Descripción
First Edition. DESCRIPTION: Illustrated black paper covered boards. Black and white patterned endpapers. Inscribed "To Dear John (John Papworth] from Vivian Craddock William (Member of the Uganda Society)." Illustrated with engravings by John Farleigh Language: English. Book Condition: Good: Light wear to corners, edges and spine ends and edges. Tightly bound with clean intact endpapers and strong hinges. Light foxing to fly pages and false title page. Lighter spotting and faint patches of foxing to margins of title page and rear pages. Inscription to false title page. All other pages are clean and unmarked. DJ Condition: No DJ. Pages 74. Size: 8vo 21cm by 13.5cm. PROVENANCE: Inscription: John Papworth & Vivian Craddock Williams. VIVIAN CRADDOCK WILLIAMS: Executive Committee of the Uganda SocietyFounded in 1923 as the Uganda Literary and Scientific Society and gained its current name in 1933. For the half century from 1933 to 1983, the Uganda Society played a prominent role as an innovative multi-disciplinary organization. It fostered and facilitated scientific, literary, social, economic and cultural pursuits of various sorts. The Uganda Society publication, The Uganda Journal, earned an excellent reputation throughout the world. The society, however, closed in the midst of civil unrest, in 1983. JOHN PAPWORTH: Acquired from the estate of John Papworth. John Papworth activist against big government, big business, supermarkets, the media, consumerism advocating the local people should control local affairs. Joined the RAF and served as a cook where he began his political awakening becoming an ardent socialist. Joined the Communist Party but thrown out for not expressing the right views. Papworth became a passionate and vocal peace activist and after one CND demonstration he was imprisoned alongside Bertrand Russell. In the 1960s he became close friends with the Austrian economist Leopold Kohr, originator of the small is beautiful concept and of societies where direct democracy and face-to-face communication were the norm. Papworth was the de facto originator of the concept of localisation. In 1966 he became founding editor of Resurgence, collaborating with Leopold Kohr, E.F. Schumacher and Herbert Read. Soon afterwards, president Kenneth Kaunda offered him a position as his personal assistant in Zambia. Most famously he staged a one-man protests against cars on the Abbey Road zebra crossing and gave shelter to George Blake, the KGBs most famous spy in the UK who had just escaped from prison. In the 1960s he was involved with the Movement for Colonial Freedom, and met Kenneth Kaunda, the first president of Zambia. Kaunda stayed with him in Earls Court, then invited him to Zambia as his personal assistant when he took over control of the country. In Zambia he found God and was ordained in 1975, before being driven out by anti-white thugs. He moved to north London in the 80s, and came to national fame in 1997 after saying that stealing from supermarkets was not sinful. At his house in St Johns Wood Papworth started regular events called Councils for Posterity, where people discussed our legacies to future generations, and which later expanded into larger London venues. Asked what he thinks his legacy will be, as he approaches what must be the end of his life, he said: I think a dispensation to ask questions about fundamental issues, rather than to take things for granted. John Papworth died aged 98 in 2020. N° de ref. del artículo 9143
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Detalles bibliográficos
Título: Adventures Of A Black Girl In Her Search For...
Editorial: Constable & Co Ltd, London
Año de publicación: 1932
Encuadernación: Hardcover
Ilustrador: FARLEIGH, John
Condición: Good
Condición de la sobrecubierta: No DJ
Edición: 1st Edition.