Transnational Classes and International Relations; the RIPE Series in Global Political Economy
London: Routledge, 1998. Paperback. 8vo, 192 pages. Firm binding; no loose pages. Small bend at the bottom of the back cover and pages late in the book.
London: Routledge, 1998. Paperback. 8vo, 192 pages. Firm binding; no loose pages. Small bend at the bottom of the back cover and pages late in the book.
New York: Holocaust Library, 1970. Paperback. 8vo, 416 pages. Firm binding; no loose pages. Black marks on the half-title page. Small bends on covers and a couple of pages; tanned pages. A good reading and reference copy.
Fayetteville: The University of Arkansas Press, 1988. Paperback. 8vo, 268 pages. Firm binding; no loose pages. Foxed edges and wear to the covers. Tanned pages. A readable copy.
Self-Published, 2021. Paperback. 8vo, 226 pages. Firm binding; no loose pages. Book and cover with minimal wear. Signed by the author on the title page (no inscription): "I pray you find blessings & hope from the words contained in my book. God Bless, George Gentry."
Self-Published, 2018. First Edition. Paperback. 8vo, unpaginated. Firm binding; no loose pages. Book and cover with minor wear. No writing or marks observed.
Shiloh Road Publishers, 2014. Hardcover. 8vo, 2184 pages. Decorated boards. Firm binding; no loose pages. Book and dust jacket with minor wear. Some marks on bottom edge. Wave at the top of some pages, but no apparent liquid damage. Nice clean copy with no writing or marks observed. This is.....
Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1981. Cloth. 8vo, 243 pages. Plum-colored boards with gilt accents. Firm binding; no loose pages. Book and dust jacket with minor wear. Dust jacket with minor rubbing, chips and small tears; sunned spine. Translated by Frances Frenaye. French edition published in 1976.
Washington DC: Smithsonian, 1988. Paperback. 8vo, 264 pages. Firm binding; no loose pages. Book and cover with minor wear. From a review by Peter Worsley: "Bruce Kapferer writes about his own people, Australians, famous for their often aggressively democratic egalitarianism. He then contrasts Australia with its opposite, the hierarchical caste-society.....