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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

81. Goldman, Emma. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
2001. Goldman, Emma. 1869–1940, American anarchist, b. Lithuania. She emigratedto Rochester, NY, in 1886 and worked there in clothing factories.
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82. 25450. Goldman, Emma. The Columbia World Of Quotations. 1996
ATTRIBUTION Emma Goldman (1869–1940), US anarchist and author; bornin Russia. Anarchism and Other Essays, 3rd rev. ed., ch. 3 (1917).
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83. Goldman, Emma
Goldman, Emma. Goldman, Emma, 1869–1940, American anarchist, b. Lithuania. Sheemigrated to Rochester, NY, in 1886 and worked there in clothing factories.
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    Goldman, Emma Goldman, Emma, , American anarchist, b. Lithuania. She emigrated to Rochester, N.Y., in 1886 and worked there in clothing factories. After 1889 she was active in the anarchist movement, and her speeches attracted attention throughout the United States. In 1893, Goldman was imprisoned for inciting to riot. From 1906 she was associated with Alexander Berkman in publishing the anarchist paper Mother Earth. In 1916 she was imprisoned for publicly advocating birth control, and in 1917 for obstructing the draft. With Berkman, Goldman was deported in 1919 to Russia but left that country in 1921 because of her disagreement with the Bolshevik government. In 1926 she married James Colton, a Welshman. She was permitted to reenter the United States for a lecture tour in 1934 on condition that she refrain from public discussion of politics. She took an active part in the Spanish civil war in 1936. She died in Toronto. See her Living My Life (1931). Other writings include

84. Emma Goldman (1869 - 1940 )
Translate this page Emma Goldman (1869 - 1940 ). Emma Goldman wurde am 27.Juni 1869 in Kowno (Russland)als Tochter eines russisch-jüdischen Theaterdirektors geboren. Das 7. - 13.
http://www.twokmi-kimali.de/texte/Emma_Goldman_Bio.htm
Teil 4: Emma Goldman (1869 - 1940 ) Sie starb am 14.Mai 1940 in Toronto. Quelle:Rabenschwarz Twokmi-Kimali.de

85. Experience Literature - Essays
Back to List Emma Goldman (1869–1940) Defense LINKS Emma Goldman A Guide to HerLife and Documentary Sources http//sunsite.berkeley.edu/Goldman/ Part of
http://www.bedfordstmartins.com/introduction_literature/essays/goldman.htm
Emma Goldman
Defense
LINKS
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. In two books, My Disillusionment with Russia (1923) and My Further Disillusionment with Russia (1924), Goldman announced her break with the Russian regime. She spent her final years in Canada, anxiously awaiting word on her request to end her exile. The request was denied. She died in Canada and is buried in Chicago. Other works include

86. Emma Goldman
Emma Goldman. 1869 1940.
http://flag.blackened.net/daver/anarchism/emma/
Emma Goldman
Local:
Anarchism: What it really Stands For

The Individual, Society and the State
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Living My Life
I have some Pictures of Emma and her grave in Chicago. Return to Anarchist Library

87. Emma Goldman

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88. Emma Goldman
Translate this page Emma Goldman (1869 - 1940). Also ebenso unerschrockene wie wortmächtigeVertreterin libertärer Theorien war Emma Goldman eine der
http://www.anarchismus.at/txt1/goldman.htm
Emma Goldman (1869 - 1940) Also ebenso unerschrockene wie wortmächtige Vertreterin libertärer Theorien war Emma Goldman eine der eigenwilligsten und bekanntesten Persönlichkeiten der anarchistischen Bewegung. 1869 wurde sie in Kowno als Tochter eines russisch-jüdischen Theaterdirektors geboren und lebte vom siebten bis zum dreizehnten Lebensjahr bei einer Großmutter im deutschen Königsberg. 1882 zog sie mit ihren Eltern nach Petersburg, wo sie in den Kreisen der revolutionär gesinnten Intelligenz verkehrte. 1886 brach sie als Siebzehnjährige endgültig aus dem bildungsbürgerlichen Milieu des Elternhauses aus - sie folgte ihrer Schwester Helene in die USA. Ihren Lebensunterhalt verdiente sie sich dort zunächst als einfache Arbeiterin in der Textilindustrie von New Haven und Rochester. Sie lernte so die Lebensverhältnisse des amerikanischen Proletariats aus eigener Erfahrung kennen. („Der Zwischenfall von Chicago war der Beginn des populären amerikanischen Vorurteils gegen jede Art von Anarchismus.“ George Woodcock)

89. Emma Goldman
Emma Goldman (1869 – 1940). The scowling stolidity of this likeness bespeaksan individual who did not mind a little controversy now and then.
http://www.blackhawkauto.org/women/goldman.html
Emma Goldman
Gelatin silver print, 1934
National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution; gift of Virginia M. Zabriskie
Full text from the book
Women of Our Time by Frederick S. Voss, available from the Museum Store

90. Emma Goldman
logo. Blackhawk Museum • 3700 Blackhawk Plaza Circle • Danville,CA 94506 • 925.736.2280. Emma Goldman (1869 – 1940). The scowling
http://www.blackhawkauto.org/women/goldmanbk.html
Emma Goldman
Born in Russia, Goldman immigrated to the United States in 1885 and settled in Rochester, New York, where she worked in a factory. Low wages and poor working conditions quickly soured her on American capitalism, and by 1890, having moved to New York City, she had become an adherent to anarchism, which envisioned replacing the centralized state with small communal entities founded on principles of absolute equality. In advancing that end, she accepted resorting to illegal tactics, and among her first major acts on behalf of anarchism was collaboration in a nearly successful attempt to assassinate Carnegie Steel executive Henry Clay Frick during the Homestead Strike of 1892. Her part in that plot went unpunished, but the following year she was sentenced to prison for telling unemployed workers in New York City that it was their right to steal food.
Gelatin silver print, 1934
National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution; gift of Virginia M. Zabriskie

91. Personality Of The Week - Goldmann
Emma Goldman (1869–1940), political activist. She was born in Kaunas(Kovno), Lithuania, then part of the Russian Empire, in 1869
http://www.bh.org.il/Names/POW/Goldmann2.asp

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Selected Bibliography:
GOLDMAN, Emma. My disillusionment in Russia . New York: Dover Publications, 2003. GOLDMAN, Emma. Patriotism; a menace to liberty . Pp. 16. New York: Mother Earth Publishing Association, [1908?] GOLDMAN, Emma. The crushing of the Russian revolution . Pp. 42. London: Freedom Press, 1922. GOLDMAN, Emma. Living my life . 2 v. New York: A. A. Knopf, 1931 GLASSGOLD, Peter (Ed.). Anarchy!: an anthology of Emma Goldman's Mother earth . Pp. xxxvi, 428, ill. Washington, D.C.: Counterpoint, 2001 SHULMAN, Alix Kates (Ed.). Red Emma speaks: an Emma Goldman reader . Pp. xii, 464. 3rd ed. Amherst, N.Y.: Humanity Books, 1998 FALK, Candace and al (Eds.). Emma Goldman: a documentary history of the American years . Berkeley: University of California Press, 2003 MORITZ, Theresa. The world's most dangerous woman: a new biography of Emma Goldman . Pp. 232. Vancouver: Subway Books, 2001 WENZER, Kenneth C. Anarchists adrift: Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman . Pp. xiii, 114. St. James, NY: Brandywine Press, 1996

92. Archives Hub: Emma Goldman And James Colton Papers
Emma Goldman and James Colton papers. Letters from Emma Goldman to JamesColton. Dates of creation 19251932 Extent 1 file Scope and Content.
http://www.archiveshub.ac.uk/news/03072902.html
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Emma Goldman and James Colton papers
Reference and contact details: GB 0217 SWCC:MND/71
Title : Emma Goldman and James Colton papers
Dates of creation
Held at : University of Wales Swansea LIS Archives
Extent : 2 files, 1 volume and 1 item
Name of Creator : Various
Level of Description : fonds
Language of Material : eng
Administrative/Biographical History
Emma Goldman was born on the 27th June 1869 in Lithuania. She emigrated to the United States in 1885 and worked in a clothing factory in Rochester before moving to New York in 1889. Emma Goldman was an anarchist. Influenced by the libertarian writings of Johann Most, and working closely with Alexander Berkman, she became active in the trade union movement. She was imprisoned when she was accused of urging the unemployed to steal the food they needed. After she was released from prison, Goldman became involved in the campaign for women's suffrage and birth control information. In 1901, when Leon Czolgosz assassinated President William McKinley, he claimed he had been influenced by the speeches of Goldman. As an opponent of America's involvement in the First World War, she was again imprisoned for two years for obstructing conscription. In 1919, Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman were deported to Russia along with 236 other people, after Alexander M. Palmer, the attorney general and his special assistant, John Edgar Hoover, organized a plan to deport a large number of left-wing figures. They chose Emma Goldman, as they knew that a high profile case would help their campaign. Palmer particularly objected to her views on birth control, free love and religion and claimed that her speeches had inspired anarchists to commit acts of violence in the United States.

93. Emma Goldman
Emma Goldman (June 27, 1869 1940) was a Russian-born anarchist knownfor her radical libertarian and feminist writing and speeches.
http://www.abacci.com/books/authorDetails.asp?authorID=89

94. Emma Goldman Quotes - The Quotations Page
Quotations by Author. Emma Goldman (1869 1940) US (Lithuanian-born)anarchist more author details. Showing quotations 1 to 2 of 2 total,
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Emma Goldman (1869 - 1940)

US (Lithuanian-born) anarchist [more author details]
Showing quotations 1 to 2 of 2 total
Crime is naught but misdirected energy.
Emma Goldman, Anarchism (1910)
The free expression of the hopes and aspirations of a people is the greatest and only safety in a sane society.
Emma Goldman, Living My Life, 1931
Search for Emma Goldman at Amazon.com Showing quotations 1 to 2 of 2 total Previous Author: Allan Goldfein Next Author: William Goldman Return to Author List Browse our complete list of 2521 authors by last name: A B C D ... Z
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95. Emma Goldman - Author Details And Biography - The Quotations Page
Quotations by Author. Author details Emma Goldman (1869 1940). FullName, Goldman, Emma (Red Emma). Biography, US (Lithuanian-born) anarchist.
http://www.quotationspage.com/author.php?author=Emma Goldman

96. AllRefer Encyclopedia - Emma Goldman (Political Science, Biographies) - Encyclop
Emma Goldman 1869–1940, American anarchist, b. Lithuania. She emigratedto Rochester, NY, in 1886 and worked there in clothing factories.
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Related Category: Political Science, Biographies Emma Goldman Berkman in publishing the anarchist paper Mother Earth. In 1916 she was imprisoned for publicly advocating birth control, and in 1917 for obstructing the draft. With Berkman, Goldman was deported in 1919 to Russia but left that country in 1921 because of her disagreement with the Bolshevik government. In 1926 she married James Colton, a Welshman. She was permitted to reenter the United States for a lecture tour in 1934 on condition that she refrain from public discussion of politics. She took an active part in the Spanish civil war in 1936. She died in Toronto. See her Living My Life (1931). Other writings include Anarchism and Other Essays Social Significance of Modern Drama (1914), and My Disillusionment in Russia (1923). See biographies by R. Drinnon (1961) and A. Shulman (1971).

97. Anarchy!: An Anthology Of Emma Goldman's Mother Earth
Anarchy! An Anthology of Emma Goldman s Mother Earth. Written by Peter GlassgoldPublished by Counterpoint Press (March 2001) ISBN 1582430403 Price $25.00.
http://20th-century-history-books.com/1582430403.html

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98. Anarchism, Bibliography

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ANARCHISM
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BOOKS, (DOCUMENTS, REPORTS, ETC.)
BAILIE, William. Josiah Warren, the first American anarchist: a sociological study.
Warren, Josiah, 1798-1874 - Anarchism and Anarchists.
LC 06002520.
ELTZBACHER, Paul. Anarchism. (Translated by Steven T. Byington). New York, N.Y., U.S.A.; London, G.B.: R. Tucker; A. C. Fifield, 1908. 309+[1]+[12] p., ports., index, 18 cm.
Translation of: Der Anarchismus. (German).
Anarchism - Anarchists.
LC 08005260.
GANDINI, Jean-Jacques. AnarchismChinaHistory - ChinaPolitics and Government, 1912-1928. ISBN 2905691085; LC 87122597. GOLDMAN, Emma. Anarchism and other essays. (With biographic sketch by Hippolyte Havel). New York, N.Y., U.S.A.: Mother Earth Publishing Association, 1910. 277 p., front. (port.), 19 cm. Goldman, Emma, 1869-1940 - Anarchism - Feminism. LC 11001583. Anarchism, and other essays. (With biographic sketch by Hippolyte Havel). Port Washington, N.Y., U.S.A.: Kennikat Press, [1969]. 277 p., port., bibliogr., 20 cm. Originally published: New York, N.Y., U.S.A.: Mother Earth Publishing Association, 1910. Goldman, Emma, 1869-1940 - Anarchism - Feminism.

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