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         Goldman Emma:     more books (32)
  1. Biography - Goldman, Emma (1869-1940): An article from: Contemporary Authors Online by --Sketch by Carol Brennan, 2006-01-01
  2. The Social Significance Of The Modern Drama by Goldman Emma 1869-1940, 2010-10-15
  3. Anarchism And Other Essays by Goldman Emma 1869-1940, Havel Hippolyte, 2010-09-30
  4. Mother Earth by Berkman Alexander 1870-1936, Goldman Emma 1869-1940, 2010-10-06
  5. The social significance of the modern drama Emma Goldman. by Goldman. Emma. 1869-1940., 1914-01-01
  6. My disillusionment in Russia by Emma, 1869-1940 Goldman, 2009-10-26
  7. Living My Life: An Autobiography of Emma Goldman by Emma Goldman, 1982-10
  8. Emma Goldman: American Individualist (Library of American Biography Series) (2nd Edition) by John C. Chalberg, 2007-04-12
  9. Dangerous Woman: The Graphic Biography of Emma Goldman by Sharon Rudahl, 2007-09-01
  10. The Life And Times Of Emma Goldman: A Curriculum For Middle And High School Students
  11. Anarchy!: An Anthology of Emma Goldman's Mother Earth by Peter Glassgold, 2001-03
  12. Love, Anarchy, & Emma Goldman: A Biography by Candace Falk, 1990-03-01
  13. Emma Goldman: A Documentary History of the American Years, Volume Two: Making Speech Free, 1902-1909 by Emma Goldman, 2004-11-22
  14. Emma Goldman: A Guide to Her Life and Documentary Sources

1. Emma Goldman (1869-1940)
Emma Goldman (18691940). Homepages and General Resources
http://www.nagasaki-gaigo.ac.jp/ishikawa/amlit/g/goldman20.htm
Emma Goldman (1869-1940)

2. The Emma Goldman Papers (DL SunSITE)
Biography, writings, photographs, video clips, bibliography, and school curriculum materials about Category Society Politics Anarchism People Goldman, Emma......Berkeley Digital LibrarySunSITE, Emma Goldman (18691940) stands asa major figure in the history of American radicalism and feminism.
http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/Goldman/
E MMA G OLDMAN (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, and union organization. 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. "We shall soon be obliged to meet in cellars, or in darkened rooms with closed doors, and speak in whispers lest our next door neighbors should hear that freeborn citizens dare not speak in the open." (Emma Goldman, "Free Speech in Chicago," Lucifer the Lightbearer 30 November 1902) "In the face of this approaching disaster, it behooves men and women not yet overcome by war madness to raise their voice of protest, to call the attention of the people to the crime and outrage which are about to be perpetrated on them." (Emma Goldman, "Preparedness, The Road to Universal Slaughter,"

3. Library/people/goldman - Emma Goldman (1869-1940)
Emma Goldman (18691940) Anarchy in Interpretation The life of Emma Goldman (index) click here to go back to the previous index
http://www.spunk.org/texts/people/goldman
Emma Goldman (1869-1940)
click here to go back to the previous index

4. Goldman, Emma, 1869-1940. Papers, 1899-1982 (inclusive), 1899-1940 (bulk): A Fin
MC 332 Goldman, Emma, 18691940. Papers 1955; Freeman, Alden, 1862-1937,;Goldman, Emma, 1869-1940; Hartmann, (Carl) Sadakichi, 1869-1944;
http://oasis.harvard.edu/html/sch00027.html
MC 332
Goldman, Emma, 1869-1940. Papers, 1899-1982 (inclusive), 1899-1940 (bulk): A Finding Aid
Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America
Radcliffe College
August 1999
REQUEST AS:
Call No.: MC 332/M-88
Note: CLOSED. USE MICROFILM.
Repository: Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study
Creator: EMMA GOLDMAN, 1869-1940 LEON MALMED, 1881-1956
Title: Papers, 1899-1940, 1956
Quantity: 2 cartons; 6 reels of microfilm (M-88)
Administrative Information
Processing Information: Processed: June, 1983
By: Bert Hartry
Acquisition Information: Accession number: 81-M13
The Emma Goldman-Leon Malmed papers were purchased by the Schlesinger Library from Daniel Malmed, son of Leon Malmed, the recipient of most of the letters, in January 1981. The papers were acquired and processed and a portion of them was microfilmed with the support of the Alice R. Sigelman Philanthropic Fund of the Jewish Communal Fund and the Friends of the Schlesinger Library. In addition to the material inventoried here the papers include many of EG's printed articles and books, volumes I-XI of Mother Earth , clippings about EG, and periodicals, newspapers and pamphlets pertaining to the anarchist movement. This part of the collection is in very fragile condition and will be closed to research until it is microfilmed.

5. Goldman, Emma, 1869-1940. Papers, 1899-1982 (inclusive), 1899-1940 (bulk): A Fin
No Frames Version.
http://oasis.harvard.edu/html/sch00027frames.html
No Frames Version No Frames Version

6. Library/people/goldman - Emma Goldman (1869-1940)
Emma Goldman (18691940). Anarchy in Interpretation The life of EmmaGoldman (index). click here to go back to the previous index
http://www.spunk.org/library/people/goldman/
Emma Goldman (1869-1940)
click here to go back to the previous index

7. Creative Quotations From Emma Goldman (1869-1940)
Quotes from Emma Goldman to inspire your creative thinking
http://creativequotations.com/one/1142.htm
CQ Home Search CQ Random CQ Search eLibrary ... Bemorecreative
Creative Quotations from . . . Emma Goldman
(1869-1940) born on Jun 27 US anarchist. She was an international anarchist who conducted leftist activities in the United States; published "Anarchism and Other Essays," 1910.
Rent Clean Movies
Random Quotes Book Close Outs No one has yet fully realized the wealth of sympathy, kindness and generosity hidden in the soul of a child. The effort of every true education should be to unlock that treasure.
When we can't dream any longer, we die. Revolution is but thought carried into action. Methods and means cannot be separated from the ultimate aim. Someone has said that it requires less mental effort to condemn than to think.
Click here for more search engines and links to biographical websites The World's Largest Poster and Print Store All Categories Books ISBN (best) Title Author Clearance Movies DVD VHS Merchandise Sell Texts: Enter an ISBN The most comprehensive image search on the web.
Published Sources for the Quotations Shown Above: F: "Living My Life," 1931.

8. Review Of "Emma Goldman In Exile" By Herbert Mitang
Emma Goldman (18691940) was born in Russia and moved to the UnitedStates in 1886. She was soon caught up in a swirl of movements
http://www.spunk.org/texts/writers/goldman/sp000185.html
Emma Goldman in Exile
From the Russian Revolution to the Spanish Civil War

By Alice Wexler
Illustrated. 301 pages. Beacon Press. $24.95
Reviewed by By HERBERT MITGANG
At the height of the red scare in 1919, the American anarchist Emma Goldman was imprisoned on Ellis Island, put on a ship with 246 men and two other women who were branded radicals, and deported to the Soviet Union. The roundup was engineered by J. Edgar Hoover, then head of the Justice Department's Radical Division, and started him on the road to prominence. Gen. Leonard Wood, a veteran of the Spanish-American War, said the radicals ``should be put on a ship of stone with sails of lead and their first stopping place should be hell.'' In darkness, a military transport with a detachment of armed marines sailed past the Statue of Liberty. Eventually, the ship reached a port in Finland, where the radicals entrained and crossed the border into revolutionary Russia. Greeted by the wife of Maxim Gorky and listening to a Soviet military band playing the Internationale, an emotional Emma Goldman said: ``This is the greatest day in my life. I once found political freedom in America. Now the doors are closed to free thinkers, and the enemies of capitalism find once more sanctuary in Russia.'' As Alice Wexler points out in ``Emma Goldman in Exile,'' a well-researched and readable biography, her enthusiasm for the new Union of Soviet Socialist Republics quickly waned. The struggle for leadership and internal conflicts of the revolution altered the supposed dictatorship of the proletariat into a dictatorship of the Communist Party apparatus.

9. Emma Goldman
Special thanks to the Microsoft Corporation for their contribution to this site. The following information came from Microsoft Encarta Goldman, Emma (18691940), Russian anarchist, born in Kovno (now Kaunas, Lithuania).
http://www.netsrq.com/~dbois/goldman.html

10. Emma Goldman Resources At Erratic Impact's Feminism Web
read. At the turn of the 20th century, Emma Goldman (18691940) was probablythe most hated woman in her adopted country. (She emigrated
http://www.erraticimpact.com/~feminism/html/women_goldman_emma.htm

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Emma Goldman
Online Resources Texts: Emma Goldman Used Books: Emma Goldman Know of a Resource? ... Are you an Author? Living My Life by Emma Goldman Wendy Smith Click here for more Emma Goldman Books Click here for Feminism Books
Emma Goldman Papers Project: University of California at Berkeley
Maintained by University of California at Berkeley. 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...
Emma Goldman: A Guide to Her Life and Documentary Sources
Candace Falk, Editor and Director; Stephen Cole, Associate Editor; Sally Thomas, Assistant Editor. This site includes:

11. Creative Quotations From Emma Goldman (1869-1940)
Creative Quotations from . . . Emma Goldman (18691940) born on Jun27 US anarchist. She was an international anarchist who conducted
http://www.creativequotations.com/one/1142.htm
CQ Home Search CQ Random CQ Search eLibrary ... Bemorecreative
Creative Quotations from . . . Emma Goldman
(1869-1940) born on Jun 27 US anarchist. She was an international anarchist who conducted leftist activities in the United States; published "Anarchism and Other Essays," 1910.
Rent Clean Movies
Random Quotes Book Close Outs No one has yet fully realized the wealth of sympathy, kindness and generosity hidden in the soul of a child. The effort of every true education should be to unlock that treasure.
When we can't dream any longer, we die. Revolution is but thought carried into action. Methods and means cannot be separated from the ultimate aim. Someone has said that it requires less mental effort to condemn than to think.
Click here for more search engines and links to biographical websites The World's Largest Poster and Print Store All Categories Books ISBN (best) Title Author Clearance Movies DVD VHS Merchandise Sell Texts: Enter an ISBN The most comprehensive image search on the web.
Published Sources for the Quotations Shown Above: F: "Living My Life," 1931.

12. The Emma Goldman Papers: A Microfilm Edition
2. Feminism United States History Sources. 3. Goldman, Emma, 18691940 Archives. 4. Goldman, Emma, 1869-1940 Correspondence. BACK TO TOP OF PAGE.
http://www.library.utoronto.ca/robarts/microtext/collection/pages/emgldman.html
[Main Index] [Microform Search] [Site Map] [Microtext Section Home] ... [U of T Home] The Emma Goldman Papers: A Microfilm Edition . Edited by Candace Falk, Ronald J. Zboray and Daniel Cornford. Alexandria, VA: Chadwyck-Healey, 1990-. 69 reels. COVERAGE Emma Goldman (1869-1940) is a major figure in the history of American radicalism and feminism. She publicized a number of significant causes including birth control, union organization, women's rights, the eight-hour work day, and modern educational methods. She also advocated movements opposing conscription and World War I. This collection includes 40,000 letters, writings, government and surveillance documents, clippings, and photographs. The collection is divided into four series: Series 1: Correspondence: The correspondence, gathered from all over the world, records Goldman's life as an activist and public figure. Correspondents included important cultural and political figures of the age such as V.I. Lenin, John Dewey, Bertrand Russell, George Bernard Shaw, H.G. Wells, Margaret Sanger, Havelock Ellis, Jack London, Helen Keller, Rudolf Rocker, Agnes Smedley, Ethel Mannin, and Frank Harris. Also included is correspondence addressing issues of personal alienation, love, and community in both her public and private writing. Series 2: Government Documents: This series covers U.S. government files on Goldman, including agents' reports of lectures otherwise unavailable to the public; court records and transcripts of her various trials and immigration hearings; postal censorship, and files that began with the McKinley assassination in 1901 and continued throughout her life. Also included are investigative government files from the Soviet Union, Germany, France, Italy, Japan, and Canada.

13. Loepa Berlin - Emma Goldman English
Emma Goldman (18691940).
http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/Lobby/8522/emma_eng.html
Emma Goldman (1869-1940) Go to: Haymarket Riot
Go to: Homestead Strike
Emma Goldman was born on June 27 1869 in a Jewish ghetto in Lithuanian and immigrated with 16 years in the USA. Anti-Semitism molds her first experiences there what made her fast become a critic of her new country, just as she was of her old one. But what led her to dedicate her life to political radicalism was the hanging of 4 anarchists in Chicago who were accused of murdering policemen during the Haymarket riot . She worked as a sewing machine operator in a corset factory what made her concluding that the factory owners exploited her and the other workers. She was attracted to anarchism not only because it wanted to replace capitalism with free worker cooperatives but also because stood for free speech, atheism and the freedom from sexual inhibition. Like many other anarchists in her time she was attracted to the idea of political violence. During the Homestead strike she helped her lover and friend Alexander Berkmann with the planning of the attempted assassination of the steel factory owner Henry Frick. Only a year later she was one year in prison because she encouraged unemployed workers to steel bread if they really need to. Between 1908 and 1916 Emma Goldman edited the anarchistic magazine "Mother Earth" and spoke throughout the USA for the anarchist cause. She believed that birth control would decrease the human misery by reducing the burden of large families and giving women of all classes sexual freedom. She was one of the first women who published books about this. She argued that not bearing children is a woman right every woman should have the means to prevent conceptions. Working as a nurse and a midwife and the attendance at a Parisian conference where condoms and other contraceptives were discussed, Emma Goldman knew a lot about modern birth control methods. In 1916 she was arrested for violating a law that forbade the spreading of information about contraceptives. She was also for "free love" what meant for her the sexual and spiritual union of two people who are not married. She believed that the ma

14. Emma Goldman (1869-1940)
Translate this page Emma Goldman (1869-1940). Una lucha cotidiana. Por León Czolgosz. Tratara Emma Goldman (1869-1940) es una tarea compleja. Más que
http://www.geocities.com/organizacion_libertaria_ja/EmmaGoldman.htm
Emma Goldman (1869-1940) Una lucha cotidiana Viviendo mi vida, Masacre de Haymarket o propaganda por el hecho Salvando un autoritario control paterno y familiar, la niña Goldman forjó desde sus primeros años en las provincias de Kurlandia y Königsberg en la Prusia Oriental un fuerte e inclaudicable carácter. "... Entre sus rasgos, uno de los que más destaca es la ausencia de miedo. Ella misma confiesa que es una de las mayores afinidades que puede sentir con otra persona y que es la cualidad que le permite salir airosa de graves dificultades, que le da valor para iniciar proyectos arriesgados y que le da alas en sus épocas de crisis", escribe Ignacio Soriano en el prólogo de Viviendo mi vida Sasha . Esto no le impidió mantener una relación polarizada entre dos fuertes caracteres. "... Emma Goldman es tiránica. Una verdadera lástima. Y lo peor es que ella misma no se da cuenta... Sin duda es en muchos aspectos una gran mujer, pero vivir cerca de ella es imposible", habría descrito Berkman, con quien inicialmente estrechó lazos sentimentales para dar paso a un profundo amor, respeto y reconomiento entre dos luchadores sociales. Su ascendencia judía también sale a cotación. A juicio del historiador costarricense Rodrigo Quesada Monge (1952), ésta sería "un ingrediente fundamental para comprender su enorme capacidad de lucha y su espíritu solidario".

15. Goldman, Emma
Goldman, Emma. Emma Goldman. By courtesy of the State HistoricalSociety of Wisconsin. (18691940), anarchist Born on June 27, 1869
http://search.eb.com/women/articles/Goldman_Emma.html
Goldman, Emma
Emma Goldman By courtesy of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin (1869-1940), anarchist In 1895, upon her release, Goldman embarked on lecture tours of Europe and the United States. Leon Czolgosz, the assassin of President William McKinley, claimed to have been inspired by her, although there was no direct connection between them, and by that time she had repudiated her earlier tolerance of violence as an acceptable means of achieving social ends. In 1906 Berkman was freed, and he and Goldman resumed their joint activities. In that year she founded Mother Earth, a periodical that she edited until its suppression in 1917. Her naturalization as a U.S. citizen was revoked by a legal stratagem in 1908. Two years later she published Anarchism and Other Essays. Goldman spoke often and widely, not only on anarchism and social problems but also on the current European drama of Henrik Ibsen, August Strindberg, G.B. Shaw, and others. She was instrumental in introducing many European playwrights to an American audience. Her lectures on that topic were published in 1914 as The Social Significance of the Modern Drama.

16. Creative Quotations From Emma Goldman (1869-1940)
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17. Emma Goldman Reference Archive
Reference Writers Emma Goldman, Emma Goldman Reference Archive. 18691940.There is no conflict between the individual and the social
http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/goldman/
Reference Writers: Emma Goldman
Emma Goldman Reference Archive
Anarchism: What It Really Stands For Biography Articles: Anarchism: What It Really Stands For
My Disillusionment in Russia
Links: Anarchy Archives: Goldman
Emma Goldman Papers Project
Reference Writers Marxists Internet Archive

18. The Emma Goldman Test
Emma Goldman (18691940) stands as a major figure in the history ofAmerican radicalism and feminism. An influential and well-known
http://www.zpub.com/notes/emmatest.html
PASS Fail The American Century by Harold Evans [ amazon ] has a full page photo of Emma and covers the context of the anarchist movement in the United States The heavily promoted, The Century by Peter Jennings et al [ amazon ] does not even bother to mention Emma Goldman (yet manages to include Bernard Geotz). Only a passing mention is made of anarchists in reference to the Russian Revolution. This book definitely fails the Emma Goldman Test
Can a book which claims to be about US history in the 20th century not mention Emma Goldman? The American Heritage Encyclopedia of American History by John MacK Faragher [ amazon ] - has a listing for Emma Goldman and anarchism
100 Most Important Women of the 20th Century by Kevin Markey [ amazon
Emma is listed as one of the 100 (along with Ann Frank)
A People's History of the United States : 1492-Present by Howard Zinn [ amazon - some mention, but would think that he would have done more
Other books which purport to cover US history, but have nothing about Emma Goldman.
  • A History of the American People by Paul Johnson
  • American Heritage History of the United States ~ Douglas Brinkley
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 -

19. Jew Watch - Jewish Mind Control - Anarchism - Emma Goldman
Goldman, Emma (18691940). ( Colliers Encyclopedia CD-ROM ). Alice Wexler, Goldman,Emma (1869-1940)., Vol. 11, Colliers Encyclopedia CD-ROM, 02-28-1996.
http://www.jewwatch.com/jew-mindcontrol-anarchism-emmagoldman.html
Jew Watch Top Jewish Mind Control: Anarchism: Emma Goldberg ( The Reader's Companion to American History ) Goldman, Emma (1869-1940), anarchist and feminist. Opponent of established
authority, war, and totalitarian government, Emma Goldman
was the most famous rebel of her day. A passionate activist
andcharismatic speaker, she committed her life to radical causes
in Europe and America. Born in a Jewish ghetto in Lithuania,
Goldman immigrated to the United States when she was
sixteen. Reared in a Jewish tradition of prophecy and opposition
to injustice, her early experience molded by Russian
anti-Semitism and reading in Russian nihilist literature, Goldman
was destined to become a critic of her newly adopted country,
just as she was of the Old World she left behind. But it was the hanging in 1887 of four Chicago anarchists accused of murdering policemen in the Haymarket affair that led her to dedicate her life to political radicalism.

20. Emma Goldman (1869-1940) At Famous Creative Women
Famous Creative Women presents. . . Emma Goldman (18691940) bornon Jun 27 US anarchist. She was an international anarchist who
http://www.famouscreativewomen.com/one/1142.htm
FCW Home Browse by Month Lookup Indexes Search eLibrary ... Bemorecreative Famous Creative Women presents. . . Emma Goldman
(1869-1940) born on Jun 27 US anarchist. She was an international anarchist who conducted leftist activities in the United States; published "Anarchism and Other Essays," 1910.
No one has yet fully realized the wealth of sympathy, kindness and generosity hidden in the soul of a child. The effort of every true education should be to unlock that treasure.
When we can't dream any longer, we die. Revolution is but thought carried into action. Methods and means cannot be separated from the ultimate aim. Someone has said that it requires less mental effort to condemn than to think.
The World's Largest Poster and Print Store All Categories Books ISBN (best) Title Author Clearance Movies DVD VHS Merchandise Sell Texts: Enter an ISBN The most comprehensive image search on the web.
Published Sources for the Quotations Shown Above: F: "Living My Life," 1931. R: In "Words of Women Quotations for Success," by Power Dynamics Publishing, 1997. A: In "The Feminist Papers," ed. Alice Rossi, 1973.

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