Edité par San Francisco: Free Print Shop, 1980
Vendeur : Lee Madden, Book Dealer, Brattleboro, VT, Etats-Unis
Edition originale
EUR 767,45
Autre deviseQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Ajouter au panierHardcover. Etat : Very Good. No Jacket. 1st Edition. Very Good HC, no DJ. Beige cloth over boards, white stylized woman's head with hair spelling 'Kaliflower' on front cover, the hair wrapping around spine onto back cover; gray laid paper end papers. Bright generally clean covers and spine have few small spots; firm, square corners; tightly bound; crisp, clean interior. Brilliant colorful images and print on every page. Starting in April of 1969, Sutter Street Commune in S.F., following Digger philosophy, began issuing a free intercommunal newspaper to area communes to 'pass the dharma', i.e., share information with other like-minded communards. For the next 3 years Kaliflower was distributed on a weekly basis, eventually to nearly 300 communes. This volume is drawn from some of those issues but also has some commentary about the making and growth of Kaliflower. As with everything this group produced, nothing is signed or attributed. One of the Sutter Street Commune founders was an experienced printer and the press work was high quality. This is a nicely bound, fine quality volume. Large 4to, 256 pp.
Edité par Free Print Shop, San Francisco, CA, 1980
Vendeur : Midway Book Store (ABAA), St. Paul, MN, Etats-Unis
Edition originale
EUR 657,82
Autre deviseQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Ajouter au panierHardcover. Etat : Very Good. First edition. 31 x 25 cm. Quarto. iv 256pp. Index. Bound into grey cloth with illustration of a women's face in black and white with her flowing hair very abstractedly forming the word Kaliflower. Lavishly and psychedelicely illustrated in color throughout with cartoons and caricatures some sexual. Some sun toning to the spine and edges. Corners are lightly bumped. Minor spotting to top edge. A collection of articles from Kaliflower, a small free weekly newspaper hand-delivered to communes in the San Francisco Bay Area from April 24, 1969 to June 22, 1972. It was founded by Steven Dworkin and published by the Sutter/Scott Street Commune, which was eventually known as the Kaliflower commune after the newspaper. The Kaliflower commune was inspired by The Diggers an "anarchist guerrilla street theater group that challenged the emerging Counterculture of the Sixties and whose actions and ideals inspired a generation to create models of Free Association. " The community supported polyamory and gay liberation, and had a reputation as being a gay commune. Eric Noble believes that Kaliflower is referenced in Carl Wittman's essay "Refugees from Amerika: a gay perspective" when he notes "To be a free territory, we must govern ourselves, set up our own institutions, defend ourselves, and use our own energies to improve our lives. The emergence of gay liberation communes, and our own paper is a good start." Reference: Kaliflower: the Intercommunal - The Digger Archives. Outhistory: Kaliflower and the Homosexual Revolution of 1969, by Eric Noble.
Edité par Free Print Shop, San Francisco, 1980
Vendeur : Boo-Hooray, New York, NY, Etats-Unis
Edition originale Signé
EUR 844,64
Autre deviseQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Ajouter au panierThe large book gathering items from the small weekly newspaper Kaliflower, hand-delivered to communes in the San Francisco Bay Area in the late 1960s and early '70s. Original issues were printed by the Sutter Street Commune, who called themselves The Friends of Perfection, but were commonly known by the title of their inter-communal newsletter, Kaliflower. Founded by Irving Rosenthal, author of the beat-era novel Sheeper and former poetry editor of The Chicago Review and Big Table, Kaliflower was deeply influenced by the American ur-commune of John Humphrey Noyes, Oneida, as well as the political philosophy of the Diggers and other radical communal organizations. Like the newsletters, the book is not credited or signed by anyone. Rather, "through the paper and its unwritten supplement (the gossip of its carriers) local communes cross-pollinated each other with ideas, needs, and information." The paper's readership quickly expanded past the communards, and the creators of the paper decided to suspend it. However, with this book they promised to "re-state, in a simple and condensed form, the main insights about communal living that had appeared in it," culminating in this book, which collected the beautiful writings and illustrations that had circulated in the preceding editions of the newspaper. Notable entries include "Taking Lessons from the 'Little Lenin Library' to Heart," a guide against petty-bourgeois consciousness, "Jacking Up Masters," an apologia for leadership and temporary natural authorities, and "Fucking Upwards," one of the many guides for love affairs in the commune where they state that "there are no pendulum swings of ecstasy paid for by horror.". First edition. In beige illustrated cloth. Reflective sheet tipped in to page 218. 256 pp. 10 x 12 1?4 in. Very good; small spotting at spine, otherwise a tight clean copy.
Edité par San Francisco: Free Print Shop, 1980, 1980
Vendeur : Peter Harrington. ABA/ ILAB., London, Royaume-Uni
Edition originale Signé
EUR 1 622,19
Autre deviseQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Ajouter au panierFirst edition, first printing, a rare presentation copy, inscribed at the foot of the last page, "a gift to Urban Ecology House from Sam and Irving". Irving Rosenthal was a founder-member of the San Francisco Sutter/Scott Street commune (known by members as the Friends of Perfection), established in 1967. As a student, he was poetry editor for the Chicago Review, but the paper's attempt to censor Beat writers prompted Rosenthal and many of his friends to resign. He co-founded Big Table and went on to create the Free Print Shop, the publishing arm of the Sutter/Scott Street commune. The Free Print Shop offered services to San Francisco communes in addition to publishing its own weekly inter-communal newsletter, Kaliflower. The paper was published between April 1969 and December 1971 and, at its height, was delivered to more than 300 communes. It was so popular that the Sutter Street commune is still widely referred to as the Kaliflower commune. The newsletter carried ideas, requests, and news between San Francisco's network of communes. Publication stopped in 1971 when the editors "realized we were working for a largely anonymous readership - something we had never intended to do". They suspended publication with the intention "to re-state, in a simple and condensed form, the main insights about communal living that had appeared in it". It took them seven years to sift through and select works from their back issues to create this book, a beautiful visual record of a key Haight-Ashbury-era publication. As with the newsletters, the book does not credit artists or authors. Rosenthal disliked signing his work and refused requests from friends; this copy is inscribed on his behalf by Sam, Rosenthal's "right-hand man"(Aronson). The recipients were Urban Ecology House, a San Francisco non-profit founded in 1975 which aims to help create more sustainable cities. Philippe Aronson, "Tracking Down My Literary Idol to a San Francisco Commune", Lit Hub, 28 Aug. 2019. Quarto. Vividly illustrated in colour throughout, one page illustrated with silver foil. Original grey cloth, illustration of a woman's head with hair spelling "Kaliflower" printed in black and white on front cover, extending over spine and rear cover, grey endpapers. Edges of covers faintly toned with a few marks: a near-fine copy.
EUR 2 890,01
Autre deviseQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Ajouter au panierEtat : Fine. Number of books: 1 book.