Clifford Harper - Books By Clifford Harper

Books By Clifford Harper

  • Class War Comix - New Times (Epic, 1974 & Last Gasp, 1979)
  • Radical Technology - includes 6 'Visions' and other drawings by Clifford Harper (edited by Peter Harper, Godfrey Boyle and the editors of Undercurrents, Wildwood House, 1976)
  • The Education of Desire - The Anarchist Graphics of Clifford Harper (Annares Press, 1984)
  • Anarchy, A Graphic Guide to the History of Anarchism (Camden Press, 1987)
  • The Unknown Deserter - the Brief War of Private Aby Harris in Nine Drawings an A6 chapbook (Working Press, 1989)
  • An Alphabet an A6 chapbook (Working Press, 1989)
  • Anarchists: Thirty Six Picture Cards (Freedom Press,1994)
  • Prologemena to a Study of the Return of the Repressed in History (Rebel Press, 1994)
  • Visions of Poesy - an Anthology of Anarchist Poetry (co-edited with Dennis Gould and Jeff Cloves, Freedom Press, 1994)
  • Stamps: Anarchist Postage Stamps for after the Revolution (Rebel Press, 1997)
  • Philosopher Footballers: Sporting Heroes of Intellectual Distinction (Philosophy Football, 1997)
  • The Guardian Country Diary Drawings (Agraphia Press, 2003)
  • The Ballad of Robin Hood and the Deer (Agraphia Press, 2003)
  • The Ballad of Santo Caserio (Agraphia Press, 2003)
  • The City of Dreadful Night by James Thompson (Agraphia Press, 2003)
  • What Is Government? by P.J. Proudhon (Privately published, 2008)
  • Children's History and Colouring Book (National Union of Teachers, 2011)

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Famous quotes containing the words books, clifford and/or harper:

    Having books published is very destructive to writing. It is even worse than making love too much. Because when you make love too much at least you get a damned clarte that is like no other light. A very clear and hollow light.
    Ernest Hemingway (1899–1961)

    The advantage of love at first sight is that it delays a second sight.
    —Natalie Clifford Barney (1876–1972)

    We feel properly embarrassed when we are caught doing something that makes us look inept, knuckleheaded, or inappropriate. Maybe the difference is this: we feel embarrassed because we look bad, and we feel shame because we think we are bad. When we are embarrassed, we feel socially foolish. When we are shamed, we feel morally unworthy.
    Lewis B. Smedes, U.S. psychologist, educator. Shame and Grace: Healing the Shame We Don’t Deserve, ch. 2, Harper (1993)