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After Kropotkin's 1921 death, the Bolsheviks permitted Kropotkin's Moscow house to become a Kropotkin Museum. This closed in 1938 [50] with his wife's death. [53] Kropotkin is the namesake for multiple regional entities. [53]
Kropotkin is a biography of the Russian anarchist Peter Kropotkin written by historian Martin A. Miller and first published in 1976 by University of Chicago Press.. In comparison to the earlier Kropotkin biography, The Anarchist Prince, written by George Woodcock and Ivan Avakumović in 1950, Miller's Kropotkin was more comparatively more scholarly and critical, with a fuller bibliography.
The Conquest of Bread [a] is an 1892 book by the Russian anarchist Peter Kropotkin. Originally written in French, it first appeared as a series of articles in the anarchist journal Le Révolté . It was first published in Paris with a preface by Élisée Reclus , who also suggested the title.
Peter Hall, Professor of Planning at the Bartlett School of Architecture and Planning, University College, London, Fellow of the British Academy and a member of the Academia Europaea Doreen Massey , Professor of Geography, Faculty of Social Sciences, Open University and recipient of the Vautrin Lud International Geography Prize and the Victoria ...
After its initial release, Kropotkin continued to revise his Memoirs with Russian-language additions in a translation of the 1902 English release. These were published in multiple editions between 1906 and 1929. The canonical 1933 Soviet Academia edition derived from Kropotkin's Russian manuscript and became the basis for Soviet reprints. [1]
Baylen, Joseph O. (1953). "Review of The Anarchist Prince. The Biography of Prince Peter Kropotkin". The American Catholic Sociological Review. 14 (4): 260– 261. doi:10.2307/3708102. ISSN 0362-515X. JSTOR 3708102. Crone, G. R. (1951). "Review of The Anarchist Prince: The Biography of Prince Peter Kropotkin". The Geographical Journal. 117 (2 ...
Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution is a 1902 collection of anthropological essays by Russian naturalist and anarchist philosopher Peter Kropotkin.The essays, initially published in the English periodical The Nineteenth Century between 1890 and 1896, [1] explore the role of mutually beneficial cooperation and reciprocity (or "mutual aid") in the animal kingdom and human societies both past and ...
Ethics: Origin and Development is a book by Peter Kropotkin, published posthumously in 1921. It continues the argument of Mutual Aid , that sociable morality is essential to human survival. It was translated into English by Louis S. Friedland and Joseph R. Piroshnikoff in 1924.