Hamburg: Otto Meissner, 1885. 8vo. Very nice contemporary black half calf with gilt spine. A bit of wear to extremitoes. Inner front hinge a little weak. Title-page a littel dusty, but otherwise very nice and clean. Book-plate (Arnold Heertje) to inside of front board. XXVII, (1), 526 pp. + 1 f. With pp. 515-16 in the first state (""Consumtionsfonds"" with a C) and with the imprint-leaf at the end.
Scarce first edition of the second volume of ""The Capital"", edited from Marx's manuscripts by Friedrich Engels and with a 20 pages long preface by Engels. The second volume constitutes a work in its own right and is also known under the subtitle ""The Process of Circulation of Capital "". Although this work has often been to as referred to as ""the forgotten book"" of Capital or ""the unknown volume"", it was in fact also extremely influential and highly important - it is here that Marx introduces his ""Schemes of Reproduction"", here that he founds his particular macroeconomics, and here that he so famously distinguishes two ""departments"" of production: those producing means of production and those producing means of consumption - ""This very division, as well as the analysis of the relations between these departments, is one of the enduring achievements of Marx's work."" (Christopher J. Arthur and Geert Reuten : The Circulation of Capital. Essays on Volume Two of Marx's Capital. P. 7).The work is divided into three parts: The Metamorphoses of Capital and Their Circuits, The Turnover of Capital, The Reproduction and Circulation of the Aggregate Social Capital, and it is here that we find the main ideas behind the marketplace - how value and surplus-value are realized. Here, as opposed to volume 1 of ""The Capital"", the focus is on the money-owner and -lender, the wholesale-merchant, the trader and the entrepreneur, i.e. the ""functioning capitalist"", rather than worker and the industrialist. ""[i]t was here, in the final part of this book [i.e. vol. II of Das Kapital], that Marx introduced his ""Schemes of Reproduction"", which influenced both Marxian and orthodox economics in the first decades of the twentieth century."" (Arthur & Reuten p. 1).The first volume of ""Das Kapital"" was the only one to appear within Marx' life-time. It appeared 1867, followed by this second volume 18 years later, which Engels prepared from notes left by Karl Marx.
Yerevan, 1938 8vo. In the original embossed cloth binding with gilt lettering to front board. The profile of Marx and Engels embossed onto front board. Extremities a bit rubbed a underligning in text throughout. 131, (5) pp. + 4 plates (respectively showing Marx, Engels, the title-page of the Original German edition and a letter).
The exceedingly rare first Armenian translation of The Communist Manifesto printed in Armenia.
"MARX, KARL (+) FRIEDRICH ENGELS (+) D. B. RIAZANOV (+) HAYIM HOLMSHTOK (+) M. LEVITAN.
Reference : 53496
(1924)
Moskve [Moscow], Tsentraler Farlag Far Di Felker Fun F. S. S. R., 1924. 16mo. With the original front wrapper (lacking spine and back wrapper). With previous owner's name to front wrapper (Henoch Gelernt). Front wrapper and last leaf with a few nicks, otherwise fine and clean. 181, (3) pp.
Rare first Soviet Yiddish translation of Marx and Engel's Communist Manifesto. From the library of Jewish activist Henoch Gelernt.
[Slovenia], Agit-Prop komisija centralnega komiteta komunistiène partije Slovenije [Agitprop Commiss Small4to (110x145 mm). In the original black/red printed stapled wrappers. With a few occassional blue underlignings. 31, (1) pp.
Rare Slovenian translation of the Communist Manifesto, printed by an undergorund partisan press. The present edition of the Manifesto was printed and distributed by Agitprop, the Communist Party institution that controlled education, publishing, libraries and mass media from the end of World War II until 1952. Presumably the present publication was, if not the very first, then among the first publications made by Agitprop. Until the end of World War II Agitprop was essentially an underground movement whose goal was to pave the way for communism after the war. After the resistance in Slovenia started in summer 1941, Italian violence against the Slovene civilian population escalated and to counter the Communist-led insurgence, the Italians sponsored local anti-guerrilla units, formed mostly by the local conservative Catholic Slovene population that resented the revolutionary violence of the partisans. After the Italian armistice of September 1943, the Germans took over both the Province of Ljubljana and the Slovenian Littoral. They united the Slovene anti-Communist counter-insurgence into the Slovene Home Guard and appointed a puppet regime in the Province of Ljubljana. The anti-Nazi resistance however expanded, creating its own administrative structures as the basis for Slovene statehood within a new, federal and socialist Yugoslavia.In 1945, Yugoslavia was liberated by the underground resistance and soon became a socialist federation known as the People's Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Slovenia joined the federation as a constituent republic, led by its own pro-Communist leadership and Agitprop became the official mass media institution.
[Slovene Littoral, Printed for Agitprop, Presumably 1944]. Small4to. In the original stapled printed grey wrappers. Previous owner's name in light pencil to front wrapper and title-page. A few brown spots to title-page, otherwise a very fine and clean copy. 52 pp.
Exceedingly rare Slovenian translation of the Communist Manifesto. This virtually unknown edition is not to be found in any bibliography nor on OCLC. The present edition of the Manifesto was printed and distributed by Agitprop, the Communist Party institution that controlled education, publishing, libraries and mass media from the end of World War II until 1952. Presumably the present publication was among the first publications made by Agitprop. Until the end of World War II Agitprop was essentially an underground movement whose goal was to pave the way for communism after the war. After the resistance in Slovenia started in summer 1941, Italian violence against the Slovene civilian population escalated and to counter the Communist-led insurgence, the Italians sponsored local anti-guerrilla units, formed mostly by the local conservative Catholic Slovene population that resented the revolutionary violence of the partisans. After the Italian armistice of September 1943, the Germans took over both the Province of Ljubljana and the Slovenian Littoral. They united the Slovene anti-Communist counter-insurgence into the Slovene Home Guard and appointed a puppet regime in the Province of Ljubljana. The anti-Nazi resistance however expanded, creating its own administrative structures as the basis for Slovene statehood within a new, federal and socialist Yugoslavia.In 1945, Yugoslavia was liberated by the underground resistance and soon became a socialist federation known as the People's Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Slovenia joined the federation as a constituent republic, led by its own pro-Communist leadership and Agitprop became the official mass media institution.Not in OCLC
Editions sociales internationales, 1935. In-8°, broché.
[15479]
Editions sociales, 1964. Un volume in-8°, cartonnage de l’éditeur.
[16706]
Editions Sociales, Classiques du Marxisme, 1966, 158 pp., poche, couverture légèrement défraîchie, traces d'usage, tranches brunies, état correct.
Phone number : 0033 (0)1 42 23 30 39
Editions Sociales 1972, in-8 broché, 366 p. (plis de lecture au dos, sinon très bon état ; non réédité) Recueil des textes les plus importants que Marx et Engels ont consacrés, entre 1841 et 1894, à ce qu'ils tenaient pour l'opium du peuple.
, Paris, Éd. sociales 1976, in-8, br., Ex-Libris manuscrit de L. Lucchini, (couv. fanée, qq. soulignures et annotations), intérieur frais, 100p.
Phone number : 01 43 29 46 77
P., Éditions sociales, 1951, in-8, br., non coupé, 173 pp., 2 index. (SE88C)
Nouvelle édition revue et complétée d'un index systématique. Ludwig Feuerbach. Le matérialisme historique. Lettres philosophiques, etc.
P., Éd. sociales, 1954, in-8, br., 412 pp. (GI6A)
Textes choisis précédés d'une introduction de M. Thorez et d'une étude de J. Fréville. Envoi de J. Fréville à Francis et Jeanne Crémieux.
format moyen, couverture souple.501 pages.exemplaire non coupÈ. Bon Ètat 1964 Èditions sociales
P., Editions Sociales, 1953. [published date: 1953] Softcover in-8°, 83 pp., index, broche, couv.
Couverture et dos us.. [DV-20vf]
Editions sociales ,1964, in-8 de 456 pages , br. , , .Les frais de port pour la France sont offerts à partir de 25 euros d'achat (Mondial relay,lettre suivie)et 30 d'achat (colissimo suivi ). Pour l'étranger : tarif livre et brochure, colissimo international, DHL express
EDITIONS SOCIALES. 1972. In-8. Broché. Etat d'usage, 1er plat abîmé, Dos plié, Mouillures. 256 Pages - Traces de mouillures sans conséquence pour la lecture - Léger Manque sur le 1er plat. . . . Classification Dewey : 320-Science politique
Traduction d'E. COGNIOT Classification Dewey : 320-Science politique
EDITIONS SOCIALES. 1960. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 358 Pages. . . . Classification Dewey : 200-RELIGION
Textes choisis traduits et annotés par BADIA.G - BANGE.P - ET E. BOTTIGELLI Classification Dewey : 200-RELIGION
EDITIONS SOCIALES. 1973. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 96 Pages. . . . Classification Dewey : 320-Science politique
Préfaces du Manifeste - Introduction de J. BRUHAT Classification Dewey : 320-Science politique
EDITIONS SOCIALES. 1968. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 94 Pages - Un tampon sur la page de faux titre. . . . Classification Dewey : 320-Science politique
Classification Dewey : 320-Science politique
format moyen, couverture souple. 61 pages. Bn Ètat 1965 Èditions sociales
Editions Sociales (1953) - In-8 broché de 84 pages -Traduction de Renée Cartelle - Index - Exemplaire en très bon état
EDITION 10/18 N°0005. 1980. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 189 pages.Différentes éditions disponibles.. . . . Classification Dewey : 320-Science politique
Introduction de Robert Mandrou. Classification Dewey : 320-Science politique
P., Editions Sociales, 1960, in 8° broché, 48 pages.
PHOTOS sur DEMANDE. ...................... Photos sur demande ..........................
Phone number : 04 77 32 63 69
Champ Libre, 1983, 72 pp. et 23 pp., traduction par Laura Lafargue, revue et annotée par F. Engels, broché, couverture très légèrement frottée, état très correct.
Phone number : 0033 (0)1 42 23 30 39