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By presenting the principles of anarchism in plain language, the New York anarchists hoped that readers might be swayed to support the movement or, at a minimum, that the book might improve the image of anarchism and anarchists in the public's eyes. Parts of the work initially appeared in the Yiddish anarchist newspaper, Freie Arbeiter Stimme. [6]
The Monkey Wrench Gang is a novel written by American author Edward Abbey (1927–1989), published in 1975.. Abbey's most famous work of fiction, the novel concerns the use of sabotage to protest environmentally damaging activities in the Southwestern United States, and was so influential that the term "monkeywrench," often used as a verb, has come to mean, besides sabotage and damage to ...
Anarchism is Movement: Anarchism, Neoanarchism and Postanarchism [128] Tomás Ibáñez Non-fiction Contemporary anarchism, Post-anarchism: 2014 The Anthropology of Utopia: Essays on Social Ecology and Community Development [129] Dan Chodorkoff Non-fiction: History and anthropology Green anarchism, History of anarchism: 2014 To Our Friends [130]
Marshall Shatz writes that Statism and Anarchy "helped to lay the foundations of a Russian anarchist movement as a separate current within the revolutionary stream". [1] The quote The People's Stick, condemning tyranny imposed with the rationale that the state represents "the people" as in Marxism, originates in this book:
Anarchist criminology certainly incorporates the sort of "visceral revolt" that characterizes anarchism itself, the passionate sense of "fuck authority," to quote the old anarchist slogan, the comes from being shoved around by police officers, judges, bosses, priests, and other authorities one time too many.
"Listen, Anarchist!" is an influential 1987 essay by Bufe on the internal dynamics of the American anarchist movement. [ 6 ] In this essay, Bufe [ 7 ] launches heavy criticism against anarcho-primitivists , including Fredy Perlman and the Vancouver Five eco-terrorist group, as well as the publications Fifth Estate , Resistance , The Spark , and ...
Anarchist Portraits is a series of biographical studies about the American anarchist movement written by Paul Avrich over twenty years. At the time, Avrich was the foremost scholar of the history of anarchism. He intended his vignettes to reflect the character of the anarchist movement through the lives of individual participants from the late ...
Closer to a biobibliography than an academic history, Nettlau shows intimate knowledge of the anarchist movement and personalities, but is more partisan and passionate in tone than detached and analytical. Revue française de science politique described the book as indispensable for anarchist studies. [4]