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Författare OWEN ROBERT
| Antal resultat: 16 |
| 11. |
Good 12mo - over 6¾" - 7¾" tall No Jacket as Issued Cloth Tenth Printing Robert Dale Owen (November 7, 1801-June 24, 1877) was a longtime exponent in his adopted United States of the socialist doctrines of his father, the Welshman Robert Owen, as well as a politician in the Democratic Party. Born in Glasgow, Scotland, Owen emigrated to the United States in 1825, and helped his father create the Utopian community of New Harmony, Indiana. After the community failed, Owen returned briefly to Europe, then moved to New York City and became the editor of the Free Enquirer, which he ran from 1828 to 1832. Owen's Moral Physiology, published in 1830 or 1831, was the first book to advocate birth control in the United States (specifically, coitus interruptus). Along with Fanny Wright, he was an intellectual leader of the radical Democratic faction, the Locofocos. In contrast to most other Democrats of the era, Owen and Wright were opposed to slavery, though their artisan radicalism distanced them from the leading abolitionists of the time. (Lott, 129) He returned 1833 to New Harmony, Indiana, and served in the Indiana House of Representatives twice (1835-1838; 1851-1853). After two unsuccessful campaigns, he was elected to the United States House of Representatives in 1842, and served from 1843 to 1847. While in Washington, he drafted the bill for the founding of the Smithsonian Institution. Owen was elected a member of the Indiana Constitutional Convention in 1850, and was instrumental in securing to widows and married women control of their property, and the adoption of a common free school system. He later succeeded in passing a state law giving greater freedom in divorce. In 1853, Franklin Pierce appointed Owen as United States minister at Naples. After leaving that post in 1858, Owen retired from political life, but remained an active intellectual. He was a strong believer in spiritualism (despite admitting having been duped into believing in a spirit named "Katie King") and was the author of two well-known books on the subject: Footfalls on the Boundary of Another World (1859) and The Debatable Land Between this World and the Next (1872). Owen died at his summer home in Lake George, New York, and was buried in New Harmony, Indiana. Rare in any printing. Spine worn.
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| 12. |
The Carnal Trap
Owen, Robert N.
Fine 16mo - over 5¾" - 6¾" tall Paperback First Edition Erotic novel.
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| 13. |
Região em litígio entre este mundo e outro
Robert Dale Owen
2ª edição
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| 14. |
The Chartist Legacy
Ashton, Owen - Fyson, Robert - Roberts, Stephen [editors]
1st edition. ~ Cloth, dj, F/F. xvi+297pp, index, a nice fine copy. New. ~ A collection of eleven essays which look at the political & social legacy of the Chartist Movement in the UK & Ireland.
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| 15. |
The National Geographic Magazine, Volume LXXXII (82), Number Six (6), December 1942
National Geographic Society [Atwood, Albert W.; Oakley, Thornton; Moore, W. Robert; Hutchison, Isobel Wylie; Williams, Maynard Owen; Oliver, Eleanor Schirmer]
10" (25.4 cm) Tall Map of Asia and Adjacent Areas is missing from magazine. Square, tight binding, very clean and bright interior. No writing or marks. Wraps are yellow and white, lightly dust-soiled overall and a bit shelf worn with closed tears at top and bottom of spine. Contents: Atwood, "The Miracle of War Production"; Oakley, "American Industries Geared for War"; Moore, "The Cities That Gold and Diamonds Built"; "Sunny South Africa"; Hutchison, "Riddle of the Aleutians"; Williams, "Mother Volga Defends Her Own"; Oliver, "A Woman's Experiences among Stone Age Solomon Islanders." http://www.catscradlebks.com/book_images/570239.jpg
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| 16. |
The National Geographic Magazine, Volume LXXXII (82), Number Four (4) (October 1942)
National Geographic Society [Simpich, Frederick; Roberts, J. Baylor; Williams, Maynard Owen; Moore, W. Robert; Phillips, Henry Albert; Simpich, Lieut. Frederick Jr.]
10" (25.4 cm) Tall Map Supplement of South America is missing from magazine. Square, tight binding, very clean and bright interior. No writing or marks. Wraps are yellow and white, lightly dust-soiled overall with rubbing at spine. Contents: Simpich, "Wartime in the Pacific Northwest"; Roberts, "Where Fog and Sun Paint the Pacific"; Williams, "New Delhi Goes Full Time'; "Behind New Delhi's News"; Moore, "Rehearsal at Dieppe"; Phillips, "Air Cruising through New Brazil"; "New Map Charts South America's Wartime Importance" (narrative essay; map is missing); Simpich Jr., "Life on the Hawaii Front." http://www.catscradlebks.com/book_images/580232.jpg
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