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The Anarchists


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.

Table of contents

Contents

Part One

    I  Heresy and reason
   II  The myth of Revolution

Part Two

  III  Reason and revolution: Proudhon
   IV  Bakunin and the great schism

Part Three

    V  Terrorism and propaganda by the deed[?] 
   VI  Saints and rebels
  VII  The Revolution that failed
 VIII  Anarchists and syndicalists
   IX  Anarchists in action:  Spain
    X  Conclusion

Note: the book concerns libertarian socialism, individualist anarchism and anarcho-syndicalism, but does not mention anarcho-capitalism.



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