-Caveat Lector-

This is exciting.  Rational thinkers everywhere are
learning that anarchy is NOT synonymous with chaos.
More below:
.......................................................

http://www.spunk.org/library/intro/sp001639.html


Anarchism

as defined by Grolier's Electronic Encyclopedia
Anarchism is an ideology that regards abolition of
government as the necessary precondition for a free
and just society. The term itself comes from the Greek
words meaning "without a ruler." Anarchism rejects all
forms of hierarchical authority, social and economic
as well as political. What distinguishes it from other
ideologies, however, is the central importance it
attaches to the state. To anarchists, the state is a
wholly artificial and illegitimate institution, the
bastion of privilege and exploitation in the modern
world.

Anarchist Thought
Although the roots of anarchist thought can be traced
at least as far back as the 18th-century English
writer William GODWIN, anarchism as a revolutionary
movement arose in the late 19th and early 20th
centuries. Its immediate objective was annihilation of
the state and of all authority imposed "from above
downward." Once liberated from political oppression,
society would spontaneously rebuild itself "from below
upward." A multitude of grass-roots organizations
would spring up to produce and distribute economic
goods and to satisfy other social needs. Where
necessary, these primary associations would form
regional and even nation-wide federations. The state,
with its impersonal laws and coercive bureaucracies,
would be supplanted by a dense web of self-governing
associations and free federations.

Like other radical ideologies of its time, anarchism
intended to complete the "unfinished business" of the
French Revolution. It placed special emphasis on the
third of the values expressed in the rallying cry
"liberty, equality, and fraternity." Anarchists had an
enduring faith in the natural solidarity and social
harmony of human beings. They believed that the
creation of the future society should be entrusted to
the free play of popular instincts, and any attempt by
anarchists themselves to offer more than technical
assistance would impose a new form of authority. They
tended to concentrate, therefore, on the task of
demolishing the existing state order rather than on
social blueprints of the future.

While battling the established order, anarchists also
battled the alternatives proposed by liberalism and
socialism. Like Marxism, anarchism was anticapitalist
and scorned liberalism's dedication to political
liberty on the grounds that only the propertied
classes could afford to enjoy it. They rejected with
equal vehemence, however, the Marxist "dictatorship of
the proletariat," the idea of capturing and using the
capitalist state to achieve a classless society.
Political institutions were seen as inherently
corrupting, and even the most selfless revolutionaries
would inevitably succumb to the joys of power and
privilege. Instead of the state "withering away," as
the Marxists anticipated, it would simply perpetuate a
new bureaucratic elite. This disagreement led to a
bitter conflict between Marx and the Russian anarchist
Michael BAKUNIN in the early 1870s, after which
Marxism and anarchism went their separate ways.

Anarchism in Practice
Anarchism attracted a following mainly in the
countries of eastern and southern Europe, where the
state's repressiveness was especially pronounced and
communal traditions remained strong. There were some
exceptions: the ideas of the French anarchist
Pierre-Joseph PROUDHON left a permanent mark on the
French industrial labor movement, and Bakunin's views
found adherents among the watchmakers of Switzerland's
Jura region. Anarchism had its greatest impact in
Russia, where numerous anarchist groups participated
in the revolutionary movement both before and during
1917. The two outstanding anarchist theorists also
were Russians: Bakunin, whose advocacy of popular
revolution had considerable influence, and Prince
Peter KROPOTKIN, whose writing spelled out some of the
constructive sides of the anarchist social vision.
Spain and Italy also had vigorous anarchist movements.
In only two instances did anarchists have a real
opportunity to put their social ideals into practice.
During the Russian civil war of 1917-21, (see RUSSIAN
REVOLUTIONS OF 1917), the peasant partisan movement
led by Nestor Makhno in the Ukraine tried to implement
anarchist principles, and in the SPANISH CIVIL WAR of
1936-39 anarchism was a significant force in the
regions of Catalonia and Andalusia. The results of
these experiments were limited and inconclusive. In
the United States, anarchism's influence was confined
largely to some of the European immigrant communities,
but it did produce a striking representative of
American radicalism in the person of Emma GOLDMAN.

Because anarchism regarded doctrinal and
organizational discipline as contradictions of its
principles, it gave rise to a wide variety of
interpretations. Anarchist-communists shared many of
the collectivist principles of socialism but sought to
realize them in autonomous local communities.
Anarcho-SYNDICALISM was an adaptation of anarchist
ideas to modern industrial conditions. It advocated
the running of factories by the workers themselves
rather than by owners or managers, with trade unions
(in French, syndicats) forming the building blocks of
a regenerated society. The novelist Leo Tolstoi
formulated a kind of Christian anarchism that rejected
the state on religious grounds, and there were
anarchist-individualists who proclaimed the
sovereignty of the individual personality.

Contrary to widespread belief, terrorism was never an
integral part of anarchist theory or practice. Some
anarchists, however, did engage in what they called
"propaganda by the deed," acts of terror and
assassination against state officials and property
owners.

Except in Spain, anarchism as an organized movement
virtually ceased to exist after the Russian
Revolutions. Anarchist ideas, however, have had a
longer life. In the 1960s and 1970s, currents of the
New left rediscovered anarchist theory, particularly
the writings of Kropotkin, and drew from it
inspiration for some of their communitarian and
antibureaucratic impulses. They also found new merit
in the anarchist critique of Marxian socialism. At
least some elements of the outlook proved to have a
surprising vitality and contemporary relevance.

Marshall S. Shatz

Bibliography: Avrich, Paul, Anarchist Portraits (1988)
and The Russian Anarchists (1967; repr. 1980); Guillet
de Monthoux, Pierre, Action and Existence (1983);
Joll, James, the Anarchists (1964); Shatz, Marshall
S., ed., The Essential Works of Anarchism (1971);
Woodcock, George, Anarchism (1962).

See also: NIHILISM; SYNDICALISM.

Copyright 1995 by Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.



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