Anarchism

A Documentary History of Libertarian Ideas; Volume One, From Anarchy to Anarchism (300CE to 1939)

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April 27, 2024 | History

Anarchism

A Documentary History of Libertarian Ideas; Volume One, From Anarchy to Anarchism (300CE to 1939)

  • 1 Want to read

Volume One of Anarchism: A Documentary History of Libertarian Ideas is a comprehensive and far-ranging collection of anarchist writings from the classical era to 1939. Edited and introduced by noted anarchist scholar Robert Graham, this incomparable volume includes the definitive texts from the anarchist tradition of political thought. It deals both with the positive ideas and proposals the anarchists tried to put into practice and with their critiques of the authoritarian theories and practices confronting them.

(Source: Black Rose Books)

Publish Date
Publisher
Black Rose Books
Language
English
Pages
519

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Cover of: Anarchism: A Documentary History Of Libertarian Ideas
Anarchism: A Documentary History Of Libertarian Ideas: From Anarchy to Anarchism (300 CE to 1939)
2005-05-30, Black Rose Books
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Cover of: Anarchism
Cover of: Anarchism: A Documentary History Of Libertarian Ideas

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Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Page x
Preface
Page xi
1. Early Texts On Servitude And Freedom
Page 1
1. Bao Jingyan: Neither Lord Nor Subject (300 CE)
Page 1
2. Etienne de la Boetie: On Voluntary Servitude (1552)
Page 4
3. Gerrard Winstanley: The New Law of Righteousness (1649)
Page 7
2. Enlightenment And Revolution
Page 12
4. William Godwin: Enquiry Concerning Political Justice (1793–97)
Page 12
5. Jean Varlet: The Explosion (1794)
Page 22
6. Sylvain Maréchal: Manifesto of the Equals (1796)
Page 27
3. Industrialization And The Emergence Of Socialism
Page 30
7. Charles Fourier: Attractive Labour (1822–37)
Page 30
8. Pierre-Joseph Proudhon: What is Property (1840)
Page 33
9. Proudhon: The System of Economic Contradictions (1846)
Page 38
4. Revolutionry Ideas And Action
Page 43
10. Michael Bakunin: The Reaction in Germany (1842)
Page 43
11. Max Stirner: The Ego and Its Own (1844)
Page 45
12. Proudhon: The General Idea of the Revolution (1851)
Page 51
13. Anselme Bellegarrigue: Anarchy is Order (1850)
Page 58
14. Joseph Déjacque: The Revolutionary Question (1854)
Page 60
15. Francisco Pi y Margall: Reaction and Revolution (1854)
Page 63
16. Carlo Pisacane: On Revolution (1857)
Page 65
17. Joseph Déjacque: On Being Human (1857)
Page 68
5. The Origins Of The Anarchist Movement And The International
Page 72
18. Proudhon: On Federalism (1863/65)
Page 72
19. Statutes of the First International (1864–1866)
Page 77
20. Bakunin: Socialism and the State (1867)
Page 79
21. Bakunin: Program of the International Brotherhood (1868)
Page 84
22. Bakunin: What is the State (1869)
Page 86
23. Bakunin: The Illusion of Universal Suffrage (1870)
Page 87
24. Bakunin: On Science and Authority (1871)
Page 89
6. The Conflict In The First International
Page 93
25. Bakunin: The Organization of the International (1871)
Page 93
26. The Sonvillier Circular (1871)
Page 96
27. The St. Imier Congress (1872)
Page 98
7. The Franco-Prussian War And The Paris Commune
Page 101
28. Bakunin: Letters to a Frenchman on the Present Crisis (1870)
Page 101
29. Bakunin: The Paris Commune and the Idea of the State (1871)
Page 104
30. Louise Michel: In Defence of the Commune (1871)
Page 105
31. Peter Kropotkin: The Paris Commune (1881)
Page 107
8. Anarchist Communism
Page 109
32. Carlo Cafiero: Anarchy and Communism (1880)
Page 109
33. Kropotkin: The Conquest of Bread (1892)
Page 114
34. Kropotkin: Fields, Factories and Workshops (1898)
Page 117
35. Luigi Galleani: The End of Anarchism (1907)
Page 119
9. Anarchy And Anarchism
Page 125
36. José Llunas Pujols: What is Anarchy (1882)
Page 125
37. Charlotte Wilson: Anarchism (1886)
Page 128
38. Éliseé Reclus: Anarchy (1894)
Page 130
39. Jean Grave: Moribund Society and Anarchy (1893)
Page 135
40. Gustav Landauer: Anarchism in Germany (1895)
Page 137
41. Kropotkin: On Anarchism (1896)
Page 141
42. E. Armand: Mini-Manual of the Anarchist Individualist (1911)
Page 145
10. Propaganda By The Deed
Page 150
43. Paul Brousse: Propaganda By the Deed (1877)
Page 150
44. Carlo Cafiero: Action (1880)
Page 152
45. Kropotkin: Expropriation (1885)
Page 153
46. Jean Grave: Means and Ends (1893)
Page 156
47. Leo Tolstoy: On Non-violent Resistance (1900)
Page 157
48. Errico Malatesta: Violence as a Social Factor (1895)
Page 160
49. Gustav Landauer: Destroying the State by Creating Socialism (1910/15)
Page 164
50. Voltairine de Cleyre: Direct Action (1912)
Page 167
11. Law And Morality
Page 171
51. William Godwin: Of Law (1797)
Page 171
52. Kropotkin: Law and Authority (1886)
Page 173
53. Errico Malatesta: The Duties of the Present Hour (1894)
Page 181
54. Kropotkin: Mutual Aid (1902) and Anarchist Morality (1890)
Page 183
12. Anarcho-Syndicalism
Page 189
55. The Pittsburgh Proclamation (1883)
Page 189
56. Fernand Pelloutier: Anarchism and the Workers’ Unions (1895)
Page 193
57. Antonio Pellicer Paraire: The Organization of Labour (1900)
Page 196
58. The Workers’ Federation of the Uruguayan Region (FORU): Declarations from the 3rd Congress (1911)
Page 199
59. Emma Goldman: On Syndicalism (1913)
Page 202
60. Pierre Monatte and Errico Malatesta: Syndicalism—For and Against (1907)
Page 206
13. Art And Anarchy
Page 212
61. Oscar Wilde: The Soul of Man Under Socialism (1891)
Page 212
62. Bernard Lazare: Anarchy and Literature (1894)
Page 215
63. Jean Grave: The Artist as Equal, Not Master (1899)
Page 218
14. Anarchy And Education
Page 220
64. Bakunin: Integral Education (1869)
Page 220
65. Francisco Ferrer: The Modern School (1908)
Page 224
66. Sébastien Faure: Libertarian Education (1910)
Page 231
15. Women, Love And Marriage
Page 236
67. Bakunin: Against Patriarchal Authority (1873)
Page 236
68. Louise Michel: Women’s Rights (1886)
Page 238
69. Carmen Lareva: Free Love (1896)
Page 242
70. Emma Goldman: Marriage (1897), Prostitution and Love (1910)
Page 246
16. The Mexican Revolution
Page 253
71. Voltairine de Cleyre: The Mexican Revolution (1911)
Page 253
72. Praxedis Guerrero: To Die On Your Feet (1910)
Page 256
73. Ricardo Flores Magón: Land and Liberty (1911–1918)
Page 259
17. War And Revolution In Europe
Page 268
74. Éliseé Reclus: Evolution and Revolution (1891)
Page 268
75. Tolstoy: Compulsory Military Service (1893)
Page 271
76. Jean Grave: Against Militarism and Colonialism (1893)
Page 274
77. Éliseé Reclus: The Modern State (1905)
Page 278
78. Otto Gross: Overcoming Cultural Crisis (1913)
Page 281
79. Gustav Landauer: For Socialism (1911)
Page 284
80. Malatesta: Anarchists Have Forgotten Their Principles (1914)
Page 286
81. International Anarchist Manifesto Against War (1915)
Page 289
82. Emma Goldman: The Road to Universal Slaughter (1915)
Page 291
18. The Russian Revolution
Page 295
83. Gregory Maksimov: The Soviets (1917)
Page 295
84. All-Russian Conference of Anarcho-Syndicalists: Resolution on Trade Unions and Factory Committees (1918)
Page 299
85. Manifestos of the Makhnovist Movement (1920)
Page 300
86. Peter Arshinov: The Makhnovshchina and Anarchism (1921)
Page 304
87. Voline: The Unknown Revolution (1947)
Page 307
88. Alexander Berkman: The Bolshevik Myth (1925)
Page 312
89. Emma Goldman: The Transvaluation of Values (1924)
Page 315
19. Anarchism In Latin America
Page 319
90. Comrades of the Chaco: Anarchist Manifesto (1892)
Page 319
91. Manuel González Prada: Our Indians (1904)
Page 320
92. Rafael Barrett: Striving for Anarchism (1909/10)
Page 324
93. Teodoro Antilli: Class Struggle and Social Struggle (1924)
Page 327
94. López Arango and Abad de Santillán: Anarchism in the Labour Movement (1925)
Page 328
95. The American Continental Workers’ Association (1929)
Page 330
20. Chinese Anarchism
Page 336
96. He Zhen: Women’s Liberation (1907)
Page 336
97. Chu Minyi: Universal Revolution (1907)
Page 341
98. Wu Zhihui: Education as Revolution (1908)
Page 347
99. Shifu: Goals and Methods of the Anarchist-Communist Party (1914)
Page 348
100. Huang Lingshuang: Writings on Evolution, Freedom and Marxism (1917–29)
Page 354
101. Li Pei Kan (Ba Jin): On Theory and Practice (1921–1927)
Page 358
21. Anarchism In Japan And Korea
Page 367
102. Kôtoku Shûsui: Letter from Prison (1910)
Page 367
103. Ôsugi Sakae: Social Idealism (1920)
Page 370
104. Itô Noe: The Facts of Anarchy (1921)
Page 371
105. Shin Chaeho: Declaration of the Korean Revolution (1923)
Page 373
106. Hatta Shûzô : On Syndicalism (1927)
Page 376
107. Kubo Yuzuru: On Class Struggle and the Daily Struggle (1928)
Page 379
108. The Talhwan: What We Advocate (1928)
Page 381
109. Takamure Itsue: A Vision of Anarchist Love (1930)
Page 383
110. Japanese Libertarian Federation: What To Do About War (1931)
Page 388
22. The Interwar Years
Page 390
111. Gustav Landauer: Revolution of the Spirit (1919)
Page 390
112. Errico Malatesta: An Anarchist Program (1920)
Page 395
113. Luigi Fabbri: Fascism: The Preventive Counter-Revolution (1921)
Page 408
114. The IWA: Declaration of the Principles of Revolutionary Syndicalism (1922)
Page 416
115. The Platform and its Critics (1926–27)
Page 418
116. Voline: Anarchist Synthesis
Page 431
117. Alexander Berkman: The ABC of Communist Anarchism (1927)
Page 436
118. Marcus Graham: Against the Machine (1934)
Page 442
119. Wilhelm Reich and the Mass Psychology of Fascism (1935)
Page 444
120. Bart de Ligt: The Conquest of Violence (1937)
Page 448
121. Rudolf Rocker: Nationalism and Culture (1937)
Page 451
23. The Spanish Revolution
Page 458
122. Félix Martí Ibáñez: The Sexual Revolution (1934)
Page 458
123. Lucía Sánchez Saornil: The Question of Feminism (1935)
Page 460
124. The CNT: Resolutions from the Zaragoza Congress (1936)
Page 466
125. Diego Abad de Santillán: The Libertarian Revolution (1937)
Page 475
126. Gaston Leval: Libertarian Democracy
Page 477
127. Albert Jensen: The CNT-FAI, the State and Government (1938)
Page 482
128. Diego Abad de Santillán: A Return to Principle (1938)
Page 488
24. Epilogue And Prologue To Volume 2
Page 496
129. Emma Goldman: A Life Worth Living (1934)
Page 496
130. Herbert Read: Poetry and Anarchism (1938)
Page 498
131. Malatesta: Toward Anarchy
Page 505
Index
Page 507

Edition Notes

Includes index.

Published in
Montreal, Canada, New York, USA
Series
Anarchism: A Documentary History of Libertarian Ideas, 1
Genre
Sources.
Copyright Date
2005

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
335/.83
Library of Congress
HX826 .A47 2005, HX833, HX826 .A53 2005

Contributors

Editor
Robert Graham

The Physical Object

Format
Paperback
Pagination
xiv, 519p.
Number of pages
519
Dimensions
23 x x centimeters

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL3465614M
Internet Archive
anarchismdocumen0000unse
ISBN 10
1551642506, 1551642514
ISBN 13
9781551642505, 9781551642512
LCCN
2005440046
OCLC/WorldCat
56419928
Library Thing
1398482
Google
d_DtAAAAMAAJ
Storygraph
d8f2e81c-2f1f-490f-b310-f197b7e1d22d
Goodreads
168902
2871555

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