Published by U. Of California Press, 1988
Seller: Book House in Dinkytown, IOBA, Minneapolis, MN, U.S.A.
Association Member: IOBA
Paperback. Condition: Very Good. Very good- paperback. Spine is uncreased, binding remains tight and sturdy, text also very good. Light shelfwear to wraps. Ships from Dinkytown in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Published by The Royal African Society / Oxford University Press, 1992
Seller: Shore Books, London, United Kingdom
Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. 150 pages. Johannes Rantete and Herman Giliomee "Bilateral negotiations between the ANC and NP in South Africa" / James LM A Webb Jr "Ecological and economic change along the middle teaches of the Gambia River 1945-1985" / Richard Pankhurst "The Falashad, or Judaic Ethiopians, in their Christian Ethiopian setting" / Nhlanhla P Maake ",Multi-cultural relations in a post-apartheid South Africa" / Gardner Thompson "Colonialism in crisis: the Uganda disturbances of 1945" (SL#107).
Published by LRB, 2004
Seller: Shore Books, London, United Kingdom
Magazine / Periodical
Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. 44 pages. Edward Said "Thoughts on Late Style" / Jerry Fodor "Finding an Ending: Reflections on Wagner's Ring" / Frank Kermode "Like a Fiery Elephant: The Story of B S Johnson" / Mark Ford - poem / Andrew O'Hagan "Gielgud's Letters" / Charles Simic - 2 poems / Maurice Keen "The Hanged Man: A Story of Miracle, Memory and Colonialism in the Middle Ages" / Peter Campbell At the National Gallery.
Published by The Society for the Social History of Medicine,, 1985
Seller: Shore Books, London, United Kingdom
Magazine / Periodical
Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. 95 pages. Estelle Cohen "Medical Debates on Woman's 'Nature' in England around 1700" / Waltraud Ernst "Psychiatry and Colonialism: Lunatic Asylums in British India 1800-1858" / David Arnold "Smallpox and Colonial Medicine in India" / Martinez Lyons "Sleeping Sickness and Public Health in the Belgian Congo, 1903-1930" (BT#38).
Published by Encounter, 1958
Seller: Shore Books, London, United Kingdom
Magazine / Periodical
US$ 10.03
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketSoft cover. Condition: Very Good. 96 pages. ARTHUR KOESTLER "The Sleepwalker (Johannes Kepler)" / STEPHEN SPENDER "Warsaw Impressions" / DAN JACOBSON "After Notting Hill" / RAYMOND ARON "The Fifth Republic" / GERMAINE TILLION "The Terrorist" / D J ENRIGHT "Empire of the English Tongue" / RICHARD H ROVERE "The Last Days If Joe McCarthy" / PEREGRINE WORSTHORNE "The Idea Of Colonialism".
Published by The British Council, 1950
Seller: Shore Books, London, United Kingdom
Magazine / Periodical
US$ 13.83
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketSoft cover. Condition: Good. 48 pages. Illustrated. A Creech Jones "Destroying Colonialism" / Frank Frost "Preparing For The 1951 Festival Of Britain" / Stephen Spender "In The 1930s - Poets" / David Parry "The Art Of The Thatcher" / Dyneley Hussey "Bach In England 1870 - 1950" (SL#111).
Published by The Land Magazine, 2009
Seller: Shore Books, London, United Kingdom
Magazine / Periodical
US$ 13.83
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketSoft cover. Condition: Very Good. 64 pages. Illustrated beautifully. Ed Hamet "Peasants at Copenhagen" / Mike Hannis "The Myth of Resource Efficiency" / Simon Fairlie "Carbon Colonialism and the Mathematics of Methane" / Ed Hamer "Reclaim The Fields" / Christina Ballinger "The Plough and the Spade" / Alanna Hartzok "Land Value Taxation - Panacea or Placebo" / Dave Bangs "Keep Our Downs Public" (BT#44).
Hardcover with Dust Jacket. Condition: VERY GOOD. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. First Edition. 192pp. Sewn binding in green paper over boards, FFEP clipped, else a clean, sharp copy; rear of DJ dampstained, some short tears.
Published by Society for Education in Film and Television, 1983
Seller: Shore Books, London, United Kingdom
Magazine / Periodical
US$ 20.75
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketSoft cover. Condition: Very Good. 96 pages. Illustrated. Robert Stam and Louise Spence "Colonialism, Racism and Representation" / Irene Kotlarz "'The Birth Of A Notion' The Representation of Black People in Animated Vartoons" / Julianne Burton "The Politics Of Aesthetic Distance: The Presentation Of Representation in 'Sao Bernardo'" / Mick Eaton "Another Angle On Anthropological Film" / Teshome H Gabriel "Teaching Third World Cinema" / Janet Hawken and Chaim Litewski "Exploitation For Profit" / Sue Aspinall "A Weekend School On Cuban Cinema"Olivier Richon "Orientation" /George Foster "What Every 16 Year Old Should Know About The Mass Media" (BT#30/1).
Published by Ceasefire, 2008
Seller: Shore Books, London, United Kingdom
Magazine / Periodical
US$ 27.67
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketSoft cover. Condition: Very Good. 48 pages. Illustrated. Jeremy Bates "Terror on Campus: Nottingham University - The struggle for academic freedom" / Adam Elliott-Cooper "Africa: the return of colonialism" / Camille Herreman "Remembering 1968" / Dominic Fox "Radicalism for beginners" / Andrew Robinson"Imperialism revisited" (SL#130).
Published by SPN Books n.d., ca. 1930s, Lisbon, 1930
Seller: Lorne Bair Rare Books, ABAA, Winchester, VA, U.S.A.
First English Language Edition. Small octavo (18.5cm.); publisher's decorative buff staplebound card wrappers printed in brown and green; 22pp. Wrappers quite toned with a few small losses along extremities not approaching text. Good or better overall.
Seller: Aragon Books Canada, OTTAWA, ON, Canada
Condition: New.
Paperback. Condition: VERY GOOD. [32]pp unpaginated. Bound with a single staple in lithographic printed wraps, illustrated throughout with color and b/w photos. With errata slip and corrections in blue pen. Small scuff to front cover, clean and sound otherwise. A guidebook published by the state agency for communication and dissemination of the Portuguese Colonial Empire. No mention is made of the Colonial War / War of Liberation then ongoing. Fairly scarce -- OCLC lists 5 copies.
Paperback. Alberni Valley; Indigenous; Pacific Coast history; colonialism (illustrator). pp. 238. 8vo. Orange binding. Contains map of Port Alberni on inside front cover and black and white photographs and illustrations throughout text. Light shelfwear, sunning to spine and edges, blue stamp to ffep, otherwise no discernible flaws; very good+. As per introduction, "The Alberni District and Historical Society presents sixty-eight sketches by George Bird. These are selections from articles written during the period 1941-1950. Many of these appeared in the West Coast Advocate. These are the personal reminiscences of Mr. Bird and not a complete early history of the Alberni Valley".
Published by Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1948
Seller: Lorne Bair Rare Books, ABAA, Winchester, VA, U.S.A.
First Edition
First Edition. First impression. Octavo. Brown cloth hardcover; gilt spine-titles; xiv,568pp; map. A tight, square copy, Very Good or better; with scattered pencil marginalia. Two clipped obituaries are tipped onto the front flyleaf. Though his ownership markings do not appear in this volume, the marginal notes are those of noted poet, translator, and anthropologist Nathaniel Tarn, whose professional academic career began with a two-year fellowship in Rangoon, 1958-9. An important and highly influential articulation of British colonial policy in Burma just prior to independence, presented as a comparison of colonial rule under British and Dutch regimes. Furnivall critiques the effects of colonial capitalism, arguing that it has had a negative impact on traditional Burmese social structure, and advocates a gradualist autonomist policy. Though it was not likely Furnivall's intent, Policy and Practice became something of a blueprint for postcolonialism - albeit a blueprint that was rarely adopted by the more radical opponents to colonial rule - and it has remained regularly in print since its original publication.
Seller: paolo tonnarelli, Milano, MI, Italy
Condition: Buone. L.H. GANN / P. DUIGNAN COLONIALISM IN AFRICA CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS 1969In 8°, 2 volumi, pag. 532+563, legatura editoriale, copertina illustrata, ill. in b/n, cartine ripiegate. Testo in inglese. In ottime condizioni.
Published by E.P. Dutton & Co, New York, 1940
Seller: Lorne Bair Rare Books, ABAA, Winchester, VA, U.S.A.
Dust Jacket Condition: dj. First American Edition. Octavo. 22cm. Publisher's russet cloth titled in gilt to spine. Dustjacket. 291pp. Light wear to spine and corners, some small abrasions to the bottom edge of the cloth, a strong and handsome copy in a lightly soiled tan dustjacket with toning to the spine panel, some fraying and shallow loss to the spine ends and a pinhole piece of damage a third of the way down the spine interfering with the "T" in the author's name. A good, solid copy in dustjacket. Internally clean with some spotting and foxing to the prelims and page edges. Lavishly illustrated with photographs by the author. Edited by A.W. Lawrence, the author's brother, with the suppressed introductory chapter to The Seven Pillars of Wisdom included alongside "The Changing East" a Lawrence essay that was later expanded into chapter 33 of Seven Pillars of Wisdom. Lawrence, only in his early 20's, spent the summer of 1911 in Syria and surroundings, studying Crusader ruins and seeking out interesting bits and pieces for the British Museum, the photographs he took, and the observations he made, form the basis for this book.
Published by Australian Motorists Petrol Company Ltd. (A.M.P.) pre1942., Sydney, Australia., 1942
Seller: Asia Bookroom ANZAAB/ILAB, Canberra, ACT, Australia
Large brightly coloured folding world map 51 x 97.4 cms (map); 61 x 101 cms (sheet), archivally mounted on linen, breaks at several folds and a minute bit of paper loss in the Celebes (now Sulawesi) and northern Afghanistan professionally repaired; in very good clean condition. World War II era advertising wall map printed in Australia for Australian Motorists Petrol Company Ltd. (AMP, now Ampol): "With the Compliments of Australian Motorists Petrol Co. Ltd. (Authorized Capital £1,000,000)" (map text) and pleads "In Wartime buy Australian" and "Australia Merits Preference". AMP was the first publicly listed Australian oil company. A colour-coded key identifies European colonial powers, the continent of Africa being the recipient of multiple colonial claimants. British Imperial might was still dominant however, claiming Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Southern and Eastern Africa, India, and British Guyana. Notably Micronesia is identified as "Japanese Mandate", but the map was published before the Japanese occupation of New Guinea. Tannu Tuva (now the Tuva Republic within the Russian Federation) is noted separately as is Sinkiang (now Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region [XUAR]). A scarce map and when available usually in poor condition, this copy in very good, attractive condition archivally mounted and ready for framing.
Published by [N.p., but near present-day Prampram, Ghana. ca. 18191836]., 1836
Seller: William Reese Company, New York, NY, U.S.A.
An attractive set of skillfully executed original pencil sketches featuring British colonial structures in Prampram, Gold Coast (present-day Ghana), likely between 1819 and 1836. The sketches are titled in pencil, as follows: "Commandant's Residence, Pam Pram, Gold Coast," "Lower Town, Pam Pram from the Upper Town," and "Abandoned Fort at Appolonia from the Beach." The Union Jack flies proudly in the foreground of the sketch of the Commandant's residence. Officially, Great Britain colonized the Gold Coast region from 1867 until the independence of Ghana in 1957, though the British had maintained and controlled forts along the West African coastline since long before 1867. Fort Appolonia, in the extreme southwestern corner of the country, had been a British trading and military outpost from 1691 until 1819, and then again from 1836 onwards, when it changed hands from the British, to the Dutch, then back to the British again. As such, if the artist here labeled Fort Appolonia as "Abandoned," he or she most likely sketched the fort during the period it was shuttered between 1819 and 1836. A fascinating trio of original sketches offering unique views from a rarely visualized period in British colonial affairs in West Africa. Central vertical crease to each drawing, the first two titled in a contemporary hand in pencil to verso, the third similarly titled below the image. Very good.
Publication Date: 1887
Magazine / Periodical
A Page from The Victorian era Graphic newspaper. December 1887. 12 x 16 inches. shows engraving of a group of Indian women posing with two white men, text beneath the image reading "Lady Dufferin's Fund, For supplying female medical aid to the women of India-some of the women doctors and their English teachers." Scenes of combat between British officers and attacking Indian natives below. Taken together the images suggest the civilizing influence of colonialism. The Countess of Dufferin Fun was established in 1885 when Queen Victoria tasked Lady Dufferin with improving women's healthcare in India. The queen had just received a missionary's letter that read in part, "the women of India suffer when they are sick." The complex relationship between conquest and paternalism played out to an extreme in India where the long term effects of colonialism continue to present day. Very light tonight to edges does not affect image or text. Overall very good condition.
Publication Date: 1946
Photograph Signed
Belgian Congo photo archive documenting colonialism and segregated settlement in Paulis, Jadotville, and at Kiubo Falls in 1946-1947, while Belgian rule expanded displacing Congolese communities from political power and control over local resources. Made by an unidentified traveler or colonial observer, the group moves between industrial sites, river traffic, town streets, waterfalls, village compounds, and posed encounters with Congolese residents, placing daily life beside the infrastructure of empire. Jadotville, in Katanga, had been built within the orbit of Union Minière du Haut-Katanga and the copper economy that tied the Congo to European industry; Paulis belonged to the northeastern colonial administrative network that extended surveillance, mission activity, and commercial penetration into local societies. By the later 1940s, these systems were producing wealth for Belgium and foreign markets through forced and controlled labor regimes. Photo archive of 36 black and white silver gelatin photographs, various sizes, ranging from 2.5" x 3.5" to 5" x 7", Belgian Congo, 1946-1947. Nine photographs are identified to the Paulis region in 1946, including versos inscribed in French with "Habitations Européens à Paulis," "Pavillon de l'hotel," and "Le Kigoma sur le fleuve." These images show European-style houses set among palms, a large riverside or lakeside steamer, a broad colonial street with automobiles and low commercial buildings, thatched structures, and Congolese figures posed near village compounds and along a tree-lined road. The remaining photographs, from Jadotville and Kiubo Falls in 1947, include multiple views of the falls from overlooks and near the waterline, several repeated compositions of cascades and riverbanks, a dense electrical installation with transformers and steel framing, public crowd scenes, dugout canoes on calm water, groups standing beside temporary camp structures, and additional views of thatched settlements, large shade trees, and Congolese men, women, and children positioned before houses or in open clearings. Several photographs set European-built environments against Congolese dwellings and occupied landscapes, making the colonial dichotomy apparent within this grouping. Waterfalls, river steamers, electric infrastructure, and ordered streets mark the channels through which copper, labor, and administrative authority moved outward to Belgian and international markets, while the photographs of Congolese settlements and residents show the populations who bore that reorganization of land and economy. In the late colonial Congo, extraction and transport depended on African labor under coercive conditions, and urban growth in places such as Jadotville advanced through racially unequal housing, wage structures, and civic access, leaving Congolese people concentrated in subordinate quarters or rural zones even when their work sustained the entire system. Light wear and occasional creasing; several versos inscribed in French; overall very good condition. An intimate look into Belgian colonial rule at the point where industrial wealth, infrastructure, and local displacement met on the ground. Signed.
Large missionary lantern slide archive documenting Protestant evangelical activity and African village life in West Africa during the early twentieth century, most plausibly within the Upper Guinea Coast region encompassing present day Sierra Leone or Liberia. The photographs record interactions between European or American missionaries and local communities during a period when Protestant mission societies expanded schools, churches, and literacy programs throughout the forest belt of West Africa. Lantern slide sets such as this were commonly produced as visual material for missionary lecture circuits in Europe and North America, where churches presented illustrated narratives describing evangelization, education programs, and village life in mission territories in order to secure financial and institutional support. Several images depict African men and women dressed in Christian or mission-associated attire and gathered in what appear to be congregational or instructional settings, suggesting scenes staged or selected to illustrate the success of missionary work, conversion, and Christian instruction. The images collectively reflect the visual language commonly employed in missionary propaganda of the period, presenting both everyday village life and scenes of religious participation as evidence of missionary influence. Archive of 49 glass lantern slides, circa 1910-1920, depicting village communities, missionary encounters, and daily life scenes in what visual evidence suggests is the Upper Guinea forest region of West Africa. Slides measure approximately 3.25 x 3.25 inches.Slides show thatched village compounds constructed with wattle walls and palm or grass roofing, agricultural work, food preparation, and communal gatherings. Several images portray individuals wearing raffia or fiber skirts and other forms of dress historically documented among forest societies of Sierra Leone and Liberia, including Mende, Vai, and related communities. Other photographs show agricultural carrying baskets worn on the back with shoulder straps, a method of transport widely used in the forest regions of Liberia and Sierra Leone for carrying crops and forest products. Additional slides depict domestic labor including a woman grinding plant material in a bowl on the ground within a village compound, scenes consistent with food preparation and herbal processing practices recorded in ethnographic studies of Upper Guinea Coast societies. One photograph shows a man standing beside a river or coastal fish trap constructed from wooden stakes, a fishing technology historically documented along the riverine and coastal systems of Sierra Leone and Liberia where fishing formed a major component of subsistence economies. The slides are mounted within glass frames typical of magic lantern projection, the visual format widely used by missionary organizations for illustrated lectures and fundraising presentations. Architectural, environmental, and material culture details visible in the photographs strongly support identification within the Upper Guinea Coast rather than East Africa. The combination of rectangular wattle-and-thatch houses, raffia fiber clothing, agricultural basket transport, mortar-based grinding of foods and herbs, and coastal or riverine fishing structures corresponds closely with practices documented among forest and coastal societies of Sierra Leone and Liberia in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The surrounding vegetation, including palm ecology and dense tropical growth, aligns with the Guinea forest zone extending from Guinea through Sierra Leone and Liberia into Côte d'Ivoire. Missionary activity intensified in this region during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries through American and European Protestant societies including Methodist Episcopal, Presbyterian, and Anglican missions, which established schools, churches, and mission stations while producing photographic material for lecture circuits abroad. Light surface wear, minor abrasions to several mounts, and scattered handling marks consistent with projection use; 2-3 images have cracks to glass but no loss to image, overall condition good. A substantial visual archive illustrating missionary propaganda, village life, and early twentieth century cross-cultural encounters in the mission fields of the Upper Guinea Coast.