Sell shadow support substance (5 Ergebnisse)

- Softcover
Anbieter: books4less (Versandantiquariat Petra Gros GmbH & Co. KG), Welling, , Deutschlandbooks4less (Versandantiquariat Petra Gros GmbH & Co. KG)
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EUR 9,95
EUR 15,95 VersandVersand von Deutschland nach USAAnzahl: 1 verfügbar
Heft. Zustand: Gut. Schnitt und Einband sind etwas staubschmutzig; Der Buchzustand ist ansonsten ordentlich und dem Alter entsprechend gut. Sprache: Deutsch Gewicht in Gramm: 460.

- Softcover
Anbieter: Antiquariat Michael Butter, Altenburg, , DeutschlandAntiquariat Michael Butter
Verkäufer/-in kontaktierenVerkäufer/-in mit 5 SternenZustand: Gebraucht
EUR 15,00
EUR 45,00 VersandVersand von Deutschland nach USAAnzahl: 1 verfügbar
Kartoniert. 30,0 x 22,0 cm. [90] Seiten. Illustrierter Originalkarton. Mit zahlreichen Abbildungen. - Gutes Exemplar / Very Good Condition. Zur Ausstellung Mathilde ter Heijne - Forgetting, 4. November - 4. Dezember 2005, Hospitalhof Stuttgart in kleiner Auflage erschienen. - Die Beiträge teilweise in deutscher bzw. in englische…r Sprache. - Die niederländische Konzept- und Installationskünstlerin Mathilde ter Heijne (geb. 1969) hat innerhalb dieser Installation Porträts von Frauen, die zwischen 1839 (dem Beginn der Fotografie) und den 1920er Jahren lebten und einflußreich oder außergewöhnlich in ihrer Zeit waren, zusammengefügt. Die Bilder und Biografien wurden auf der ganzen Welt gesammelt. In den Biografien geht es um das Leben von Menschen, die in einer von patriarchalen Gesellschaftsstrukturen geprägten Welt für ihre individuellen Ziele gekämpft haben. Die meisten dieser Frauen wurden vergessen. Versandhinweis: Die Versandkostenpauschalen basieren auf Sendungen mit einem durchschnittlichen Gewicht. Falls das von Ihnen bestellte Buch besonders schwer oder sperrig sein sollte, werden wir Sie informieren, falls zusätzliche Versandkosten anfallen.

- Softcover
Anbieter: Aderholds Bücher & Lots, Kassel, DeutschlandAderholds Bücher & Lots
Verkäufer/-in kontaktierenVerkäufer/-in mit 4 SternenZustand: Gebraucht
EUR 12,00
EUR 90,00 VersandVersand von Deutschland nach USAAnzahl: 1 verfügbar
4° Quart Brosch. Brosch. o. S. Mit zahlr. s/w Abb. Text teilw. in deutsch, teilw. in englisch. Die Ecken sind bestoßen. Das obere Kapital ist leicht bestoßen. sehr guter Zustand M3.6 Sprache: Deutsch Gewicht in Gramm: 600.
Sojourner Truth: I Sell the Shadow to Support the Substance. [Original albumen cabinet card portrait photo of Sojourner standing against studio backdrop].
[AFRICAN-AMERICANA -- WOMEN]. TRUTH, Sojourner [Isabella Baumfree].
Verlag: [Corydon C.] Randall, Photographer, 220 Woodward Ave., c. 1864 [1881-1882]., [Detroit, MI: 1864
Anbieter: Zephyr Used & Rare Books, Vancouver, WA, USAZephyr Used & Rare Books
Verkäufer/-in kontaktierenVerkäufer/-in mit 5 SternenZustand: Gebraucht
EUR 11.347,22
EUR 6,91 VersandVersand innerhalb von USAAnzahl: 1 verfügbar
One mounted albumen cabinet card photo sized 3.9 x 5.9 in. mounted on tan studio board sized 4.25 x 6.5 in., rounded corners, printed caption below the image, printed photographer's imprint on verso (minor age-toning, minor spotting, slight soiling to fore-edges, old tiny pinhole evidenced at upper blank margin of mounted board…not affecting the photograph, very upper right w/ slight creasing & cracking of photo, now neatly re-affixed), still a VG exemplar of this very rare cabinet card image. A very scarce full-length albumen cabinet card portrait of Sojourner Truth (1797-1883) taken when she was 84-83 years old, and used as a fund-raiser at her public events at the end of her life. This is one of Truth's late portraits, and she was quite unusual having acquired her copyright to her portrait during the Civil War, giving her control over both the distribution of the CDV and Cabinet Card images, and the revenues they generated. As one of the best-known African-American former slaves, abolitionists, and women's rights advocates of the 19th-Century, she traveled the country for decades giving lectures and attending conferences where she would sell her "Shadow" photographs as a primary means of support for her ongoing mission. According to extensive historical research by Darcy Grimaldo Grigsby, Truth posed for Detroit photographer Corydon C. Randall's camera on three occasions between June, 1881 and April, 1882. The finished albumen photos were prepared in both Carte de Visite (2.25 x 3.5 in.) and Cabinet Card (4 x 6 in.) formats, and sold to Truth at .5¢ apiece. Randall's studio records show purchases of 50, 50, and 100 copies of each of the three separate poses, which was "an astonishing order for a woman in her eighties," but considering they were some of the last photographs of Truth, the editions size was quite small, with the Cabinet cards scarcer than the CDV versions. Grigsby details this standing pose in her book: the photographs "stage her against a pedastal in front of painted seaside backdrop. The effect is unique among her portraits. She stands in what purports to be a natural scene, her figure is smaller than the background, suggesting a vastness of space we have not seen before. . . Even as we recognize its artiface we indulge in the illusion of space and air and natural light that it so economically suggests. . . In these late seaside portraits, there is a soft, winsome quality, intensified when we realize that she is in her eighties and at the very end of a long, arduous life of personal and political struggle." Worldcat locates 1 copy of seated version CDV (Boston Athenaeum); See: Grigsby, Enduring Truths (2015), pp. 178-184.

Verlag: Detroit, Michigan 1864
Anbieter: Seth Kaller Inc., White Plains, NY, USASeth Kaller Inc.
Verkäufer/-in kontaktierenVerkäufer/-in mit 5 SternenZustand: Gebraucht - Gut
EUR 9.344,77
EUR 2,59 VersandVersand innerhalb von USAAnzahl: 1 verfügbar
No binding. Zustand: Very Good. Carte-de-visite, 1864, [copyright, Detroit, Michigan]. 1 p., 2 x 3 1/4 in. This albumen photograph features Sojourner Truth seated at a table holding knitting needles. The verso contains copyright notice at the federal court in Detroit, Michigan, indicating that it was likely taken in that city.Th…e caption, "I Sell the Shadow to Support the Substance," acknowledges that her image had value. At a human-rights convention, she commented that she "used to be sold for other people's benefit, but now she sold herself for her own." Isabella Baumfree / Sojourner Truth (1797-1883) was born into slavery and spent her early life on the New York estate of Colonel Charles Hardenbergh (d. 1806), a Dutch American, ninety-five miles north of New York City. She spoke only Dutch until she was nine years old and never learned to read and write. Around 1815, she fell in love with fellow slave Robert but was instead forced to marry Thomas, with whom she had five children. In 1826, when her master failed to free her as promised or indicated he would not follow the provisions of an 1817 New York law that set July 4, 1827, as the date of final emancipation in the state, Baumfree ran away. When she learned that her five-year-old son had been sold to Alabama, she sued his new owner under the name Isabella Van Wagenen and won, becoming one of the first black women to sue a white man and win. After experiencing a religious conversion, she moved to New York City and became a housekeeper. In 1843, she changed her name to Sojourner Truth and became an itinerant preacher. She soon became involved in both the antislavery and women's rights movements. With the assistance of William Lloyd Garrison, she dictated and published her memoirs in 1850. She moved to Battle Creek, Michigan, in 1857, and helped recruit African American troops for the Union Army during the Civil War. In 1864, the National Freedmen's Relief Association employed her in Washington, D.C., and President Abraham Lincoln invited her to the White House in October of that year. After the war, she continued to advocate for African American and women's rights.Excerpt from Truth's speech delivered at the Women's Convention in Akron, Ohio, 1851:"I have as much muscle as any man, and can do as much work as any man. I have plowed and reaped and husked and chopped and mowed, and can any man do more than that? I have heard much about the sexes being equal. I can carry as much as any man, and can eat as much too, if I can get it. I am as strong as any man that is now. As for intellect, all I can say is, if a woman have a pint, and a man a quart - why can't she have her little pint full? The poor men seems to be all in confusion, and don't know what to do. Why children, if you have woman's rights, give it to her and you will feel better. You will have your own rights, and they won't be so much trouble. I can't read, but I can hear. I have heard the Bible and have learned that Eve caused man to sin. Well, if woman upset the world, do give her a chance to set it right side up again."Condition: tack hole in upper margin just touching photograph; 1/2-inch tear in caption area; other minor wear to mount. Photograph.