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 > 150 years  of Libertarian
 
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150 years of Libertarian
 
Thu, 12/11/2008 - 05:38 — _afaq_ (http://anarchism.pageabode.com/user/afaq) 
 [1]  
 
This year, 2008, marks the 150th anniversary of the use of the  word “
libertarian” by anarchists. 
As is well known, anarchists use the terms “libertarian”,  “libertarian 
socialist” and “libertarian communist” as equivalent  to “anarchist” and, 
similarly, “libertarian socialism” or  “libertarian communism” as an 
alternative for “anarchism.” This is  perfectly understandable, as the 
anarchist 
goal is freedom, liberty, and the  ending of all hierarchical and 
authoritarian institutions and social  relations. 
Unfortunately, in the United States the term “libertarian” has become, 
since  the 1970s, associated with the right-wing, i.e., supporters of “
free-market”  capitalism. That defenders of the hierarchy associated with 
private 
property  seek to associate the term “libertarian” for _their  authoritarian 
system_ 
(http://anarchism.pageabode.com/anarcho/an-anarchist-critique-of-anarcho-statism)
  [2] is both  unfortunate and somewhat unbelievable to any 
genuine libertarian. Equally  unfortunately, thanks to the power of money and 
the relative small size of the  anarchist movement in America, this 
appropriation of the term has become, to a  large extent, the default meaning 
there. 
Somewhat ironically, this results in  some right-wing “libertarians” 
complaining that we genuine libertarians have  “stolen” their name in order to 
associate our socialist ideas with it! 
The facts are somewhat different. As Murray Bookchin noted,  “libertarian” 
was “a term created by nineteenth-century European  anarchists, not by 
contemporary American right-wing proprietarians.” [The  Ecology of Freedom, p. 
57] While we discuss this issue in _An Anarchist FAQ_ 
(http://www.anarchistfaq.org.uk/)  [3] in a few places (most  obviously, 
_section A.1.3_ 
(http://anarchism.pageabode.com/afaq/secA1.html#seca13)   [4]) it is useful on 
the 
150th  anniversary to discuss the history of anarchist use of the word “
libertarian” to  describe our ideas. 
The first anarchist journal to use the term “libertarian” was La  
Libertaire, Journal du Mouvement Social. Somewhat ironically, given recent  
developments in America, it was published in New York between 1858 and 1861 by  
French communist-anarchist Joseph Déjacque. The next recorded use of the term  
was in Europe, when “libertarian communism” was used at a French regional  
anarchist Congress at Le Havre (16-22 November, 1880). January the following  
year saw a French manifesto issued on “Libertarian or Anarchist Communism.”
 Finally, 1895 saw leading anarchists Sébastien Faure and Louise Michel  
publish La Libertaire in France. [Max Nettlau, A Short History of  Anarchism, 
pp. 75-6, p. 145 and p. 162] 
It should be noted that Nettlau’s history was first written in 1932 and  
revised in 1934. George Woodcock, in his history of anarchism, reported the 
same  facts as regards Déjacque and Faure [Anarchism: A History of libertarian 
 ideas and movements, p. 233] Significantly, Woodcock’s account was written 
 in 1962 and makes no mention of right-wing use of the term “libertarian.” 
More  recently, Robert Graham states that Déjacque’s act made “him the 
first person  to use the word ‘libertarian’ as synonymous with ‘anarchist’” 
while Faure  and Michel were “popularising the use of the word ‘libertarian’ 
as a synonym  for ‘anarchist.’” [Robert Graham (Ed.), Anarchism: A 
Documentary History  of Libertarian Ideas, p. 60 and p. 231] 
Which means, incidentally, that Louise Michel is linked with anarchists 
both  using the term “libertarian” to describe our ideas and with the _black 
flag_ (http://anarchism.pageabode.com/afaq/append2.html)  [5] becoming our 
symbol. Faure subsequently wrote an  article entitled _“Libertarian  Communism”
_ 
(http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/faure/1903/libertarian-communism.htm)
  [6] in  1903. 
In terms of America, we find Benjamin Tucker (a leading individualist  
anarchist) discussing “libertarian solutions” to land use in February,  1897. 
As we discuss in section G.3, the Individualist Anarchists attacked  
capitalist (i.e., right-“libertarian”) property rights in land as the “land  
monopoly” and looked forward to a time when “the libertarian principle to  the 
tenure of land” was actually applied. [Liberty, no. 350, p. 5]  The 1920s saw 
communist-anarchist Bartolomeo Vanzetti argue that: 
"After all we are socialists as the social-democrats, the socialists,  the 
communists, and the I.W.W. are all Socialists. The difference - the  
fundamental one - between us and all the other is that they are authoritarian  
while we are libertarian; they believe in a State or Government of their own;  
we believe in no State or Government." [Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo  
Vanzetti, The Letters of Sacco and Vanzetti, p. 274]
Interestingly, Rudolf Rocker’s 1949 book, published in Los Angeles, states  
that individualist anarchist Stephan P. Andrews was “one of the most  
versatile and significant exponents of libertarian socialism.” [Pioneers  of 
American Freedom, p. 85] It should also be noted that 1909 saw the  translation 
into English of Kropotkin’s history of the French Revolution in  which he 
argued that “the principles of anarchism . . . had their origin . .  . in the 
deeds of the Great French Revolution” and “the libertarians  would no doubt 
so the same today.” [The Great French Revolution, vol.  1, p. 204 and p. 
206] 
The most famous use of “libertarian communism” must be by the world’s  
largest anarchist movement, the anarcho-syndicalist CNT in Spain. After  
proclaiming its aim to be “libertarian communism” in 1919, the CNT held its  
national congress of May 1936 in Zaragoza, with 649 delegates representing 982  
unions with a membership of over 550,000. One of the resolutions passed was  
_“The  Confederal Conception of Libertarian Communism”_ 
(http://www.zabalaza.net/pdfs/varpams/libcomm_cnt.pdf)  [7] [Jose Peirats, The 
CNT in the 
Spanish  Revolution, vol. 1, pp. 103-10] This was resolution on libertarian 
communism  was largely the work of Isaac Puente, author of the widely reprinted 
and  translated _pamphlet of the same  name_ 
(http://flag.blackened.net/liberty/libcom.html)  [8] published  four years 
previously. That year, 1932, 
also saw the founding of the  Federación Ibérica de Juventudes Libertarias 
(Iberian Federation of  Anarchist Youth) in Madrid by anarchists. 
The term “libertarian” has been used by more people than just anarchists, 
but  always to describe socialist ideas close to anarchism. For example, in 
Britain  during the 1960s and 1970s _Maurice  Brinton_ 
(http://anarchism.pageabode.com/anarcho/maurice-brinton-for-workers-power)  [9] 
and the group he 
was a member  of (Solidarity) described their politics as “libertarian” and 
their  decentralised, self-managed form of socialism is hard to distinguish 
from  anarchism. So while “libertarian” did become broader than anarchism, 
it was  still used by people on the left who aimed for socialism. 
Unsurprisingly, given this well known and well documented use of the word  “
libertarian” by anarchists (and those close to them on the left) to 
describe  their ideas, the use of the term by supporters of capitalism is 
deplorable. And  it should be resisted. Writing in the 1980s, Murray Bookchin 
noted 
that in the  United States the “term ‘libertarian’ itself, to be sure, 
raises a problem,  notably, the specious identification of an 
anti-authoritarian 
ideology with a  straggling movement for ‘pure capitalism’ and ‘free trade.’
 This movement never  created the word: it appropriated it from the 
anarchist movement of the  [nineteenth] century. And it should be recovered by 
those anti-authoritarians .  . . who try to speak for dominated people as a 
whole, not for personal egotists  who identify freedom with entrepreneurship 
and 
profit." Thus anarchists in  America should “restore in practice a 
tradition that has been denatured  by” the free-market right. [The Modern 
Crisis, 
pp. 154-5] 
As we note in _section F.2_ 
(http://anarchism.pageabode.com/afaq/secF2.html)  [10], anarchists tend to use 
an alternative name for  the right-wing “
libertarian”, namely “Propertarian.”  Interestingly, Ursula Le Guin used the 
term in her 1974 classic of anarchist  Science-Fiction, The Dispossessed. One 
of the anarchist characters notes  that inhabitants of Anarres (the 
communist-anarchist moon) “want nothing to  do with the propertarians” of 
Urras. 
Urras is, however, a standard  capitalist world (with A-Io representing the 
United States and Thu representing  the Soviet Union) and not explicitly 
right-“libertarian” in nature. The  anarchist protagonist, Shevek, does 
discover some people who describe themselves  as “libertarian” but these 
declare 
themselves close to communist-anarchism  (asked whether they are anarchists 
they reply: “Partly. Syndicalists,  libertarians . . . anti-centralists”). 
Shevek, needless to say, is  unimpressed with claims he should visit Thu to 
see “socialism”, replying that he  was well aware how “real socialism 
functions.” [The Dispossessed, p. 70, p. 245 and p. 118] 
It should be noted that “archist” and “propertarian” is used  pretty much 
interchangeably in The Dispossessed to describe Urras,  showing clear 
understand of, and links to, Proudhon’s argument in the first  self-labelled 
anarchist book that property was both “theft” and  “despotism.” As we noted in 
_section F.1_ (http://anarchism.pageabode.com/afaq/secF1.html)  [11], 
Proudhon argued that “violates equality by  the rights of exclusion and 
increase, 
and freedom by despotism” and has  “perfect identity with robbery.” [What 
is Property, p. 251] Little  wonder French syndicalist Emile Pouget, echoing 
Proudhon, argued that: 
"Property and authority are merely differing manifestations and  
expressions of one and the same 'principle' which boils down to the  
enforcement and 
enshrinement of the servitude of man. Consequently, the only  difference 
between them is one of vantage point: viewed from one angle,  slavery appears 
as 
a property crime, whereas, viewed from a different  angle, it constitutes 
an authority crime." [No Gods, No  Masters, vol. 2, p. 66]
So, in summary, considered in terms of our political, social and economics  
ideas it is unsurprising that anarchists have been using the term “
libertarian”  for 150 years. Regardless of the attempts by others ignorant of 
both 
the history  of that term and the reality of capitalism to appropriate it for 
their  hierarchical and authoritarian ideology, we will continue to do so. 
This article appeared in Freedom vol. 69, No.  23-4


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