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         Goldman Emma:     more books (32)
  1. My Two Years in Russia; An American Anarchist's Disillusionment and the Betrayal of the Russian Revolution by Lenin's Soviet Union by Emma Goldman, 2008-08-01
  2. Living My Life (Penguin Classics) by Emma Goldman, 2006-04-04
  3. Rebel in Paradise: A Biography of Emma Goldman (Phoenix) by Richard Drinnon, 1982-10-15
  4. EMMA GOLDMAN IN EXILE by Alice Wexler, 1992-01-01
  5. Emma Goldman: An Intimate Life by Alice R. Wexler, 1984-09-12
  6. Emma Goldman: Sexuality and the Impurity of the State (Women's Studies/Psychology/Sociology) by Bonnie Haaland, 1993-06-01
  7. Emma Goldman (Twayne's United States Authors Series) by Martha Solomon, 1987-04
  8. Emma Goldman in America by Alice Wexler, 1986-10
  9. Mother Earth: An Epic Drama of Emma Goldman's Life by Martin B. Duberman, 1991-07
  10. E. G. and E. G. O. Emma Goldman and the "Iceman Cometh" (University of Florida Humanities Monographs : No. 43) by Winifred L. Frazer, 1974-06
  11. Emma Goldman and the American Left "Nowhere at Home" (Twayne's Twentieth-Century American Biography Series) by Marian J. Morton, 1992-09
  12. Emma Goldman: A Documentary History of the American Years, Volume One: Made for America, 1890-1901 by Emma Goldman, 2003-04-17
  13. Emma Goldman: Political Activist (Women of Achievement) by David Waldstreicher, 1990-04
  14. Emma by Howard Zinn, 2002-09-01

21. The Anarchist Encyclopedia From The Daily Bleed: A Gallery Of Saints & Sinners;
In Spanish, see Rodrigo Quesada Monge, El Anarquismo De Emma Goldman (18691940)y Los Límites De La Utopía http//www.ucm.es/info/especulo/numero17/Goldman
http://recollectionbooks.com/bleed/Encyclopedia/GoldmanEmma.htm
    The Anarchist Encyclopedia:
Emma Goldman, (1869-1940) "Emma Goldman was a principal exponent of Anarchism, which she herself characterized as "the philosophy of a new social order based on liberty unrestricted by man-made law; the theory that all forms of government rest on violence, and are therefore wrong and harmful, as well as unnecessary." Her commitment to Anarchism and her activist inclinations led her to champion the causes of labor, anti-militarism, atheism, prison reform, and women's rights not just in the U.S. but abroad as well. After her deportation to Russian in 1919, and subsequent disillusionment with the so-called Soviet revolution, Emma never gave up hope that her anarchist ideals might still find fertile ground. She saw the flower bloom in Spain. Citizens and workers, organized by the CNT-FAI, the Anarcho-Syndicalist union, quickly suppressed the July, 1936 uprising of the army, led by General Franco, in both Barcelona and the countryside. Emma, 67 years old, rushed to lend her support. Working on propaganda broadcasts she traveled to London as a CNT-FAI representative seeking support and money for the cause. A newsreel, produced by the CNT/FAI and documenting the death of the Spanish Anarchist militia leader

22. Emma Goldman: Biography
Emma Goldman “Red Emma” (18691940) Emma Goldman was one of the “newimmigrants” to the United States in the post Civil War era.
http://recollectionbooks.com/bleed/Encyclopedia/GoldmanEmma/goldmanWright.htm
Emma Goldman “Red Emma” Emma Goldman was one of the “new immigrants” to the United States in the post Civil War era. She fit the generalizations of the immigrants from this time period, destined from her childhood to actively advocate anarchy to the entire world. Born to Taube Bienowitch and Abraham Goldman in Lithuania, 27 June 1869, Goldman experienced a traumatic youth. She grew up in a family providing little love, her parents the product of an arranged marriage. Abraham invested the little money they had in a business that failed, leaving a family of seven with little to live on.
Emma was surrounded by social injustices. Peasants worked on huge estates and were little more than slaves. The czar of Russia was a ruthless oppressor, passing laws for his own benefit and to the common people’s loss. Corrupt governmental officials took bribes and worsened the problems for peasants. Anna was unfortunate to be born into a Jewish family. The Russians shunned Jews, passing many segregation laws. There was occasional random storming of Jewish communities. Militants beat and robbed any Jew that they found.
Abraham sent Emma to Germany to live with her grandmother and attend school. Her uncle ended up withdrawing her from the school and pocketed the tuition sent from her father. Emma was forced to work around the house from dawn till dusk. She finally got fed up and said that she was tired and didn’t want to work anymore. Her uncle hit her and knocked her down the stairs. Emma’s aunts take care of her until Abraham can return to take her back home.

23. Emma Goldman
Emma Goldman. Goldman (18691940), the Russian-American anarchist, wasone of the most renowned radicals of the early twentieth century.
http://www.lib.umich.edu/spec-coll/ishill/goldman.html
Emma Goldman
Goldman (1869-1940), the Russian-American anarchist, was one of the most renowned radicals of the early twentieth century. The editor of the journal Mother Earth, she was well-known for her fiery speeches, and had a strong influence on Ishill, who often heard her speak in New York soon after he arrived in the United States. Voltairine De Cleyre, by Emma Goldman. Berkeley Heights, N.J.: Oriole Press, 1932. Copy no. 44. Garamond and Cochin types; printed in black and orange; 50 copies on Nuremberg mould- made; boards with buckram spine; 5.25 x 8 inches; 42 p. Photo Of Emma Goldman Emma Goldman - A Challenging Rebel, by Joseph Ishill. Berkeley Heights, N.J.: Oriole Press, 1957. Kennerley type; printed in four colors; orange gold-flecked wrappers; 5.25 x 8 inches; 31 p. This lengthy essay was first published in Yiddish in the journal Freie Arbeiter Stimme (Free Voice of Labor). It is published here for the first time in its original form.

24. Essays: Emma Goldman
Back to List Emma Goldman (18691940) LINKS The Anarchy Archives Emma Goldmanhttp//dwardmac.pitzer.edu/Anarchist_Archives/Goldman/Goldmanarchive.html
http://www.bedfordstmartins.com/litlinks/essays/goldman.htm
MM_preloadImages('../images/m_research_o.gif'); MM_preloadImages('../images/m_related_o.gif'); MM_preloadImages('../images/m_literary_o.gif'); MM_preloadImages('../images/m_poetry_o.gif'); MM_preloadImages('../images/m_drama_o.gif'); MM_preloadImages('../images/m_fiction_o.gif');
Emma Goldman
LINKS
The Anarchy Archives: Emma Goldman

http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/Anarchist_Archives/goldman/Goldmanarchive.html
Maintained by Pitzer College, this site includes biographical information, e-text versions of much of Goldman's work, links to commentary on her work, and many photos. "Patriotism" by Emma Goldman
http://www.connix.com/~harry/emma.htm
This page features an e-text version of Goldman's 1911 essay "Patriotism." Emma Goldman: A Guide to Her Life and Documentary Sources
http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/goldman/
Part of the Emma Goldman Papers Project, which "has collected, organized, and edited tens of thousands of documents by and about Goldman from around the world," this site offers an extensive amount of online information. BIOGRAPHY
Emma Goldman (1869-1940). Socialist, anarchist, and feminist, Goldman was born in Russia and emigrated in 1885 to New York City, where she worked in clothing factories and began writing and lecturing on behalf of reform movements, including feminism and birth control. In 1893, she was arrested for inciting a riot after urging a group of unemployed workers to take food by force. In 1919, after serving time in prison for agitating against military conscription and U.S. involvement in World War I, she was deported to Russia, whose revolution in 1917 she had hailed as the dawn of a just society. After two years, she left Russia to travel in a number of countries, including Germany, England, and Canada.

25. Project Gutenberg Author Record
Project Gutenberg Author record. Goldman, Emma, 18691940. Titles. Anarchism AndOther Essays. To the main listings page. Main Project Gutenberg Web page (online).
http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/authors/goldman__emma__1869-1940.html
Project Gutenberg Author record
Goldman, Emma, 1869-1940
Titles
Anarchism And Other Essays
To the main listings page
Main Project Gutenberg Web page (online)

26. Project Gutenberg Author Index
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, 17491832. Gogol, Nikolai Vasilievich, 1809-1852.Goldman, Emma, 1869-1940. Goldsmith, Oliver, 1730?-1774. Gonzales, Don Manoel.
http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/authors/author_index_G.html
Project Gutenberg
Author Index "G"
Gaboriau, Emile, 1832-1873 Galbraith, Anna M. (Anna Mary), b. 1859 Galsworthy, John, 1867-1933 Galt, John, 1779-1839 ... Guthrie, William, 1835-1908
To the main listings page
Main Project Gutenberg Web page (online)

27. Rodrigo Quesada Monge: El Anarquismo De Emma Goldman - Nº 17 Espéculo (UCM)
Translate this page EL ANARQUISMO DE Emma Goldman (1869-1940) Y LOS LÍMITES DE LA UTOPÍA . RodrigoQuesada Monge . Algo así le sucedió al principio a Emma Goldman (1869-1940).
http://www.ucm.es/info/especulo/numero17/goldman.html
EL ANARQUISMO DE EMMA GOLDMAN (1869-1940)
Y LOS LÍMITES DE LA UTOPÍA
Rodrigo Quesada Monge "El Estado es el altar de la libertad política que,
como el altar de la religión, está concebido
con el solo propósito del sacrificio humano".
E MMA G OLDMAN PRESENTACIÓN. R Con este trabajo queremos rescatar el ideario anarquista de la ilustre pensadora judía, articulando nuestro análisis sobre cuatro ejes esenciales; ellos serán los siguientes:
  • Anarquismo y marxismo: Emma Goldman y el estado soviético. Anarquismo y feminismo: Emma Goldman y la "mujer nueva". Anarquismo y romanticismo: Emma Goldman y el amor libre. Anarquismo y utopía: Emma Goldman y los totalitarismos.
  • Como en otros ensayos nuestros, el grueso de la bibliografía es en lenguas extranjeras, en vista de que son excepcionales los textos de Goldman traducidos al español. De tal manera que, éste bien puede ser concebido como una introducción al pensamiento de la mujer, al mismo tiempo que una puesta a punto con muchas de las profecías y pronósticos que hubiera hecho en su momento sobre el futuro, ya conocido por todos, del estado soviético. ANARQUISMO Y MARXISMO: EMMA GOLDMAN Y EL ESTADO SOVIÉTICO.

    28. Goldman, Emma
    Goldman, Emma. Anarchist (18691940), Who's Who in American History. Emma Goldmangrew up in a petit-bourgeois Jewish family in the Baltic region of Russia.
    http://us.history.wisc.edu/hist102/bios/20.html
    Stanley K. Schultz, Professor of History
    William P. Tishler, Producer
    Shane Hamilton, Web Editor Goldman, Emma Anarchist (1869-1940) Emma Goldman grew up in a petit-bourgeois Jewish family in the Baltic region of Russia. (Her birthplace is today part of Lithuania.) After emigrating to the United States at age 16, she worked in a Rochester garment factory before settling in New York City in 1889. Already influenced in her youth by the radical culture of St. Petersburg, she soon joined the anarchist movement and met lifelong comrade Alexander Berkman. In these early years, she advocated violence and helped Berkman plot to assassinate industrialist Henry Clay Frick. As her thinking evolved, she later rejected terrorism in favor of tireless political organizing. Over the next three decades, Goldman threw her energies into lecturing, editing and mobilizing protests. She fought countless battles for free speech and civil liberties. Though expressing little interest in the suffrage cause, she critiqued the social and economic subordination of women and was an early advocate of birth control.
    The U.S. government targeted "Red Emma" for her radical activities, jailing her on several occasions and stripping her citizenship in 1908. In 1917, Goldman and Berkman were imprisoned again for protesting military conscription. During the post-WWI anti-Bolshevik fervor, the government deported both to Russia. After two years, however, Goldman fled the new Soviet Union, profoundly disillusioned with the authoritarian state and its disregard for civil liberties. She spent the last two decades of her life travelling between France, England and Canada, still actively promoting her humanist brand of anarchism. Summing up her lifelong struggle, one historian writes, "Offering an invaluable counterstatement to the pragmatic faith of progressives and socialists in the omnicompetent state, she fought for the spiritual freedom of the individual at a time when the organizational walls were closing in."

    29. Occupations
    1900. Goldman, Emma (18691940) Anarchist orator and author. Grady reformer.Goldman, Emma (1869-1940) Anarchist orator and author. La
    http://us.history.wisc.edu/hist102/bios/html/occupations.html
    Stanley K. Schultz, Instructor
    William P. Tishler, Producer Artists, Intellectuals, and Writers Addams, Jane
    Social Reformer Barton, Bruce
    Public relations pioneer Berger, Victor
    Milwaukee Socialist Darwin, Charles
    British naturalist Gilman, Charlotte Perkins
    Feminist, social reformer Darwin, Charles
    British naturalist Godkin, E.L.
    Editor of The Nation Goldman, Emma
    Anarchist orator and author Grady, Henry W.
    Editor of The Atlanta Constitution Grant, Ulysses S. Civil War General Republican President, 1869-1877 Sinclair, Upton Journalist, novelist, Socialist Steinbeck, John Novelist Sumner, William Graham Sociologist, economist Turner, Frederick Jackson UW-Madison Historian Twain, Mark (S. Clemens) Novelist, satirist Veblen, Thorstein Economist, social critic Social Reformers Addams, Jane Social Reformer Anthony, Susan B. Suffragist, Social Reformer Gilman, Charlotte Perkins Feminist, social reformer Goldman, Emma Anarchist orator and author La Follette, Robert M. Republican Congressman, 1885-1891 Governor of Wisconsin, 1900-1906

    30. The All Hail Emma Goldman Oatmeal Chocolate Cherry Cookies
    Emma Goldman (18691940) anarchist and feminist, was sentenced toprison for opposing the WWI draft. If she were alive today, I'd
    http://www.misterridiculous.com/features/recipes/sweets/chocolatecherry.html
    00 Front Page 01 Columns 02 DIY Section 03 Vegan Recipes 04 Record/Show Reviews 05 Message Boards 06 Links 07 Staff Profiles 08 Squeaky 09 How to Get Involved 10 Contact Us 11 Banners Cooking by kittee: Index Knowledge: + A Word on Tofu + Dairy Substitutions + Got Stink? + How to Peel a Tomato + Information About Sugar + My Favorite Cookbooks + Recipe Clubbing It + Vegan Cookzines + Vegan Links + Vegan Potluck Cards Breadstuff: + A Good Pie Crust to Make + Soft Hamburger and Hotdog Buns Breakfast: + Banana-Spirulina Pancakes + Breakfast Burritos + Drop Biscuits Other Meals: + Arugula Pesto + Collard Greens + Creamed Spinach + Lemon Chickin' + Oven Fried Tofus + Sushi + Tempeh Salad + Tofu Mojo + Tofu Quiche Ethiopian Recipe Intro: + Atar Allecha + Berbere + Collard Greens + Injera + Niter Kebbeh + Misr Allecha + Salad + Yemiser W'et + Yetakelt W'et Indian Cooking Italian Cooking: + Antipasto + Cacciatore + Caponata + Tofu Lasagna + Risotto + Stuffed Shells Latino Cooking: + John's Bean Filling + No Queso-Quesadillas + Potato Taquitos + Tacos Middle East Cooking: + Dolmas (stuffed grape leaves) + Spinach Pies Quick Stuff: + Cheezie Pasta + Coolslaw + Guacamole + Tofu Olive Spread Recipe Club: + Cilantro Jalapeno Dip + Rebel Rocks + Spicy Black Bean Sandwiches + Spiced India Tea + TVP Sausage Gravy Sweets: + Blondies + Buckeye Balls + Chocolate Cherry Cookies + Chocolate Cupcakes + Chocolate Peanut Butter Porcupines + Chocolate Truffles + King Cake + Oatmeal Chocolate Cherry Cookies + O' Henry Bars + Peanut Butter Rice Crispy Squares + Rebel Rocks + Scotter Muffins + Vanilla Double Layer Cake

    31. Anna Rotkirch: Goldman Lecture, Life Course
    Anna Rotkirch, 1900luvun feministejä-luentosajra, sl01. Emma Goldman (1869-1940)– elämänkaari LAPSUUS JA NUORUUS (0-24 v.). 1869 EG Syntyi Kovnossa (nyk.
    http://www.valt.helsinki.fi/staff/rotkirch/goldmanlife.htm

    Home page

    LAPSUUS JA NUORUUS (0-24 v.)
    1869 EG Syntyi Kovnossa (nyk. Kaunas) Liettuassa
    1881 Aleksanteri I murhattu
    1885 Yhdysvaltoihin Helena.siskon kanssa, asuvat Rochesterissa (N.Y.)
    1886 Haymarket pommit
    1887 Avioliitto Jacob Kershnerin kanssa 1887 4 anarkistin teloitus
    Avioero.
    1889 Muuttaa New Yorkiin
    Tutustuu Alexander ’Sasha’ Berkmaniin (s.1870)
    Tutustuu anarkistijohtajaan Johann Mostiin Asuu Berkmanin, Modest Steinin ja Helen Minkinin kanssa Voiko kahta rakastaa? AB saa 22 vuoden vankeustuomion Tapaa Edward Bradyn AGITAATTORI ja ANARKISTI, ’PUNAINEN EMMA’ (24-54 v.) 1893 EG syytetty puheesta laittomassa kokouksessa, 1 vuosi vankeutta Vankilassa EG toimii sairaanhoitajana 1900 Berkman eritysselliin mm. ’The Sex Question’ luento 1901 Golman maan alle 1901 Presidentti W. McKinleyn murha 1903 Free Speech League 1905 IWW perustettu 1906 Mother Earth lehti Luentokiertueita 1908 Reitmanin uskottomuus 1910 ’Anarchism and Other Essays’ 1911 146 ammuttu ay-kokouksessa Moderni taide-skandaali 1914 ‘Social Significance of the Modern Drama’ 1. maailmansota

    32. Goldman Emma From FOLDOC
    history of philosophy LithuanianAmerican political activist (1869-1940); authorof Recommended Reading Red Emma Speaks An Emma Goldman Reader, ed. by Alix
    http://www.swif.uniba.it/lei/foldop/foldoc.cgi?Goldman Emma

    33. Emma Goldman
    Emma Goldman. (18691940). Emma Goldman was born in Kovno, Lithuaniain 1869 into a religiously traditional household. As a teenager
    http://www.us-israel.org/jsource/biography/EGoldman.html
    Emma Goldman
    Emma Goldman was born in Kovno, Lithuania in 1869 into a religiously traditional household. As a teenager, she was deeply influenced by the Russian anarchist writers Chernyshevsky and Bakunin. When she expressed a desire for further education, her father told her, "Girls don’t have to learn much! All a Jewish daughter needs to know is how to prepare gefilte fish, cut noodles fine and give the man plenty of children." Rebelling against such limits, in 1885 the strong-minded 16-year-old Goldman left home and boarded a boat for America, the land of freedom. By the 1890s, Goldman won a reputation as "Red Emma," perhaps the most notorious radical lecturer in the United States. In New York City, anarchist newspaper editor Johann influenced Goldman Most. Recognizing her charisma, Most encouraged the fiery Goldman to agitate among Yiddish speaking workers for general strikes and the overthrow of the state. Beyond the usual anarchist protest against economic inequality, Goldman also called for "freedom, the right to self-expression [and] everybody’s right to beautiful things." Goldman invoked the love of beauty and higher instincts that, she believed, are shared by all humans regardless of cultural background or economic status. At this time, Goldman met and became involved with Alexander Berkman, a fellow anarchist. In 1892, the pair became incensed by the repression and killing of strikers at Carnegie Steel’s Homestead plant, near Pittsburgh. Goldman funded Berkman’s purchase of the gun with which he wounded Henry Clay Frick, manager of Carnegie Steel, in a failed assassination attempt. Berkman was sentenced to life in prison and the United States government launched a crackdown on other anarchists. One year later, Goldman was imprisoned for violating laws that prohibited anarchist speech. Goldman proclaimed that the government "can never stop women from talking."

    34. Fromkin, Morris, 1892-1969, Collector.
    Goldman, Emma, 18691940. UWM MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION 125. BOX. FOLDER.Correspondence, 1934-1935. 1. 1. Newspaper Clippings, 1934-1937. 1.2.
    http://www.uwm.edu/Libraries/arch/findaids/uwmss125.html
    Archives: Finding Aid
    Fromkin, Morris, 1892-1969, collector.
    Collection of Morris Fromkin-Emma Goldman correspondence, 1934-1935.
    UWM Manuscript Collection 125
    .2 cubic ft. (1 small archives box)
    ABSTRACT: The collection consists mainly of correspondence between Morris Fromkin and Emma Goldman. Also included is correspondence between Fromkin and others discussing Goldman's financial status, speaking tours, and writings. The collection contains several newspaper clippings dating from 1934 to 1937 regarding Goldman's speaking tours, writings, and travels.
    ACCESS RESTRICTIONS: Wisconsin Statutes BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE: Emma Goldman was born June 27, 1869, in Kaunas, Lithuania. She emigrated to America in 1885. Within a few years of coming to America, Goldman became an active anarchist; she wrote articles and books, lectured, and even spent time in jail. In 1919 she was deported to Russia, but soon became disillusioned with the government of the newly formed Soviet Union. Goldman then moved to several countries, including Canada, France, and Spain. She died in Canada on May 14, 1940. Morris Fromkin was born in Kiev, Russia on July 25, 1892. As a child he emigrated to the United States and spent his formative years in New York City. Fromkin moved to Milwaukee to attend law school and to be a part of the progressive atmosphere of the city. As a lawyer, Fromkin offered his services to immigrants and the disadvantaged, often for free. Fromkin died April 24, 1969. Shortly after his death, his family and the University of WisconsinMilwaukee established the Morris Fromkin Lecture Series and the Morris Fromkin Memorial Collection which contains materials regarding social justice issues. This collection is housed in the Golda Meir Library at the University of WisconsinMilwaukee.

    35. People Of The Century: Gandhi, King And Goldman
    28, 1963. Emma Goldman (18691940) Religion, the dominion of the human mind;Property, the dominion of human needs; and Government, the dominion of human
    http://thedagger.com/archive/people.html
    thedagger.com
    People of the Century
    May their thought, spirit and action reverberate through the new millennium

    MAN OF THE CENTURY (shared) WOMAN OF THE CENTURY
    Mahatma Gandhi
    "Nonviolence is the greatest force at the disposal of mankind. It is mightier than the mightiest weapon of destruction devised by the ingenuity of man."
    "It may be long before the law of love will be recognised in international affairs. The machineries of government stand between and hide the hearts of one people from those of another."
    "Whenever I see an erring man, I say to myself I have also erred; when I see a lustful man I say to myself, so was I once; and in this way I feel kinship with everyone in the world and feel that I cannot be happy without the humblest of us being happy."
    "I have nothing new to teach the world. Truth and Non-Violence are as old as the hills. All I have done is to try experiments in both on as vast a scale as I could." Mahatma Gandhi Links:
    Martin Luther King, Jr.
    "I call on you to be maladjusted."

    36. Emma Goldman: Feminist, Anarchist And Social Reformer
    Living My Life by Emma Goldman At the turn of the 20th century, Emma Goldman(1869-1940) was probably the most hated woman in her adopted country.
    http://www.creativeprocess.net/moreposters/individuals/women/goldmane.html

    Test your IQ! FREE!

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    JUMP TO... MORE POSTERS BOOKSHELVES... MORE BOOKS- BY AND ABOUT... LINKS FOR LEARNING -peace education -art -science -social studies
    EDUCATIONAL POSTERS Emma Goldman Poster allposters.com
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    who is in the poster? Images of Labor Posters ... Famous Women posters Emma Goldman, who has a significant place in securing freedom of speech in the United States, was born in Lithuania on 27th June, 1869, to the petit-bourgeois Jewish family of Taube Bienowitch and Abraham Goldman. The family suffered from the social and political persecution of anti-Semitism and in1881 they moved to St. Petersburg where 12 year old Emma was exposed to the possiblity that there could be a new order to society. Reading What Is to Be Done by Chernishevsky excited her and gave her the heroine of a political organizer and cooperative worker to model. Through family connections in Germany Emma had hopes of getting an education, but those were dashed when she chaffed under the routinization of the Gymnasium.

    37. GgbainSubjects06
    Glover, George W.,Jr. Gluck, Alma,18841938. Goldman, Emma,1869-1940. Golf1900-1920.Golfers1900-1910. Golfers1900-1920. Golfers1900-1940.
    http://memory.loc.gov/pp/ggbainhtml/ggbainSubjects06.html
    PREV NEXT INDEX NEW SEARCH
    Subjects
    Glover, George W.,Jr.
    Gluck, Alma,1884-1938.

    Goldman, Emma,1869-1940.

    Gompers, Samuel,1850-1924.
    ... NEW SEARCH

    38. VvSubjects03
    Gish, Dorothy. Godowsky, Leopold,18701938. Gold, Arthur. Goldman, Emma,1869-1940.Graham, Martha. Graham, Shirley,1906-1977. Gray, Gilda. Green, Anne.
    http://memory.loc.gov/pp/vvSubjects03.html
    PREV NEXT INDEX NEW SEARCH ... Van Vechten Portraits
    Subjects
    Faulkner, William,1897-1962.
    Feibleman, Peter S.,1930-

    Fences.

    Fernandez, Jose.
    ... NEW SEARCH

    39. Emma Goldman Papers
    SUBJECT KEYWORDS Women's studies Emma Goldman, 18691940 Anarchists United StatesFeminism Women and socialism Birth control Government, resistance to.
    http://www.unl.edu:2020/alpha/Emma_Goldman_Papers.html
    UNL LIBRARIES INTERNET RESOURCES CATALOG RECORD
    To connect to this resource, click on the title TITLE:
    Emma Goldman papers
    AUTHORS:
    University of California at Berkeley
    National Historical Publications and Records Commission of the National Archives
    SUBJECT CATEGORIES:
    SUBJECT KEYWORDS:
    Women's studies
    Emma Goldman, 1869-1940
    Anarchists United States
    Feminism Women and socialism Birth control Government, resistance to SITE INCLUDES: Publications of the Emma Goldman Papers Project Emma Goldman: a Guide to her life and documentary sources Sample documents from the Emma Goldman Papers Online Exhibition: excerpts from the Emma Goldman Papers Traveling Exhibition Curriculum for Middle and High School Students: helps students explore issues such as freedom of expression, women's rights Selections from Emma Goldman's writings Excerpts from Anarchism and other essays, The social significance of the modern drama, and My disillusionment in Russia Excerpts of Goldman's essays and pamphlets Sample documents, letters, telegrams and handbills Photographs of Emma Goldman and her contemporaries Emmarabilia, a catalog of publications and commemorative items from the Emma Goldman papers Emma Goldman and free speech Emma Goldman and the Spanish Civil War War Resistance, Anti-Militarism and Deportation of Goldman Birth Control Pioneer
    Return to top October 16, 1997 JAS

    40. Emma Goldman Web Site
    http//sunsite.berkeley.edu/Goldman/. Emma Goldman (18691940) stands asa major figure in the history of American radicalism and feminism.
    http://www2.h-net.msu.edu/~women/links/resource-goldman.html
    Emma Goldman Web Site The Berkeley Digital Library SunSITE is pleased to announce a Web site devoted to the life and times of EMMA GOLDMAN at http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/Goldman/ Emma Goldman (1869-1940) stands as a major figure in the history of American radicalism and feminism. An influential and well-known anarchist of her day, Goldman was an early advocate of free speech, birth control, women's equality and independence, union organization, and the eight-hour work day. Her criticism of mandatory conscription of young men into the military during World War I led to a two-year imprisonment, followed by her deportation in 1919. For the rest of her life until her death in 1940, she continued to participate in the social and political movements of her age, from the Russian Revolution to the Spanish civil war. The site offers reproductions of photographs, correspondence, government documents, telegrams, and handbills relating to Emma Goldman and her contemporaries. In addition, the site provides an extensive index to papers relating to her life held by libraries around the world. Other features include essays, a chronology of her life, and an annotated exhibition of key materials. The Emma Goldman Papers Web site is a joint project of the Emma Goldman Papers Project, University of California, Berkeley and the Berkeley Digital Library SunSITE.

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