The_Anarchists The_Anarchists

The Anarchists - Definition

Image:James Joll The Anarchists (second edition).jpg

ISBN 0-416-72250-4 (hardback)

ISBN 0-416-72260-1 (paperback)

The Anarchists is a book by the historian James Joll. At 265 pages, it is a relatively brief history of the anarchist movement, covering its philosophical beginnings in Europe with William Godwin and Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, the further development by the Russians Peter Kropotkin and Mikhail Bakunin and its influence on the working class movements of the 19th and 20th centuries -- mainly in Europe and Russia, but also in the United States.

The Anarchists was first published in 1964; the second edition (pictured) was published in 1979.

Contents

    Part One

  1. Heresy and reason
  2. The myth of Revolution
  3. Part Two

  4. Reason and revolution: Proudhon
  5. Bakunin and the great schism
  6. Part Three

  7. Terrorism and propaganda by the deed
  8. Saints and rebels
  9. The Revolution that failed
  10. Anarchists and syndicalists
  11. Anarchists in action: Spain
  12. Conclusion


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