ABSTRACT

Anarchism—literally, a society without government—is less a political philosophy than it is a temperament. Anarchists are defiant people who seek to organize for the purpose of destroying organization. For its adherents, anarchism means a grand struggle against evil, a plea for the "new," a secular crusade against the debasement of self, a fight against the degradation of mankind that organized society seems to represent. Anarchism is anti-politics, anti-economics, anti-authoritarianism in all forms. Anarchism is a mood of perpetual rebellion.

The decade of the sixties witnessed a revival in the anarchist temperament, which Perlin finds evident in such diverse efforts as the women's liberation movement, student demonstrations, civil rights marches, free schools, the "back to the land" movement, demands for birth control and other—usually controversial-causes and activities. This new anarchism had few conscious links with the old anarchism. It was instead a response to changed conditions in the social fabric of American and European life, a reflex to the structural, cultural and psychological tensions that made those years turbulent, strife-filled and rebellious.

Perlin concludes that while a revolution was not made in the sixties, a revolutionary life-style became a possibility. The spokesmen for the marginal groups whose interests achieved a new kind of legitimacy during the sixties were anarchists or their sympathizers. A representative cross-section of their writings is included in this volume.

part |2 pages

The Return Of Anarchism

chapter 1|18 pages

The Recurrence of Defiance

part |2 pages

The Revival

chapter 2|14 pages

Anarchism Revisited

chapter 3|15 pages

The Relevance of Anarchism to Modern Society

Edited ByDolgoff Sam

part |2 pages

Anarchism On The Left

chapter 4|11 pages

Letter to the New Left

chapter 5|20 pages

The Movement: A New Beginning

chapter 6|8 pages

The Anarchist Revolution

chapter 7|16 pages

The Red Flag and the Black

Edited ByEmile Capouya

part |2 pages

Libertarianism

chapter 9|24 pages

The Anatomy of the State

chapter 10|6 pages

Why Be Libertarian?

part |2 pages

Doing Anarchism

chapter 11|4 pages

Anarchists — And Proud of It

chapter 12|4 pages

Why Terror Is Not an Anarchist Means

Edited ByM. C.

chapter 13|11 pages

Black Anarchy in New York

Edited ByH. W. Morton

chapter 14|14 pages

A New Consciousness and Its Polemics

chapter 15|4 pages

Some Secular Myths

Edited ByJack Robinson

chapter 16|4 pages

A Religious View of Anarchism

chapter 17|4 pages

Man — the Creator and Destroyer

Edited ByJustin

chapter 18|4 pages

Education and the Democratic Myth

chapter 19|14 pages

The Machinery of Conformity

chapter 20|10 pages

Towards Workers’ Control

Edited ByP. Turner

chapter 21|12 pages

From: Manifesto for a Nonviolent Revolution

Edited ByGeorge Lakey

part |2 pages

Anarchism as Critique and Possibility

chapter 23|16 pages

From: Post-Scarcity Anarchism

chapter 24|16 pages

The Conspiracy of Law

Edited ByHoward Zinn