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Where is Kropotkin When We Really Need Him?
If you want to know what anarchism is and why we should care, read Kropotkin.
On February 8, 1921 twenty thousand people, braving temperatures so low that musical instruments froze, marched in a funeral procession in the town of Dimitrov, a suburb of Moscow. They came to pay their respects to a man, Petr Kropotkin, and his philosophy, anarchism.
Petr Kropotkin (1842–1921)
Some 90 years later few know of Kropotkin. And the word anarchism has been so stripped of substance that it has come to be equated with chaos and nihilism. This is regrettable, for both the man and the philosophy that he did so much to develop have much to teach us in 2012.
I am astonished Hollywood has yet to discover Kropotkin. For his life is the stuff of great movies. Born to privilege he spent his life fighting poverty and injustice. A lifelong revolutionary, he was also a world-renowned geographer and zoologist. Indeed, the intersection of politics and science characterized much of his life.
His struggles against tyranny resulted in years in Russian and French jails. The first time he was imprisoned in Russia an outcry by many of the world’s best-known scholars led to his release. The second time he engineered a spectacular escape and fled the country. At the end of his life, back in his native Russia, he enthusiastically supported the overthrow of the Tsar but equally strongly condemned Lenin’s increasingly authoritarian and violent methods.
In the 1920s Roger N. Baldwin summed up Kropotkin this way:
Kropotkin is referred to by scores of people who knew him in all walks of life as "the noblest man" they ever knew. Oscar Wilde called him one of the two really happy men he had ever met…In the anarchist movement he was held in the deepest affection by thousands--"notre Pierre" the French workers called him. Never assuming position of leadership, he nevertheless led by the moral force of his personality and the breadth of his intellect. He combined in extraordinary measure high qualities of character with a fine mind and passionate social feeling. His life made a deep impression on a great range of classes--the whole scientific world, the Russian revolutionary movement, the radical movements of all schools, and in the literary world which cared little or nothing for science or revolution.
For our purposes Kropotkin’s most enduring legacy is his work on anarchism, a philosophy of which he was possibly the leading exponent. He came to the view that society was heading in the wrong direction and identifying the right direction using the same scientific method that had led him to shock the geography profession by proving that the existing maps of Asia had the mountains running in the wrong direction.
The precipitating event that led Kropotkin to embrace anarchism was the publication of Charles Darwin’s Origin of the Species in 1859. While Darwin’s thesis that we are descended from the apes was highly controversial, his thesis that natural selection involved a “survival of the fittest” through a violent struggle between and among species was enthusiastically adopted by the 1% of the day to justify every social inequity as an inevitable byproduct of the struggle for existence. Andrew Carnegie insisted that the “law” of competition is “best for the race because it insures the survival of the fittest in every department.” “We accept and welcome great inequality (and) the concentration of business…in the hands of a few.” The planet's richest man, John D. Rockefeller, bluntly asserted, "The growth of a large business is merely a survival of the fittest…the working out of a law of nature.”
In response to a widely distributed essay by Thomas Huxley in The Nineteenth Century, “The Struggle for Existence in Human Society,” Kropotkin wrote a series of articles for the same magazine that were later published as the book Mutual Aid.
He found the view of the social Darwinists contradicted by his own empirical research. After five years examining wildlife in Siberia, Kropotkin wrote, “I failed to find – although I was eagerly looking for it – that bitter struggle for the means of existence…which was considered by most Darwinists…as the dominant characteristic – and the main factory of evolution.”
Kropotkin honored Darwin’s insights about natural selection but believed the governing principle of natural selection was cooperation, not competition. The fittest were those who cooperated. He wrote:
The animal species, in which individual struggle has been reduced to its narrowest limits, and the practice of mutual aid has attained the greatest development, are invariably the most numerous, the most prosperous, and the most open to further progress. … The unsociable species, on the contrary, are doomed to decay.
He spent the rest of his life promoting that concept and the theory of social structure known as anarchism. To Americans anarchism is synonymous with a lack of order. But to Kropotkin anarchist societies don’t lack order but the order emerges from rules designed by those who feel their impact, rules that encourage humanly scaled production systems and maximize individual freedom and social cohesion.
In his article on Anarchy in the 1910 Encyclopedia Britannica Kropotkin defines anarchism as a society “without government – harmony in such a society being obtained, not by submission to law, or by obedience to any authority, but by free agreements concluded between the various groups, territorial and professional, freely constituted for the sake of production and consumption…”
To Americans anarchism is synonymous with a lack of order. But to Kropotkin anarchist societies don’t lack order but the order emerges from rules designed by those who feel their impact, rules that encourage humanly scaled production systems and maximize individual freedom and social cohesion.
Mutual Aid was published in 1902. With chapters on animal societies, tribes, medieval cities and modern societies, it makes the scientific case for cooperation. Readers in 2012 may find the chapter on medieval cities the most compelling.
In the 12th to 14th centuries, hundreds of cities emerged around newly formed marketplaces. These marketplaces were so important that laws embraced by kings, bishops and towns protected their providers and customers. As the markets grew, the cities gained autonomy, and organized themselves into political, economic and social structures that to Kropotkin made them an instructive working model of anarchism.
The medieval city was not a centralized state. It was a confederation, divided into four quarters or five to seven sections radiating from a center. In some respects it was structured as a double federation. One consisted of all householders united into small territorial units: the street, the parish the section. The other was of individuals united by oath into guilds according to their professions.
The guilds established the economic rules. But the guild itself consisted of many interests. “The fact is, that the medieval guild…was a union of all men connected with a given trade: jurate buyers of raw produce, sellers of manufactured goods, and artisans – masters, ‘compaynes,’ and apprentices.” It was sovereign in its own sphere, but could not develop rules that interfered with the workings of other guilds.
Four hundred years before Adam Smith, medieval cities had developed rules that allowed the pursuit of self-interest to support the public interest. Unlike Adam Smith’s proposal, their tool was a very visible hand indeed.
This mini world of cooperation resulted in remarkable achievements. From cities of 20,000-90,000 people emerged technological as well as artistic developments that still astonish us.
Life in these cities was not nearly as primitive as the Dark Ages to which our history books assign them. Laborers in these medieval cities earned a living wage. Many cities had an 8-hour workday.
Florence in 1336 had 90,000 inhabitants. Some 8-10,000 boys and girls (yes girls) attended primary schools and there were 600 students in four universities. The city boasted 30 hospitals with over 1000 beds.
Indeed, Kropotkin writes, “the more we learn about the medieval city, the more we are convinced that at no time has labor enjoyed such conditions of prosperity and such respect as when city life stood at its highest.”
Mutual Aid is rarely read today. No one remembers Petr Kropotkin. But his message and his empirical evidence, that cooperation, not competition, is the driving force behind natural selection, that decentralization is superior to centralization in both governance and economies and that mutual aid and social cohesion should be encouraged over massive social inequity and the exaltation of the individual over society is as relevant to the central debates of our time as it was to the debates of his time.
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62 Comments so far
Show AllHoorah. FINALLY someone mentions Kropotkin. I read "Mutual Aid" back in the 1970's, and along with Ralph Borsodi's "This Ugly Civilization", turned me on to totally new ways of thinking about society and the ability of people to live COERCION FREE. We have been programmed to belive in the necessity of the State (and now the Corporate State) to "control" society or protect us from "ourselves". Mutual Aid showed how society can grow from voluntary cooperation for mutual benefit. Great stuff!
Agreed! I can see Mutual Aid on my shelf. It seems to me his CENTRAL idea is that cooperation is just as embedded in our nature as competition, and as Kropotkin found, MORE pervasive in practice. In the wilds of Siberia he observed even "lone" eagles cooperating in hunting groups. America's obsession with the lone frontiersman needs to be balanced with a clear understanding of the cooperative side of human nature.
To serve all, social structures do need to develop from the neighborhood up, not be imposed from the top down. Local democracies can combine into larger democratic groups. The authoritarian personalities among us muck this up.
Side note: Trying to get people today to re-re-define "anarchy" would likely be a distracting waste of political energy.
Another strange misrepresentation.
Darwin's belief was not about the strength we call physical fitness, but it was about which species "fit" best within a given niche. It is NOT about overpowering with physical force (although that can be a part of evolution).
Here is an example.
Some hummingbirds have had beaks which allow feeding on a wider diversity of flowers than other hummingbirds which have a harder time finding food. It is the peculiarity of the beak, not the strength of the bird which gives it the advantage.
The notion that a "violent struggle" is the mode of evolution says more about human priorities (which are clearly not evolving in a beneficial way for the majority) than about science.
Yes, the 1% of his day and of those days following were not adverse to misinterpreting and selectively focusing to their advantage what Darwin was saying concerning competition.
It does not follow from this, but to me it seems that the more that co-operation and communication and consensual organization exist among the 99% the less that "violent struggle" will be needed with the current social evolution.
The concepts that Kropotkin discussed need a word to describe them and rather than coin a new one it is less confusing that we use the word that he used in the way that he used it. It is time to reclaim the word "anarchy" and restore it the meaning that it had in Kropotkin's days.
Thoughtful essay by David Morris and perhaps it will encourage some readers to pick up Kropotkin.
Oddly enough, I just recommended Mutual Aid and Kropotkin's other writings in the comments column after Chris Hedges' condemnation of the 'anarchist' group Black Bloc,
A couple commentators clearly had no understanding of the political philosophy of anarchism or its history, and I suggested a modicum of reading might be of some small benefit.
You can even get an MP3 audio version of the book on EBay for $5.
http://www.ebay.com/itm/MUTUAL-AID-FACTOR-EVOLUTION-KROPOTKIN-MP3-AUDIO-BOOK-CD-/360227390878?pt=US_Audiobooks&hash=item53df39c59e
The Conquest of Bread is another excellent work by Kropotkin.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Conquest_of_Bread
Orwell's book Homage to Catalonia has some admiring descriptions of the anarchists running Barcelona during the Spanish Civil War. Anarchism had a strong tradition in Spain and Italy before both countries turned to fascism.
yep. Orwell's book is actually a 'fun' read too. As in, it is really fucking interesting.
There are many deeper books about Spain. Emma Goldman's 'Letters' is a must read.
anarchism has a 100 year history amazing history, but since 'it' does not do political parties, you have to have left historians, marxist and anarchist etc, to tell people how it was involved.
for instance, naomi klein's the take....I figure most people think that great doc is about 'socialists' workers taking things...but actually....their language is ALL anarchist syndicalist.....has nothing to do with lenin....etc....Argentina and Chile have one hundreds years of anarchist syndicalist organizing......oh...whew....the terms don't really matter the ideas do though...What happened in the Ukraine with Mahkno's peasant armies....1918 to 1921 is probably the best example too of 'who the leninists' will kill first.
On Spanish anarchism the "Siete domingos rojos" (Seven Red Sundays) by Ramón Sender is the most stirring. Pity that later on Sender turned to Stalinism.
for those interested in a film (broken into 11 segments) that addresses anarcho-syndicalism in spain,
ANARCHISM IN ACTION
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lmFNcdaL-a0&feature=related
{"Introduction to anarchism, anarcho-syndicalism and the social revolution in Spain (1936), compiled together from several documentaries by Brisbane Anarchists for the CNT Centenary celebration event (2010)."}
...peace...
So glad to learn my namesake and I share an admiration of Peter Kropotkin. Everyone should read Mutual Aid.
David Holmes Morris
Great article. I remember Kropotkin from my high school history class - Modern History - Europe since 1815. My explanation for anarchy has always been the co-operation of people with each other, in groups large and small. City-states were ultimately done in by the pursuit of empire. Oops - there's that old empire bugaboo.
Hmm... interesting that this is published after Hedges hackjob on the black bloc. I don't remember ever before seeing anything less than negative on anarchism in CD. I haven't read Mutual Aid, but have read The Conquest of Bread and recommend it to anyone interested in learning something about anarchism. Also William Godwin, Proudhon and Bakunin.
Speaking of that controversial Hedges article, check out Randall Amster's "A Bustle in Hedges’ Row"* if you haven't seen it already.
Given Amster's penchant for borderline touchy-feely inspirational essays, I was pleasantly surprised to read this down-to-earth rebuttal to Hedges' ill-conceived perspective.
It's not a coincidence, I think, that although CD is quick to publish Amster's innocuous "upbeat" pieces, so far it hasn't seen fit to publish this one.
___________________
* http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/02/08/a-bustle-in-hedges-row/
Allow me to add this:
http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/02/09/the-surgeons-of-occupy/
And
http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/02/10/should-occupy-use-violence/
I'd like to see both published here.
The eternal debate among Anarchists has always been about violence vs non-violence. One school of thought believes it may be necessary to bring an end to the violence of the state - sort of a "just war" theory. Another school of thought (prominent among the "Christian Anarchists") is that violence of any kind is the ultimate symbol of coercive control and that any form of domination ("Archy") is antithetical to An-archy. Nothing more invigorating than good Anarchist debate - Kropotkin would approve!
In the massive Hedges BB discussion one commentator elucidated how Occupy was completely based on Anarchist process and OWS founded by Anarchists.
Morris does well to bring some needed background to the page. Thanks CD, and thanks also to the moderator for putting up with such a volume of blather on the comments page of the recent Hedges piece (of which i was a part)!
I think some folks are unable to accept that an-archist principles have basically filled in the void left by Marxist-Leninist theorizing and debate, and are showing themselves to be a more adaptable and promising direction for future forms of action and participation. Kropotkin was a deeply admired and genuine personality who brought a lot of insight to the idea of self-government, and demonstrated these values regularly. My favorite phrase to describe the perception of early an-archists is "More sinned against than sinning", and this is really true... I honestly believe a lot of movements (even those who would not associate with an-archists) have benefitted indirectly from its imagination and example.
We have to remember that all members of our society-- right- and left-oriented alike-- have had a real number done on their perception of what is permissive and what is free. I know for a fact that most Americans are far more shackled than they really know... their freedoms have always been tenuous and prone to recall. It took me a long time to discover, for instance, that the police are not really here to serve us... I really wanted to go along with the idea like everyone else, but the reality in front of my eyes was giving me another picture.
I personally believe that we need to revisit figures like Kropotkin now, and even more so, the history of our indigenous peoples who showed great skill at self-government. It is always pushed aside, and tragic that only today are we starting to recover what was in fact a serious and effective mode of organization. They were (compared to our societies, at least) mostly peaceful people, remember: until they had to defend themselves from relentless violent attacks (aka extermination). They have many lessons for us yet...
Our namesake!! Our hero since the 60s, a true saint in the struggle for dignity, justice, and freedom.
MUTUAL AID -- read it, of course. But the best book is his autobiography, MEMOIRS OF A REVOLUTIONIST. Very inspirational and highly recommended!
My vote is for THE CONQUEST OF BREAD.
Practical advice for the Revolutionary City, love it. ;)
I really like this concept, but anarchy seems a misnomer. Guilds, confederations of citystates with their own internal subdivisions, etc... suggest "archy" (rule) of some type. I'm calling it "panarchy" where all rule, because consideration is given to all, even the non-human species, as the best of the Green/sustainability movement would have it (and pagans too). I'm going to look into "Mutual Aid".
The word means "The State of Being Self Ruled". Prefix An-meaning without ; Archy being the state of being ruled. Literally meaning The state of being without ruler. Being free, we are all anarchists, and this is actually the modality that operates almost all of the time.
David, and the people cheering the mention. You all understand that anarchism is not a political party...that within occupy, for example...you have no idea who there.... is really an anarchist until they identify as such. I was at GA where a liberal started going off about the 'anarchists'...and half the people were quiet looking at each other.....cuz it was too tired to argue with her. Half there were anarchists.....duh.....direct democracy....spokespeople....general assemblies....double duh...
I've been in punk/underground bands from ohio to SF for 20 years, always on the left side, and NEVER have I not heard kroptkin's name. Same with bakunin and Emma. I love that you're writing about him. But seriously. AK press is one of the largest indie english language presses in the world. Do you really think the hundreds of thousands of americans that buy books from them don't know anything about anarchism-communism.....Then why is the phrase 'mutual aid' in so many radical conversations these days. Did we learn that from the Nation?
heh. still I am so glad so many americans are embracing anarchism. It is a social and economic philosophy. NOT a badge you wear. Though many of us do. We must unite working class and middle class towards a better world, through cooperation, mutual aid and face to face democracy. kinda like occupy huh? And all you anarchists, get off that chris hedges article...there is some real truth in it, I've been verbally street fighting those narcisists invidualists for 25 years. All black bloc ain't that. But I've had my share on confrontations with their silly 'look at me' crap. He DID embrace syndicalism, i.e. civic society with rank and rile union people....and chomsky. ....etc. That IS where we need to go. Stop wasting your time denfending all 'currents' of anarchism...and organize with real anachism......that of bakunin, kropotkin, maletesta, emma, rocker,....and the bright kids at occupy. don't waste your time arguing about this shit....we have so much work to do....
I hope you are not being condescending in your opening remarks, tommy. My optimism toward this article is mainly that Kropotkin is being recognized at all. It may be the anniversary of his death, but strangely it can be celebrated as a resurgence of interest in a completely valid outlook on direct action.
It's interesting that you mention the punk angle... I've always felt it's been an unfortunate image for committed anarchists to have to explain. It has been a very separate community in most cases, more aesthetic than ideological. Most of the public also see that the far-right has its share of punk bands too, and draw facile comparisons. Dylan and Billy Bragg notwithstanding, I would have to argue that we educate ourselves less with music than by experience and honest study. Not all messages can be encapsulated in a neat lyric...
As a recently hatched adherent to the 'cause', I find my inspiration is more anthropological than political. David Graeber helped with that, but my attention has always run toward indigenous struggle (i.e. Kanehsatake and Caledonia actions in Canada) and tracking instances of courageous defiance such as can be found in Egypt + Middle East or South America and so on. I don't see such effective examples in our own society. Many of the actionists abroad would be amused to hear that we find the Black Bloc tactics 'violent', for sure.... Rock throwing and person-to-person combat are regular phenomena for them.
Amen, Tommys. Good points, all.
If "archy" is domination, what is meant by "menarchy"? .... -30-
Two weeks ago, while browsing the shelves of Moe's Bookstore in Berkeley, I found a 1904 first American edition of Mutual Aid. It's very cool to hold and read a book that was being read for the first time over a hundred years ago. There are so many misconceptions about anarchism, due primarily to the threat it poses to the elite class and their propaganda war waged against those "bomb throwers". It's good to see this article here at CD. I would also highly recommend an excellent analysis of anarchism by David Osterfeld called "Freedom, Society, and The State". It's currently out of print but I think I've seen an online version somewhere. Osterfeld clearly outlines the various forms of anarchism, from individualist to collectivist. And of course there is Peter Marshall's "Demanding the Impossible".
Only the fittest will survive, but human strength now comes from our machines. Our machines are organized thought, and the fittest societies are those that organize their thoughts, and themselves, to best thrive under whatever environmental niche they are faced with. Organization demands more than mere subservience (slavery is dead): it demands cooperation.
Societies that embrace social Darwinism end up in a game of 'last man standing'. Whoever is left is strongest, but society overall is weak. The stronger society is one that cooperatively organizes itself to face its challenges. Ironically, IT is the fittest that will survive.
yes
"Remember Kropotkin!"
Franz Kafka, Diary (scribbled in margins)
Nice to see Kropotkin getting some love here. "Mutual Aid", in particular, is an absolutely vital work, and predicts much of modern anthropology and zoology. It is also delightful to read, full of sensitivity and clever observations regarding animals, insects and of course, humans.
Morris writes --
"I am astonished Hollywood has yet to discover Kropotkin."
Hollywood hasn't even discovered Emma Goldman yet.
Still, for colorful, larger-than-life anarchist revolutionaries from Europe/Russia in need of the film treatment I'd have to go with Mikhail Bakunin.
Bakunin was friends with Marx, but the two split over the concept of the dictatorship of the proletariat (which the anarchist characterized as "authoritarian socialism"). He accurately predicted the horrors of the Soviet Union, stating that "If you took the most ardent revolutionary, vested him in absolute power, within a year he would be worse than the Tsar himself."
During their mutual struggle for leadership of the first Internationale, Marx began penning scurrilous rumors about Bakunin, suggesting that he was a secret agent; indeed, Bakunin spent a lot of time creating and participating in secret societies, where he fomented revolutionary schemes. Bakunin lost to Marx, and the fate of European socialism was sealed.
Bakunin was no saint. Perhaps because of his experience with Marx, he embraced a certain degree of anti-semitism; of course that was not unusual for the time. He talked of "Jewish commercial or banking agents...with one foot in the bank, the other in the socialist movement...I am certain that Rothschild for his part greatly values the merits of Marx, and that Marx for his part feels instinctive attraction and great respect for Rothschild."
Bakunin was a big man, "a literal giant as well as the demon that stalked the bourgeois imagination"; he was constantly trying to overthrow various governments and replace them with bottom-up socialist cooperatives. He traveled the globe from America to Japan stirring up trouble.
"They jailed him in Prague for nine months before moving him to the Olmutz fortress where he was chained to the wall for two months. They condemned him to hang for high treason."
In the may Uprising in Dresden in 1849 he "helped to organize the defense of the barricades against Prussian troops with Richard Wagner and Wilhelm Heine. Held for thirteen months before being condemned to death by the government of Saxony." One morning he was removed from his cell. He expected he would be shot. Instead he was transferred to Russia (indeed the only reason he was kept alive was because he was wanted by the governments of Russia and Austria). In Russian prison he lost his teeth from scurvy and nearly went insane.
At one point he begged his brother to supply him with a vial of poison so he could commit suicide. He escaped and made his way on foot across Siberia, ending up in Japan.
During the Paris Commune, Bakunin recommended that rebels steal paintings from art galleries and use them as shields; he surmised that troops would value the expensive art work more than the workers. It was a brilliant idea, not seized upon.
It has been suggested that Bakunin was bisexual, and that he had a homosexual affair with Nechaeyev. He also liked 'em young. He married a 17 year old at the age of 40.
Now tell me that doesn't have the ingredients for a great flick.
--
Runner up for Euro/Russian anarchist film-treatment would go to my namesake, Durruti. Wonderful article "The Hidden Wanderings of Durruti" here --
http://flag.blackened.net/daver/anarchism/hwod.html
Article describes Durruti's various travels, during which he and his gang robbed a series of banks, killed slave-owners/overseers and organized workers. Prior to his better-known role as the military leader of the "Durruti Column" in anarchist Spain, he more closely resembled Dillinger than Zapata -- minus the psychopathic narcissism.
"It is indeed true that I have robbed banks. And not only in Spain, but in other countries too. But it was always for the sake of the General Cause. All the money went straight into the coffers of the Organization (the CNT), since that was the its predestined destination. Nobody kept back a single cent and, if this method was the only effective one at the time, that is because the circumstances were radically different from those of today. Now we say 'Down with Banditry! Up with Collective Appropriation!' - Durruti
--
One complaint about this article -- it is intimated that Kropotkin's theories are somehow at odds with those of Darwin. Not true. The term "survival of the fittest" was coined by a right-wing reactionary named Herbert Spencer, who tried to use Darwin's theories to justify elite dominance. Darwin understood that intra-species competition between humans (war is competition writ large) does not aid in our survival; quite the opposite. Rather it is "mutual aid", as Kropotkin described it, which allows us to survive.
I cover this topic in my film "Human Resources", which is available online.
tx Dx
If the average mind holds the wingspan of a backyard creek, yours in comparison would stretch across the Grand Canyon. Your reach of knowledge is TRULY impressive. Thank you for the post. And I, too, recall CD publishing an article that cited the actual verbiage used by Darwin in support of the advantages of species' cooperative efforts.
Some folk here have a romantic notion about Bakunin, the archetype mad terrorist bomber. Think Timothy McVeigh. Any support for Bakunin indicates a twisted mind. Recall that he wrote "a [worldwide] war of extermination….with no quarter and no respite". Bombs were his tool of trade. Collateral damage was part of the process.
Sheesh. Kids these days don't know how to read.
And some folks in here like to use straw men to argue their points.
Sheesh. I guess WTF types of people these days don't know how to logically respond to comments.
"Some folk here have a romantic notion about Bakunin, the archetype mad terrorist bomber. Think Timothy McVeigh."
Bakunin was not a "bomber". And comparing him to Timothy McVeigh is just silly.
"Recall that he wrote "a [worldwide] war of extermination….with no quarter and no respite".
I don't doubt that Bakunin might have made such a statement at some point; indeed during his early life he was variously a nihilist, a pan-Slavic nationalist and a communist. But no one's accusing him of being a saint.
Bakunin had almost as many flaws as Marx, and like all great revolutionary figures he made his fair share of outlandish comments. Nevertheless, Bakunin is an important figure in the history of socialism and anarchism. He made predictions that Chomsky (for example) has described as "unique in the social sciences" in terms of their accuracy ("which is why they're never studied", he went on to say), and he had a fascinating and -- indeed -- romantic life. Hence the argument that his lifestory would make a great film.
Your caricature of a "mad bomber" would better be applied to Emma Goldman, who in her earlier years was a follower of Johann Most, one of the foremast advocates of the "propaganda of the deed" (aka terrorism against the ruling class). Goldman's lover, Alexander Berkman, put the idea into practice when he attempted to kill an industrialist during a labor dispute.
If you want to read some really hair-raising stuff about "wars of extermination" against the ruling class, check out some of the statements of George Bernard Shaw.
"Sheesh. Kids these days don't know how to read."
I am guessing you felt this sentence would score you some sort of rhetorical victory, however it comes off as merely childish.
Anyway, the point here, again, is not to suggest that Bakunin was a saintly figure, only that his lifestory is a rather incredible one amongst revolutionary anarchists. The subject of the article, Kropotkin, was much more philosophically astute; and anarcho-syndicalism has been much more insightfully addressed by figures like Rudolph Rocker and Chomsky.
DURRUTIX: Such aplomb and grace under fire! Can I borrow you to stand in for me the next time I'm under attack?
BTW: Did one of your parents (by some odd chance) pass onto you a cool & collected gene?
Well, my father was a librarian. So he had to be cool and collected in order to keep his job. But me...not so much, I'm afraid. It's all I can do not to smash my computer screen when I read about the latest oil spill, or war crime, or police beating.
When it comes to online discussions, we often say things we wouldn't dare face to face. It's the nature of the medium. I try to keep that in mind, and respond appropriately. Frequently I fail.
Much has been "rewritten" about Bakunin by neo-anarchists who have been trying to elevate him to near sainthood. These are the texts that most often turn up in Google searches, along with re-interpretations of his writing. I see the same reinterpretation of the history of Hitler by articulate writers at neo-Nazi websites (and well-known Middle-Eastern leaders). Doublethink at it's finest. Read Bakunin's earliest works in which he liberally sprinkles the word "terror" throughout, but the word almost never appears in any disposition of Bakunin at neo-anarchist websites; almost as if he never used the word.
But dig deeper into scholarly texts and a more truer portrait of the man arises, a man who wrote and demanded "terror for terror's sake, terror as spectacle, death as spectacle". Nowadays kids believe he advocated violence only against property, but the reality is that that he also demanded the death of innocents. George Woodcock wrote some excellent, well-researched articles on Bakunin in the '60s.
Bakunin incited and led the Dresden riots of 1949 and the Lyons uprising of 1870 (both used destruction as a tool). He lauded the Paris Commune uprising. Ultimately, the death of some 20,000 innocents can be attributed to Bakunin. As you say, hardly a saint, and certainly not a leader worth emulating.
WTF wrote --
"I see the same reinterpretation of the history of Hitler"
So now you're comparing Bakunin to Hitler...WTF indeed....
Sorry to break it, but Bakunin tried in vain to convince the membership of the Internationale to follow a libertarian socialist path, and FAILED; in his later life, he was (literally) a toothless old man, commanding little influence. The extraordinary powers you ascribe to him derive from your own imagination, not actual events.
"He lauded the Paris Commune uprising. Ultimately, the death of some 20,000 innocents can be attributed to Bakunin."
So now you're attributing to Bakunin the Paris Commune -- described by many 20th and 19th C socialists, including Marx himself, as the most important workers uprising until that point. What's more, you attribute to Bakunin its failure - via state repression! An anarchist. Apparently all those troops slaughtering workers was the fault of one deranged individual. Or perhaps you have it completely backwards. Marx wrote of the Paris Commune,
"The whole world, which looks complacently upon the wholesale massacre after the battle is convulsed by horror at the desecration of brick and mortar."
"As you say, hardly a saint, and certainly not a leader worth emulating."
No, not a saint. And I suspect he himself would dislike the term "leader". But I think you're being overly harsh on Bakunin. He was a brilliant philosopher, a mediocre revolutionary, a flawed human, and a colorful character, who deserves neither the toxic venom you pour on him nor the "saintly" characteristics which, you claim, some anarchists bestow.
He sure did punk Marx, though.
I did NOT compare Hitler to Bakunin, instead said the process of reinventing the two men is the same. Do you respond to other people's views by putting words in their mouths? If I am to compare Bakunin with a latter-day model, Osama bin Laden comes to mind. Both fomented terror, both had little concern for innocents, both were only concerned with achieving their own, private and selfish goals.
Bakunin may have disliked the word leader, but he was in charge in Dresden and Lyons.
You should make a comparison to The Bush crime syndicate, they advocated anarchism about as much as their henchman Osama Bin LAden did. And slaughtered many more innocents with Osama's work. Just what is your point? Bakunin/anarchism are bad? What are you in charge of? You are the one throwing "bombs", what about Kropotkin- was he just a re-write too? How about Che? Jesus? Mohammed? Who are your heroes? The bush families henchman Hitler and Osama? You are simple and plain, a sucker.
Medeival-styled guilds seem to have been the model for Marx's thinking in the 1848 publication of the Communist Manifesto at the beginning of his career, however, he ended up opposing anarchism as an intellectual "flavor-of-the-month" and for the reasons of political philosophy and strategy. He agreed with anarchists that the state needed to "wither away," but doing this while leaving the market intact would simply confer all power upon the bourgeoisie, that is the financier class, by stripping all power from the more ancient social institution with any capacity for opposing market power.
The evolutionary argument for cooperation is absolutely correct, however, the concept cannot be applied a priori, as it was, for instance, in the early Soviet Union when disastrous harvests were caused by abandonment of the plow with the mere scattering of seeds because of the notion that the plants, insects, and fauna would naturally cooperate. A posteriori it is apparent that social cooperation for many and inter-species partnerships for others proved far greater advantages than the sharpest tooth or the biggest claw.
Ants are the true owners of this planet.
Great post
Carles Darwin's theory was atheistic (might we say "antheist"?) insofar
as it offered an explanation of the orgin of the various animal species
without any need to invoke the agency of "god" as creator. Why then did
England -- then an at least nominally Christian nation -- nevertheless
accept Darwin? [And in so doing diminish a Christian theological view
and presentation of creation.]
Here is the hypocrisy: England accepted Darwin because he provided
a "scientific justification" of what England's business-like leaders and
rulers ALREADY believed. [The same was true in America, as shown
by David Morris' quotations from Carnegie and John D. Rockefeller.]
Namely, that the "nobles" and the "aristocracy of merit" deserved
(and were needed) to rule over the masses. As they might have said:
**Christianity please be excused if you're getting in the way of the real
business; we men of merit are going to take care of our business
regardless of what you preach to the contrary. Nevertheless, we will
ADMIT your scriptural authority in keeping the people docile to powers
that be.** "The powers that be are ordained of god." Romans 13:1.
So we may see that "two-faced" authoritarianism underlies big business
from the start. They adhere to Christianity only up to the point where
it begins to hurt business. That attitude is in fact un-Christian.
It is thus little wonder that Kropotkin as an anarchist might have gotten
some ideas from Darwin's natural selection, but at last came to doubt
the ramifications of Darwin's theory. The early orientation of business
toward a "natural selection" of a few privileged rich men to dominate
the rest of us reappears in the notions written by Ayn Rand, to whom
many businessmen (and some in congress) hold devotion. And so
in 2012 still, the one-percenters strive mightily to prove that THEY are
the ones "naturally selected" (as they may see the battle) to survive.
So are we today burdened by bad historical precedent. "The evil that
men do lives after them ... ."
My apologies to those readers who may be non-christian, non-theist,
or atheist. Such is your right, and for all I know you may be right.
It just appears to me as hypocritical for Mr. Businessman to sit in
his own pew in church Sundays, and maybe say "Amen", and then
oppress the ninety-and-nine percent however he can get away with
Monday through Saturday. Much of my motivation in my post above
was to point out that hypocrisy. And in the longer context, hypocrisy
is at the BASE of big business, from its origination in England. The
prior social organizing principle -- be it Christianity, or whatever else
might have been leading the ninety nine percent to a so-so good life --
was to be paid lip service by England's one percenters, after which
"Sunday work" it was back with the people to the "dark Satanic mills"
and the proprietors' filling their pockets with profits. That hypocrisy
is so GLARING when the one percenters (appear to) have chosen the
BEST that happened to be existant in the prior society, and debased
it so as to show THEMSELVES to be the best: "Naturally selected"
to survive when the workers in the proprietors' shops often did not.
Darwin's natural selection provided both an excuse for abuses, AND
an announcement of further intent to abuse the ninety nine. It's all part
of the history -- only new to us now if we didn't know the history.
VERY GOOD to see people like the folks at the Institute for Self-Reliance digging on Kropotkin.
This is exactly what they should be reading.
Between Mutual Aid and The Conquest of Bread, Kropotkin has shown us the general way, all that we need is some updating and some specifics. ;)
My two cents would be to remind all that the Medieval Guild Cities represent not only cooperation, but also POLYARCHY.
A Polyarchic scenario in which Anarcho-Communist groupings (like Kropotkin was for) and many other types of self-governing groupings could be birthed and thrived without the need to fully change the overall system may be the best way to bring about beneficial anarchy (and other social experiments/improvements) in our lifetimes.
Where do you work Matti? Perhaps we could form a syndicate? By the way, how do you reconcile your new support of anarchism, and OWS, with your derision of the process of consensus decision making? And polyarchy is antithetical to Anarchy- what we have now is polyarchy, you are saying we should return to the state of being ruled as we are now. Your subtle manipulations here are really sinister, you cleverly postion yourself as a "radical" while poisoning the well. Why?
Kropotkin's book, Mutual Aid, is available through the following link:
http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/Anarchist_archives/kropotkin/mutaidcontents.html
Also, ---theanarchistlibrary.org--- has basically all of P.Kropotkin's writings and much more from other thinkers available online and downloaded in many formats free of charge. :)
I was born into and live in a community that, I discovered just recently while doing a school project, was based on, among other things, the writings of this Russian guy named Kropotkin. That is why I found this article so interesting. And now every time I see this name it jumps out at me, because it has become fascinating to me. For this past Xmas, I decided to buy friends of mine DVDs of various films I had seen and enjoyed during my life. For one couple I bought the movie "The Assassination Bureau" just because I had remembered this being a fun movie I had seen. I know it doesn't sound "fun", but you have to see it it stars Diana Rigg and Oliver Reed. So I was reading about this movie at IMDB and first of all, turns out it was based on an unfinished novel by Jack London of all people. Then I was reading user comments and I have to reproduce the last one written here because it kind of blew me away:
"There actually was an assassination Bureau, centered in London, steered from behind the scene by the Monarchy, British Intelligence, and the Fabian Society. Its operational head was the exiled Russian prince, Peter Kropotkin, who fled Russia, and then Switzerland, and then suspiciously escaped from jail in Paris to find asylum in England. He was on the lam for his role in the assassination of Czar Alexander II, and as a leader of the "People's Will" anarchist organization, he was under a death sentence. He was the international head of the anarchist movement, replacing Bakunin, and steered the organization which assassinated 19 heads of state, Kings, Queens, Princes, Dukes and Archdukes, Prime ministers, and a President, during the years preceding WWI. Kropotkin was the controller of Emma Goldman (who lived with Kropotkin for a time in London) whose disciple, Czolgosz, shot McKinley. Kropotkin was with Emma Goldman when she met with Czolgosz at Jane Addams "Hull House" in Chicago in the week before Czolgosz made his way to Buffalo to shoot McKinley. King Umberto of Italy was shot the year before by Antonio Bresci, member of Goldman's anarchist chapter in Paterson NJ. Goldman met with Bresci weeks before he went to Italy to shoot the King, financed by money raised by the members of the chapter. Go through the history of the political assassinations during the run up to WWI, mostly done by anarchists, supposedly acting alone. It was all organized by British Intelligence out of London, directed by Kropotkin and his networks."
This doesn't put Kropotkin in a very favorable light and is just in dissonance to everything else I have heard about him. Is this all true??
"Is this all true??"
No. None of it is. If it were, Emma Goldman wouldn't have had to stay in people's basements; she would have had a lavish apartment and lived accordingly.
Czolgosz was not a "disciple" of Goldman. He merely attended one of her speeches; this factoid was seized upon by the media of the day to further vilify anarchists. Goldman did defend Czolgosz somewhat after he shot McKinely.
While stressing that she did not support terrorism against political figures, she also stated, "Anarchism claims the right of Defense against Invasion and Aggression of every shape and form and no one, who has his eyes open will and can deny those in Power are the Invaders". She called Czolgosz "one of the Exploited and disinherited millions, who lead a life of darkness...one of the victims of the McKinely regime."
Needless to say, the majority of anarchists quickly tried to distance themselves from the man who shot the president, but Goldman stood firm. Anarcho-primitivist John Zerzan did something similar with respect the Unabomber, who was influenced by Zerzan's work; however in the latter case, the terrorist was rather slipshod and schizophrenic in his choice of targets; Czolgosz targeted the figurehead of American capitalism.
The claim (though unsupported) that Bakunin may have been involved in some political assassinations is not unreasonable; however the assertion that Kropotkin was the "head" of an "assassination bureau" is completely ridiculous. Kropotkin was an exquisitely sensitive non-violent soul who spent much of his time studying small mammals and insects. He was born of wealth and lived a comfortable life. He was a kindred spirit of Leo Tolstoy.
When dealing with the sort of macro conspiracy theory you have outlined, it is always best to look for evidence. And by evidence I don't mean David Icke, Alex Jones or the John Birth Society. The simple truth is that, in the modern age, anarchists have been the most persecuted of any political group. The Wobblies were the first to be attacked during the "Red Scare" in the US; the Bolsheviks went to war against the Mahknovists in Russia; Mao purged the anarchists from the Red guards of the Shengwulian; and even today, "anarchists" (aka fascists/police provocateurs dressed in black pajamas during protests) have been selected as the scapegoats of choice.
There is a very good reason for this. Anarchists are alone amongst political groups in their insistence that society be run on a directly democratic basis. Not by alleged "representatives", and not by a "dictatorship of the proletariat", but by the "common" man -- decentralized assemblies federated horizontally. Such an arrangement would do away with the "need" for a ruling class of any sort; thus, the ruling class despises anarchy.
Durrutix,
"Anarchists are alone amongst political groups in their insistence that society be run on a directly democratic basis"
on that note.
everyone has preferences, i prefer the term decentralized socialism. by this, i mean very localized government that's owned and structured by the people for the interests of the people.
the marxist critique of capitalism (class struggle, historical materialism, alienation of the worker etc..) in my mind is valid, the question for me is what is to emerge in a post capitalist society. personally, i'd prefer to live in a world where property rights (capital) are limited and where the commons are preserved. many indigenous peoples recognized the social and environmental significance of attempting to live in balance w/ the world around them.
it's especially challenging for americans to see alternative systems of governance as being legitimate, considering our society and cultural norms (tolerance of exploitation and reverence for property rights) were so engrained from the inception of european colonialism. every aspect of our lives is predicated on the exploitation (and genocide) of other peoples. yet as we observe the end game of capitalism - it's becoming more apparent to many americans (even mainstream americans are beginning to understand the marxist critique) that this system isn't working.
the problems that confront us are global, but the solutions to those problems exist on the local level - in the daily tasks of our lives. the trick is how to develop structures that preserve local governance while providing the opportunity to interact w/ other people (meet other people's needs, share culture and ideas, recognize our human bonds) around the world.
on this score, we can replace representative governance with direct democracy and loose federations that reach to the global level. wiki lists over 20 forms of democracy in the encyclopedia. granted this is extremely idealistic, but who would have imagined 600 years ago that a new world existed and that a global system of exploitation would emerge that would jeopardize all life on the planet while enriching but a fraction of 1% of the people. idealistic ? nihilistic ? anything and everything is possible.
representative democracy was sold to the american people as the most feasible system, ultimately the evolution of capitalism (severe inequities of property), as we understand it, is a direct result of the inequitable distribution of rights exemplified in the constitution. the founders understood this (benefiting from the document), and as we craft a new system of governance it's important to recognize the pitfalls we inadvertently stumbled upon in the past. american democracy may have been a step forward from absolute monarchs - we can do better.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_democracy
{Direct democracy was very much opposed by the framers of the United States Constitution and some signatories of the Declaration of Independence. They saw a danger in majorities forcing their will on minorities. As a result, they advocated a representative democracy[citation needed] in the form of a constitutional republic over a direct democracy. For example, James Madison, in Federalist No. 10 advocates a constitutional republic over direct democracy precisely to protect the individual from the will of the majority. He says, "A pure democracy can admit no cure for the mischiefs of faction. A common passion or interest will be felt by a majority, and there is nothing to check the inducements to sacrifice the weaker party. Hence it is, that democracies have ever been found incompatible with personal security or the rights of property; and have, in general, been as short in their lives as they have been violent in their deaths."[19] John Witherspoon, one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence, said "Pure democracy cannot subsist long nor be carried far into the departments of state – it is very subject to caprice and the madness of popular rage." Alexander Hamilton said, "That a pure democracy if it were practicable would be the most perfect government. Experience has proved that no position is more false than this. The ancient democracies in which the people themselves deliberated never possessed one good feature of government. Their very character was tyranny; their figure, deformity."[20]...}
power to the people for the people... ¡Ya basta!
...peace...