

‎[Di Rosa] - ‎ ‎Hervé Di Rosa‎

Reference : 008292

(1989)

‎DIROSPORNOS - Di Rosa‎

‎Paris Le Dernier Terrain Vague DTV 1989 In-12 Broché, jaquette illustrée en couleurs ‎


‎EDITION ORIGINALE. Préface d'Hervé Peredriolle et présentation de Jean Seisser. Nombreux dessins en noir - mais haut en couleurs - d'Hervé Di Rosa. Bien complet du papillon "errata-couille". Très bon 0‎

Phone number : 01 42 66 38 10

EUR50.00 (€50.00 )

‎LUXEMBURG Rosa.‎

Reference : 30173

ISBN : 9782889550906

‎Herbier de prison.‎

‎<meta charset="utf-8"><span data-mce-fragment="1">Quoi de plus iconoclaste qu'un herbier composé entre quatre murs, sans l'étendue de la nature ? Comme une contradiction dans les termes. L'herbier de prison de Rosa Luxemburg est une archive sans équivalent. Troublante et attachante, sa fragilité et son histoire en font un témoignage de résistance et</span><span id="js-showResume" class="showResume" data-mce-fragment="1">d'évasion, une fabrique de formes et de joie, un document sur le sentiment politique de la nature, fondement de toute écologie.<br data-mce-fragment="1">Composé de sept cahiers datés d'avril 1915 à octobre 1918, l'herbier a pu être réalisé par la révolutionnaire emprisonnée grâce à l'amitié sans faille de quelques femmes, ses amies intimes dont la féministe Clara Zetkin. Au-delà des quelques fleurs et mauvaises herbes de la cour de la prison que Rosa glane lorsqu'elle sort sous surveillance, ce sont ses proches qui lui envoyèrent par lettres des spécimens séchés ou des bouquets fleurs fraîches qu'elle-même pressait. Aux planches de l'herbier répondent ainsi tout une correspondance où il est question de botanique, de nature, de romantisme allemand, d'amour de toutes créatures, et cela, « en dépit de l'humanité ». Rosa Luxemburg ne cesse d'encourager ses proches à garder leur joie de vivre et leur gaieté alors que les nuages qu'elle entraperçoit par une fenêtre à barreaux se chargent des couleurs de la guerre et de l'acier.<br data-mce-fragment="1">L'herbier et le rossignol est constitué de 133 planches botaniques accompagnées de la traduction des légendes manuscrites de celles-ci. Cet ouvrage recueille également une soixantaine de lettres, dans lesquelles la révolutionnaire évoque sa passion pour les plantes, ainsi que pour les animaux. Des documents inédits en français complètent le volume, notamment un journal où Rosa Luxemburg consigne les faits et gestes de sa vie d'incarcérée. De part sa richesse, cette édition est complètement originale et n'a pas d'égale ni en allemand ni en polonais</span> Paris, 2023 Héros-Limite 360 p., nombreuses photographies, broché. 14,8 x 21‎


‎Neuf‎

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EUR36.00 (€36.00 )

‎DI ROSA (Hervé).‎

Reference : L8057

‎Recuerdos de Mexico. Autour du monde, 10 em. étape.‎

‎ La ferme d'en haut et Le musée d'art moderne de Lille, 2004. In folio en feuilles. Textes d’Hervé Di Rosa et Nicolas Surlapierre en français et en anglais. Illustrations en couleurs d'Hervé Di Rosa, photos. E.O. 1/100 ex. numérotés et signés par Hervé Di Rosa.‎


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EUR275.00 (€275.00 )

‎ROSA Salvatore‎

Reference : 11464

(1656)

‎Figurine. Varia et concinna delineamenta‎

‎S.n. Ca 1656, petit in 4, un frontispice et 60 planches., relié.‎


‎62 eaux fortes sur papier fort. Très Rare. Salvatore Rosa a exécuté ce travail de gravures vers 1656 dans un recueil originellement intitulé Figurine. Notre recueil porte un autre titre dans le cartouche du frontispice, de même que l'exemplaire possédé par le musée portugais national de Soares dos reis porte le titre : Has ludentis oty Carolo Rubeo singularis amititiae pignantes. D. D. D. L'exemplaire du musée portugais est annoncé comme une publication posthume du XVIIIe. La plupart des gravures de ce recueil sont visibles séparément au fines art museum of San francisco (Achenbach Foundation for Graphic Art -plus grande collection américaine de gravures), le county musém de Los Angeles en possède 8, le museum of fine arts de Boston 4. Les gravures sont décrites au même format que notre recueil (13,6 x 8,9 cm), certaines gravées d'après des artistes anonymes, d'autres dessinées par Salvatore Rosa Lui-même, les différences de style sont en effet visibles. Le frontispice possédé par le musée de San Francisco est vierge. Le musée ne détient que 52 gravures, par ailleurs toutes inversées. Toutes les gravures de notre recueil portent le monogramme de deux lettres entrelacées S et R. Certains monogrammes sont inversées, ce qui tend à penser que la planche l'est également. La planche 29 a été restaurée, la marge basse sous la gravure a été rajoutée (la planche avait été coupée à la limite de la gravure). Une tâche brune claire marge haute du titre sans atteinte aucune à la gravure. La planche 33 a été mal coupée en marge basse. Un livre italien sur le sujet est paru : Figurine d'acquaforte : mostra di incisioni di Salvator Rosa,Benevento, Museo del Sannio, 9 dicembre 2000-7 gennaio 2001. Publication musée del Sannio. Reliure en demi basane glacée Marine Restauration, dos lisse à filets et fers à froid et filets et roulettes dorés. Un léger accroc avec manque au mors supérieur bas. Salvatore Rosa (1615-1673), né à Naples et mort à Rome, travailla à Rome et à la cour des Médicis, fut un grand peintre baroque italien et un poète ainsi qu'un acteur apprécié, il sera plus tard considéré comme très influent sur la sensibilité romantique. - Photos sur www.Edition-originale.com - ‎

Le Feu Follet - Paris
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‎BARBA (Rosa)]‎

Reference : 80279

(2011)

ISBN : 9783775730198

‎Rosa Barba. White is an Image.‎

‎Ostfildern Hatje Cantz 2011 1 vol. relié in-4, toile éditeur imprimée en couleur, 293 pp., nombreuses reproductions en couleurs. Catalogue réalisé autour de trois expositions de l'artiste vidéaste Rosa Barba en France et en Italie. Articles de Lynne Cooke, Elisabeth Lebovici, Raimundas Malasauskas, Francesco Manacorda, Natasa Petresin-Bachelez, Ian White. TEXTE EN ANGLAIS (avec traductions des articles in-fine en français et en Italien). Petit pli dans la marge inférieure des 20 premières pages, sinon belle condition.‎


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‎LUXEMBURG Rosa - TROTSKY Léon‎

Reference : 18360

(1978)

‎L'ÉTAT BOURGEOIS ET LA RÉVOLUTION‎

‎ 1978 Paris, éditions La Brèche, Petite collection La Brèche, 1978. Préface de Carlos Rossi. Cet ouvrage contient 4 textes de Rosa Luxemburg : Social-démocratie et parlementarisme (1904), Le Revers de la médaille (1914), Assemblée nationale ou gouvernement des conseils ? (1918), et Blanquisme et social-démocratie (1906). Suivis de 2 textes de Léon Trotsky : Bas les pattes devant Rosa Luxemburg ! (1932) et Rosa Luxemburg et la Quatrième Internationale (1935). In-12 broché de 95 pp., avec 2 illustrations pleine page. Couverture illustrée. Couverture un peu salie, sans manque. Intérieur en très bon état, sans annotations ni soulignements. ‎


Phone number : 01 44 61 00 77

EUR20.00 (€20.00 )

‎Loge de Saint-Jean Sub Rosa - Loge indépendante à l'Orient de Genève‎

Reference : 91262

(1990)

‎Les deux Saint-Jean - Etude sur les patrons de l'Ordre Antique de la Franc-Maçonnerie - Loge de Saint-Jean Sub Rosa‎

‎In Rosa Arcanum et Loge Sub Rosa Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 1990 Book condition, Etat : Bon broché, sous couverture imprimée éditeur blanche, illustrée d'une vignette d'une rose In-8 1 vol. - 55 pages‎


‎ année estimée à 1990, sine data légères traces de pliures aux coins des plats, petite tache sombre sur le bord droit du plat supérieur, infimes petites taches discretes sur les plats, intérieur sinon frais et propre, nom et cachet de l'ancien propriétaire au coin de la première page (particulier), cela reste un bon exemplaire de lecture - année estimée à 1990, sine data‎

Librairie Internet Philoscience - Malicorne-sur-Sarthe
EUR8.00 (€8.00 )

‎[Di Rosa] - ‎ ‎Di Rosa‎

Reference : 013841

(1998)

‎Hervé Di Rosa Autour du Monde. 7e étape, Binh Duong, Viet-nam > 2 CATALOGUES‎

‎Paris - Amiens Louis Carré - Enrico Navarra - Maison de la Culture 1998 In-4 Broché, couverture illustrée ‎


‎Catalogue édité à l'occasion de l'exposition de l'artiste à la FIAC, du 7 au 12 octobre 1998. Extraits du journal de bord illustré de l'artiste lors de ces différents séjours au Viet-nam. 85 reproductions en couleurs. Biographie, bibliographie et liste des expositions de l'artiste in fine. 136 pp. JOINT le catalogues de l'exposition organisée en 1998 à Amiens, consacrés aux pérégrinations de l'artiste en Tunisie, Mexique, Corée, Bulgarie, Ghana, Bénin, Ethiopie, La Réunion, Vietnam & Corse, Préface de l'artiste et texte de Jean-Hubert Martin, Philippe Saulle, Jean-Luc Parant. 39 reproductions. 98 pp. >>Les deux catalogues Très bon 0‎

Phone number : 01 42 66 38 10

EUR35.00 (€35.00 )

‎DI ROSA (Hervé).‎

Reference : 986

‎L'Art Modeste.‎

‎ Éditions Hoëbeke. 2007. Textes de Hervé Di Rosa, Victoire Di Rosa et Jean Seisser. Photographies en couleurs de Francis David, Pierre Schwartz, Camille Goujon-Hoëbeke et Lorette Francfort de Soultrait. Couverture cartonnée sous jaquette illustrée. 224 pages. Très bon état.‎


‎Enrichi d'un dessin original pleine page de Hervé Di Rosa. ‎

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Phone number : 09 53 64 12 15

EUR220.00 (€220.00 )

‎ROSA (Leonardo)]. NOEL (Bernard), FREIXE (Alain), MONTICELLI (Raphaël).‎

Reference : 105441

(2003)

ISBN : 2911718984

‎Traces du temps : sur une oeuvre de Leonardo Rosa.‎

‎Coaraze L'Amourier 2003 1 vol. Broché in-4, broché, couv. à rabats, non paginé, 7 compositions en couleurs à pleine page par Leonardo Rosa. Edition originale. Un des 329 exemplaires numérotés, seul tirage après les 21 de tête. Très bon état.‎


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EUR45.00 (€45.00 )

‎LAURAT Lucien (LUXEMBURG Rosa)‎

Reference : 16716

‎L'accumulation du capital d'après Rosa Luxemburg suivi d'un aperçu sur la discussion du problème depuis la mort de Rosa Luxemburg‎

‎ Bibliothèque générale d'économie politique / Librairie des sciences politiques et sociales Marcel Rivière (1930) - In-8 broché de 200 pages - Exemplaire en excellent état‎


Phone number : 06 15 22 89 43

EUR50.00 (€50.00 )

‎DI ROSA.‎

Reference : 4905

(1990)

‎Féria de Béziers. Du 11 au 15 Août 1990. Dossier de Presse.‎

‎ Ville de Béziers 1990. Chemise illustrée couleur contenant une trentaine de feuillets de différentes couleurs : la lettre du maire et les diverses manifestations. La couverture est de Di Rosa. Complet, bel état.‎


Phone number : 06.98.21.85.69

EUR40.00 (€40.00 )
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