Jello. Leroi Jones, formerly Imamu Amiri Baraka. Third World Press Chicago, 1970. Signed First Edition.
Softcover. Stapled yellow and black covers. The play is deeply rooted in radical politics and black power ethos. An important work.
Third World Press statement of purpose states he third world is a liberating concept for people of color, non-europeans-for Black People. That world has an ethos–a black aesthetic if u will–and it is the intent of Third World Press to capture that ethos, that black energy. We attempt to give an initial exposure to black writers. We publish black (poetry, historical notes, essays, short stories, and hopefully novellas) for Africans here (most referred to as “negroes”) and Africans abroad. And because we publish black–profit it not our thing/not our thing’
No signed copies in commerce.
Softcover. Stapled yellow and black covers. The play is deeply rooted in radical politics and black power ethos. An important work.
Third World Press statement of purpose states he third world is a liberating concept for people of color, non-europeans-for Black People. That world has an ethos–a black aesthetic if u will–and it is the intent of Third World Press to capture that ethos, that black energy. We attempt to give an initial exposure to black writers. We publish black (poetry, historical notes, essays, short stories, and hopefully novellas) for Africans here (most referred to as “negroes”) and Africans abroad. And because we publish black–profit it not our thing/not our thing’
No signed copies in commerce.
Softcover. Stapled yellow and black covers. The play is deeply rooted in radical politics and black power ethos. An important work.
Third World Press statement of purpose states he third world is a liberating concept for people of color, non-europeans-for Black People. That world has an ethos–a black aesthetic if u will–and it is the intent of Third World Press to capture that ethos, that black energy. We attempt to give an initial exposure to black writers. We publish black (poetry, historical notes, essays, short stories, and hopefully novellas) for Africans here (most referred to as “negroes”) and Africans abroad. And because we publish black–profit it not our thing/not our thing’
No signed copies in commerce.