N. 98608730

Non più disponibile
TIME - 1983-1982
Offerte chiuse
8 settimane fa

TIME - 1983-1982

A near-complete consecutive run of Time Magazine – European Edition, spanning 1983 and 1984 (approx. 49 issues in total). This collection captures two of the most dynamic years of the 1980s — from Cold War confrontations to pop culture revolutions, technological breakthroughs, and historic political milestones. Highlights include: -Margaret Thatcher: “Maggie by a Mile” (June 20 1983) – U.K. re-election landslide -David Bowie: “Dancing to the Music” (July 18 1983) – Pop icon at his creative peak -George Orwell: “1984 – Big Brother’s Father” (Nov 28 1983) – The prescient look ahead to 1984 -Pope John Paul II: “Why Forgive?” (Jan 9 1984) – Forgiving his would-be assassin -Geraldine Ferraro: “A Historic Choice” (July 23 1984) – First woman nominated for U.S. Vice President -Carl Lewis: “A Star Is Born” (Aug 13 1984) – 1984 Los Angeles Olympics triumph -Dr. William DeVries: “Medical Miracles” (Dec 10 1984) – The artificial heart revolution 1983: June 20 – “Maggie by a Mile” (Margaret Thatcher’s re-election landslide in Britain); July 11 – “The Colossus That Works” (IBM’s global dominance in computing); July 18 – “Dancing to the Music” (David Bowie and the rise of the global pop superstar); July 25 – “Travel: Americans Everywhere” (U.S. tourism abroad); August 1 – “Japan: A Nation in Search of Itself” (economic identity and innovation in Japan); August 8 – “Central America: The Big Stick Approach” (Reagan’s foreign policy and U.S. interventions); September 12 – “Shooting to Kill” (the Soviet destruction of Korean Air Lines Flight 007); September 19 – “Putting Moscow on the Defensive” (Reagan’s Cold War counterstrategy); September 26 – “Banishing Mao’s Ghost” (Deng Xiaoping and China’s reform movement); October 3 – “Lebanon: Holding the Line” (U.S. Marines amid Beirut conflict); October 10 – “Superdollar” (the dominance of the U.S. dollar); October 24 – “The Tribes of Britain” (punk, mod, and youth subcultures); October 31 – “Luther: 500 Years Young” (Martin Luther’s legacy); November 7 – “Rescue in Grenada” (U.S. invasion of Grenada); November 14 – “J.F.K.: How Good a President Was He?” (Kennedy reassessed); November 28 – “1984: Big Brother’s Father” (George Orwell and renewed relevance of 1984); December 12 – “Western Europe: Racism on the Rise” (xenophobia and immigration); December 19 – “Syria: Clashing with the U.S.” (Hafez al-Assad and Middle East tensions); and December 26 – “Images ’83: Pictures of the Year” (year-end retrospective and “Video Rocks” MTV feature). 1984: January 9 – “Why Forgive?” (Pope John Paul II pardons his would-be assassin Mehmet Ali Agca); January 16 – “Africa’s Woes” (coups, conflict, and corruption across the continent); January 23 – “Cashing In Big” (venture capitalist Arthur Rock and the new Silicon Valley elite); January 30 – “Olympic Dreams” (Sarajevo Winter Olympics preview); February 6 – “One-Man New Wave” (French actor Gérard Depardieu); February 13 – “Nuclear Power: The U.S. Turns Off, The World Plugs In” (global energy contrast); February 20 – “The Succession” (Soviet power vacuum after Andropov’s death); February 27 – “The Kremlin’s New Master” (Konstantin Chernenko’s rise); March 5 – “That Monster Deficit” (Reagan’s U.S. economic challenges); March 26 – “Cholesterol: And Now the Bad News…” (diet and health awareness); April 2 – “Sex in the ’80s: The Revolution Is Over” (social conservatism and AIDS); April 23 – “Mining Nicaragua’s Harbors” (CIA operations and global criticism); April 30 – “China’s New Face” (Reagan’s visit and modernization efforts); May 7 – “Getting Away with Murder?” (Libyan Embassy crisis in London); May 14 – “Master of the Musical” (Andrew Lloyd Webber’s theatrical success); May 21 – “Olympic Turmoil: Why the Soviets Said Nyet” (the USSR’s Olympic boycott); May 28 – “D-Day: Forty Years After the Great Crusade” (Normandy commemoration); June 4 – “And for Vice President… Why Not a Woman?” (rise of Ferraro and Feinstein); June 11 – “Why Pain Hurts” (neuroscience breakthrough); June 18 – “I Am the Nominee” (Walter Mondale secures the Democratic ticket); June 25 – “Moscow’s Hard Line” (renewed Cold War rhetoric); July 16 – “The High-Tech Gap” (Europe’s struggle to compete with Silicon Valley); July 23 – “A Historic Choice” (Geraldine Ferraro becomes the first female U.S. vice-presidential nominee); July 30 – “The Wonderful World of the Olympics” (Los Angeles 1984 Games preview); August 13 – “Carl Lewis: A Star Is Born” (Olympic heroics and four gold medals); August 27 – “Republican Encore: Coronation in Dallas” (Reagan–Bush re-election convention); September 3 – “Ferraro Fights Back” (defending against media scrutiny); September 10 – “Making Babies” (IVF and reproductive science); November 5 – “Mind Your Manners!” (revival of civility and etiquette); and December 10 – “Medical Miracles: But How to Pay the Bill?” (Dr. DeVries and the artificial heart). Each issue is a time capsule of 20th-century history, featuring world leaders, cultural icons, scientific advances, and international crises — all in Time’s signature journalistic and visual style.

N. 98608730

Non più disponibile
TIME - 1983-1982

TIME - 1983-1982

A near-complete consecutive run of Time Magazine – European Edition, spanning 1983 and 1984 (approx. 49 issues in total).
This collection captures two of the most dynamic years of the 1980s — from Cold War confrontations to pop culture revolutions, technological breakthroughs, and historic political milestones.

Highlights include:

-Margaret Thatcher: “Maggie by a Mile” (June 20 1983) – U.K. re-election landslide
-David Bowie: “Dancing to the Music” (July 18 1983) – Pop icon at his creative peak
-George Orwell: “1984 – Big Brother’s Father” (Nov 28 1983) – The prescient look ahead to 1984
-Pope John Paul II: “Why Forgive?” (Jan 9 1984) – Forgiving his would-be assassin
-Geraldine Ferraro: “A Historic Choice” (July 23 1984) – First woman nominated for U.S. Vice President
-Carl Lewis: “A Star Is Born” (Aug 13 1984) – 1984 Los Angeles Olympics triumph
-Dr. William DeVries: “Medical Miracles” (Dec 10 1984) – The artificial heart revolution

1983:
June 20 – “Maggie by a Mile” (Margaret Thatcher’s re-election landslide in Britain); July 11 – “The Colossus That Works” (IBM’s global dominance in computing); July 18 – “Dancing to the Music” (David Bowie and the rise of the global pop superstar); July 25 – “Travel: Americans Everywhere” (U.S. tourism abroad); August 1 – “Japan: A Nation in Search of Itself” (economic identity and innovation in Japan); August 8 – “Central America: The Big Stick Approach” (Reagan’s foreign policy and U.S. interventions); September 12 – “Shooting to Kill” (the Soviet destruction of Korean Air Lines Flight 007); September 19 – “Putting Moscow on the Defensive” (Reagan’s Cold War counterstrategy); September 26 – “Banishing Mao’s Ghost” (Deng Xiaoping and China’s reform movement); October 3 – “Lebanon: Holding the Line” (U.S. Marines amid Beirut conflict); October 10 – “Superdollar” (the dominance of the U.S. dollar); October 24 – “The Tribes of Britain” (punk, mod, and youth subcultures); October 31 – “Luther: 500 Years Young” (Martin Luther’s legacy); November 7 – “Rescue in Grenada” (U.S. invasion of Grenada); November 14 – “J.F.K.: How Good a President Was He?” (Kennedy reassessed); November 28 – “1984: Big Brother’s Father” (George Orwell and renewed relevance of 1984); December 12 – “Western Europe: Racism on the Rise” (xenophobia and immigration); December 19 – “Syria: Clashing with the U.S.” (Hafez al-Assad and Middle East tensions); and December 26 – “Images ’83: Pictures of the Year” (year-end retrospective and “Video Rocks” MTV feature).

1984:
January 9 – “Why Forgive?” (Pope John Paul II pardons his would-be assassin Mehmet Ali Agca); January 16 – “Africa’s Woes” (coups, conflict, and corruption across the continent); January 23 – “Cashing In Big” (venture capitalist Arthur Rock and the new Silicon Valley elite); January 30 – “Olympic Dreams” (Sarajevo Winter Olympics preview); February 6 – “One-Man New Wave” (French actor Gérard Depardieu); February 13 – “Nuclear Power: The U.S. Turns Off, The World Plugs In” (global energy contrast); February 20 – “The Succession” (Soviet power vacuum after Andropov’s death); February 27 – “The Kremlin’s New Master” (Konstantin Chernenko’s rise); March 5 – “That Monster Deficit” (Reagan’s U.S. economic challenges); March 26 – “Cholesterol: And Now the Bad News…” (diet and health awareness); April 2 – “Sex in the ’80s: The Revolution Is Over” (social conservatism and AIDS); April 23 – “Mining Nicaragua’s Harbors” (CIA operations and global criticism); April 30 – “China’s New Face” (Reagan’s visit and modernization efforts); May 7 – “Getting Away with Murder?” (Libyan Embassy crisis in London); May 14 – “Master of the Musical” (Andrew Lloyd Webber’s theatrical success); May 21 – “Olympic Turmoil: Why the Soviets Said Nyet” (the USSR’s Olympic boycott); May 28 – “D-Day: Forty Years After the Great Crusade” (Normandy commemoration); June 4 – “And for Vice President… Why Not a Woman?” (rise of Ferraro and Feinstein); June 11 – “Why Pain Hurts” (neuroscience breakthrough); June 18 – “I Am the Nominee” (Walter Mondale secures the Democratic ticket); June 25 – “Moscow’s Hard Line” (renewed Cold War rhetoric); July 16 – “The High-Tech Gap” (Europe’s struggle to compete with Silicon Valley); July 23 – “A Historic Choice” (Geraldine Ferraro becomes the first female U.S. vice-presidential nominee); July 30 – “The Wonderful World of the Olympics” (Los Angeles 1984 Games preview); August 13 – “Carl Lewis: A Star Is Born” (Olympic heroics and four gold medals); August 27 – “Republican Encore: Coronation in Dallas” (Reagan–Bush re-election convention); September 3 – “Ferraro Fights Back” (defending against media scrutiny); September 10 – “Making Babies” (IVF and reproductive science); November 5 – “Mind Your Manners!” (revival of civility and etiquette); and December 10 – “Medical Miracles: But How to Pay the Bill?” (Dr. DeVries and the artificial heart).

Each issue is a time capsule of 20th-century history, featuring world leaders, cultural icons, scientific advances, and international crises — all in Time’s signature journalistic and visual style.

Offerte chiuse
Ilaria Colombo
Esperto
Stima  € 150 - € 200

Oggetti simili

Per te in

Libri

Imposta un’allerta di ricerca
Imposta un’allerta di ricerca per ricevere una notifica quando sono disponibili nuove corrispondenze.

Questo oggetto era presente in

                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    

Come fare acquisti su Catawiki

Scopri di più sulla nostra Tutela degli acquirenti

      1. Scopri oggetti speciali

      Esplora migliaia di oggetti speciali selezionati da esperti. Osserva le foto, i dettagli e il valore stimato di ogni oggetto speciale. 

      2. Fai l’offerta più alta

      Trova qualcosa che ti interessa e fai l’offerta migliore. Puoi seguire l’asta fino alla fine o lasciare che il nostro sistema faccia le offerte per te. Non devi fare altro che impostare un’offerta per l’importo massimo che desideri pagare. 

      3. Paga in tutta sicurezza

      Effettua il tuo pagamento e noi lo terremo al sicuro finché il tuo oggetto speciale non sarà arrivato a destinazione sano e salvo. Utilizziamo un sistema di pagamento affidabile per gestire tutte le transazioni. 

Hai qualcosa di simile da vendere?

Possiamo aiutarti a guadagnare di più dai tuoi oggetti speciali, che tu venda professionalmente o sia nuovo nel mondo delle aste online.

Vendi il tuo oggetto