ABSTRACT

In the last few years, anarchism has been rediscovered as a transnational, cosmopolitan and multifaceted movement. Its traditions, often hastily dismissed, are increasingly revealing insights which inspire present-day scholarship in geography. This book provides a historical geography of anarchism, analysing the places and spatiality of historical anarchist movements, key thinkers, and the present scientific challenges of the geographical anarchist traditions.

This volume offers rich and detailed insights into the lesser-known worlds of anarchist geographies with contributions from international leading experts. It also explores the historical geographies of anarchism by examining their expressions in a series of distinct geographical contexts and their development over time. Contributions examine the changes that the anarchist movement(s) sought to bring out in their space and time, and the way this spirit continues to animate the anarchist geographies of our own, perhaps often in unpredictable ways. There is also an examination of contemporary expressions of anarchist geographical thought in the fields of social movements, environmental struggles, post-statist geographies, indigenous thinking and situated cosmopolitanisms.

This is valuable reading for students and researchers interested in historical geography, political geography, social movements and anarchism.

part I|82 pages

Spaces of the history of anarchism

chapter 1|19 pages

Anarchists and the city

Governance, revolution and the imagination

chapter 2|15 pages

Uncovering and understanding hidden bonds

Applying social field theory to the financial records of anarchist newspapers

chapter 3|25 pages

The other nation

The places of the Italian anarchist press in the USA

part II|64 pages

Early anarchist geographies and their places

chapter 6|16 pages

Revolutions and their places

The anarchist geographers and the problem of nationalities in the Age of Empire (1875–1914)

chapter 7|22 pages

Historicising ‘anarchist geography’

Six issues for debate from a historian’s point of view 1

part III|58 pages

Anarchist geographies, places and present challenges

chapter 8|13 pages

Lived spaces of anarchy

Colin Ward’s social anarchy in action

chapter 9|14 pages

Moment, flow, language, non-plan

The unique architecture of insurrection in a Brazilian urban periphery

chapter 10|16 pages

Future (pre-)histories of the state

On anarchy, archaeology, and the decolonial