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Anarchism without adjectives

Anarchism without adjectives is a pluralist tendency of anarchism that opposes sectarianism and advocates for cooperation between different anarchist schools of thought. First formulated by the Spanish anarchists Ricardo Mella and Fernando Tarrida del Mármol, as a way to bridge the ideological divide between the collectivists and communist factions, it was later adopted by the Italian anarchist Errico Malatesta and the American individualist Voltairine de Cleyre.

Anarchists without adjectives are suspicious of dogmatism and criticise prescriptions for a post-capitalist future, which they consider authoritarian. Instead they hold that a new society should be allowed to emerge spontaneously after a social revolution, which they believe could result in the experimental development of different economic forms in different locations. They thus tend to focus on taking action in the present, with contemporary forms outright rejecting utopianism.

Background edit

When anarchist communism was first formulated in 1876, debates over its merits led to a split within the Anarchist International, as French and Italian communists clashed with collectivists from Spain.[1] At the 1877 Vervies Conference, Swiss anarchist leader James Guillaume attempted to overcome the split by arguing that "each group be free to determine its own solutions".[2]

This position was adopted by a number of Spanish anarchists, who advocated for the tolerance of different, coexisting anarchist schools of thought.[3] In 1886, Catalan anarchists around the periodical Acracia [es] began attempting to settle the communist-collectivist split by propagating a kind of "non-denominational" anarchism. Despite opposition from anarchist communists around the Tierra y Libertad paper, these anarchists began referring to themselves as "socialist anarchists" and used terms such as "indifferent anarchism" or "plain and simple anarchism" in order to overcome the divide.[4]

In 1888, the anti-sectarian campaign was adopted by a circle of anarchist intellectuals led by Antoni Pellicer, who formulated a perspective that rejected any qualifying labels for anarchism.[5] This perspective was developed further by the political theorists Fernando Tarrida del Mármol and Ricardo Mella, who articulated an "unhyphenated form of anarchism" which they termed "anarchism without adjectives" (Spanish: Anarquismo sin adjetivos).[6]

Development edit

By Tarrida edit

 
Fernando Tarrida del Mármol, the Spanish collectivist who coined the phrase "anarchism without adjectives"

A pupil of Anselmo Lorenzo, Tarrida had initially been attracted to collectivist anarchism, through the federalism of Pierre-Joseph Proudhon and Francesc Pi i Margall. By 1889, he had become a prolific anarchist speaker and writer for Acracia, winning support from many of Barcelona's workers, who delegated him to the International Workers Congresses of Paris.[7] Drawing from his background in mathematics, Tarrida considered anarchism to be a universal philosophy with scientifically-validated principles. Although himself a collectivist, he rejected rigid doctrine and refused to engage in the debate between the collectivists and communists, instead upholding Pellicer's formula for an anarchism that included a diversity of economic systems. From this position, he first developed his theory of "anarchism without adjectives".[8]

Tarrida first used the term at a November 1889 meeting in Barcelona, when he called for anarchists to reject of all forms of dogma in order to conform closer with the principles of "nature, science and justice".[9] The communist-collectivist feud, which dominated the anarchist discourse of the time, had encouraged Tarrida to issue an appeal for an ecumenical approach to anarchism, calling for tolerance between different anarchist tendencies in order to focus on the cause of revolutionary anarchism. He concluded that if anarchists were to be consistent with their anti-dogmatic tendencies, which upheld freedom of thought, they ought not to impose their own economic programmes on others. Nevertheless, the feud persisted, with French communists denouncing the Spanish collectivists as authoritarian and scrutinising Tarrida's proposal for an "anarchism without adjectives".[10]

The following year, in the pages of the French communist newspaper Le Révolté, Tarrida replied that the pursuit of anarchy and the abolition of the State ought to be emphasised as the common foundation of anarchism.[11] He held the economic question to be of "secondary importance", rejecting any rigid systematic theory and upholding the complimentary potential of different anarchist economic propositions.[12] The French communists, he argued, had become too ideologically rigid and puritanical, which had isolated them from other anarchist groups and rendered them ineffective as a force against the bourgeoisie. He concluded by encouraging them to drop their utopian tendencies to preconceive an immutable future anarchist society, so that they could better adapt to the changing social and economic conditions of the present.[13] He also criticised the French communists for attempting to impose a "foreign style of anarchism" on Spanish collectivists, whose organisationalist tendencies had arisen from different material conditions and had proven an effective response to those conditions.[14] Although Tarrida rejected the communists' indiscriminate anti-organizational stance, he was also opposed to rigidity within Spanish collectivism, arguing that the Federation of Workers of the Spanish Region (FTRE) had "outlived its usefulness" by growing increasingly bureaucratic and accepting its dissolution.[15]

By Mella edit

 
Ricardo Mella, another of the principle advocates of "anarchism without adjectives" as a means to resolve the collectivist-communist schism

A different approach to "anarchism without adjectives" was taken up by the prolific anarchist theorist Ricardo Mella. In contrast to Tarrida, who recommended that different anarchist systems be synthesised, Mella called for free experimentation to determine the best system for a given circumstance. Mella believed that the great divide within anarchism wasn't between communism and collectivism, but between tolerance and intransigence, the latter of which created divisions over the supremacy of different forms of dogma.[16] When Mella began writing for Acracia, he initially called for tolerance between anarchist tendencies as a way to prevent communist ideas from becoming predominant in Spain. In his article La reacción y la revolución, Mella argued against dogmatic economic prescriptions for a future anarchist society, declaring that a revolutionary movement could only arise from a diversity of perspectives that could "proceed according to whatever traditions and customs best suited the circumstances at hand."[17]

Although Mella remained a staunch collectivist and anti-communist,[18] he nevertheless opposed the internecine split between the two factions, attempting to keep the debate between them healthy by continuing his advocacy of non-denominational anarchism.[19] As time went on, he became more tolerant of communism, considering it to be possible for it to coexist alongside other economic systems. He even went on to defend anarchist communists from attacks by the Italian criminologist Cesare Lombroso and translated the work of Peter Kropotkin, although he remained uncomfortable fully endorsing communist views for the rest of his life.[20]

In 1889, Mella published the apotheosis of his development of anarchism without adjectives: his utopian novella La Nueva Utopía, which examined the possible social and economic forms of a future anarchist society. In the book, Mella depicts a society that had undergone a social revolution, resulting in the complete satisfaction of their needs and a harmonious cooperation between its inhabitants.[21] Such an economic and social reorganization of society had been achieved after multiple centuries of experimentation and hard work, driven by scientific and technological progress, which had eliminated both toil and environmental pollution.[22]

Growth and adoption edit

In Europe edit

Throughout the 1890s, Tarrida and Mella continued their campaign for the adoption of a non-sectarian form of anarchism, eventually achieving some success. Many other anarchists, including Anselmo Lorenzo and Joan Montseny, began calling for an end to the dogmatic schism between communists and collectivists, with the adjectives themselves even taking on negative connotations among those that had tired of the split.[23] Inspired by Tarrida and Mella, many other European anarchists began to eschew hyphenated labels and refer solely to anarchy as their end goal, rejecting prescriptions for a future society as inherently authoritarian.[24] Anarchism without adjectives was taken up by Élisée Reclus and Max Nettlau,[25] the latter of whom called for a non-sectarian anarchism that accounted for both communism and individualism, without universalizing either, leaving room for experimentation in different possibilities of economic organization.[26]

 
Errico Malatesta, an Italian anarchist socialist who advocated for anarchists of different schools of thought to cooperate within a single plural organisation

The position was also adopted by the Italian communist Errico Malatesta,[27] who likewise argued against dogmatism within the anarchist movement,[28] declaring: "Let us do away with all exclusivism of schools of thinking."[29] Malatesta warned that "one must beware, at the risk of certain disaster, of supposing that one’s system is the only, and infallible, one [...] and that its success must be assured at all costs, by means other than those which depend on persuasion, which spring from the evidence of facts."[30] Malatesta posited that as anarchism centres spontaneity, it would be wrong for anarchists to impose economic prescriptions. He concluded that different anarchist tendencies should therefore unite within a single organisation, which centred a shared anarchist method. Malatesta also began referring to himself as an "anarchist socialist", in order to promote inclusivity of different anarchist schools.[31] In the pages of Le Révolté, Malatesta declared that "[i]t is not right for us, to say the least, to fall into strife over mere hypotheses".[32]

By the turn of the 20th century, anarchism without adjectives had spread beyond Europe to the Americas, where many anarchists were increasingly migrating. In Buenos Aires, Antoni Pellicer argued that Argentine workers ought to reject dogmatism and embrace anarchism without adjectives. It also found its way to the United States, where American anarchists were brought over to the idea by the arguments of Tarrida del Marmól.[33]

In the United States edit

In the United States, there was also an intense debate between individualist anarchists around Benjamin Tucker and the anarchist communists around Johann Most, who dismissed each other's ideas as un-anarchistic.[34] Troubled by the "bitter debates" between anarchists from divergent schools of economic thought, those who did not see a need to confine themselves to one particular school of thought called for more tolerance among anarchists, with some of them explicitly terming it "anarchism without adjectives".[35]

Starting in the 1880s, many American anarchists began to prioritize their commonly-held anti-statism over their differing economic methods, which they saw as of secondary importance and something to be left until the future.[36] In 1893, William and Lizzie Holmes organized an international anarchist conference in Chicago, where they attempted to formulate a common programme for anarchists to unite behind. They were joined by Voltairine de Cleyre, Honoré Jackson, C. L. James, Lucy Parsons and William Henry van Ornum, but the conference was boycotted by Benjamin Tucker and Johann Most, who were still locked in an ideological conflict.[37] Over the subsequent years, the Holmes couple and their circle continued attempting to reconcile the different anarchist factions, even going as far as to advocate for an anti-authoritarian united front with Georgists, socialists and nationalists. In 1895, the Jewish anarchist J. A. Maryson began calling for a "pure and simple" anarchism that upheld freedom of opinion, arguing that diversity was an essential component of freedom.[38]

 
Voltairine de Cleyre, an American anarchist whose advocacy of anarchism without adjectives has inspired sections of contemporary anarchism

By the 1900s, the most visible American exponent of anarchism without adjectives was Voltairine de Cleyre,[39] who adopted the term from Tarrida del Mármol,[40] and likewise advocated for cooperation between different anarchist philosophies and strategies.[41] She criticised economic dogmatism,[42] believing that after the state was abolished, different localities would be free to experiment in different economic forms of anarchism,[43] ranging from mutualism to communism.[44]

During the last years of her life, de Cleyre argued passionately against anarchist sectarianism, declaring her desire to rid the anarchist movement of "those outrageous excommunications which belong properly to the Church of Rome, and which serve no purpose but to bring us into deserved contempt with outsiders."[45] Skeptical of "high-sounding theories", which she considered to be indicative of intellectual elitism, de Cleyre preferred to support action in the present rather than indulge in debates over the future.[46] She believed that a future free society could not be forecast, due to the uncertainty of how society might evolve, and thus upheld all experiments in the direction of greater freedom as intrinsically good.[47]

As she saw shortcomings in each anarchist school of thought, arguing for the best elements of each to be synthesized into a more pragmatic philosophy, historian Paul Avrich argued that de Cleyre "cannot be fitted into any single anarchist category".[48] Until the end of her life, she insisted on labelling herself simply as an "anarchist",[49] even as she personally moved from American individualism towards the anarchist communism advocated by Emma Goldman.[50] Herself inspired by Max Stirner's individualist anarchism, Goldman also came to reject visionary thinking of "blueprints for the future", instead declaring that anarchist methods must be adapted depending on the circumstances of different places and times.[51]

Anarchism without adjectives was later taken up by Luigi Galleani and the Galleanisti, who went so far as to reject formal organizational structures, claiming the end point of any organization was to move towards conservatism and eventually become reactionary.[52] Other Italian-American anarchists, who were not followers of Galleani, also came to consider themselves anarchists without adjectives, rejecting specific currents and individual leaders.[53]

Contemporary developments edit

Eventually, the term "anarchism without adjectives" largely fell out of use, although its anti-sectarian principles were still implicitly upheld by some contemporary anarchists, following the development of diverse new social movements.[29] Research by Dana M. Williams found that North American anarchists were more likely to reject the labels of "red" or "green anarchist", in favour of simply identifying as "anarchist", "anti-authoritarian" or some form of "anarchist without adjectives".[54]

Voltairine de Cleyre's contributions to anarchism without adjectives have been particularly influential on the development of contemporary anarchism,[55] which has often neglected prescriptive models for alternatives to globalization and neoliberalism.[56] de Cleyre's conception of anarchism without adjectives was adopted by the anarchist historian Peter Marshall, who argued against false binaries that separate economic systems or dichotomise the individual against the community.[57] The anarchist communist Wayne Price has also proposed that a post-capitalist transition would be carried out in an "experimental, pluralist, and decentralized society," which would utilise different solutions to the specific issues that affect them.[58] Post-anarchism, while attaching an adjective to anarchism, has also argued for a polythetic classification of different anarchist schools of thought, proposing an "anarchism with many possible adjectives".[59]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Graham 2018, pp. 338–339.
  2. ^ Graham 2018, p. 339; Nettlau 1996, p. 140.
  3. ^ Avrich 1978, pp. 149–150; Esenwein 1989, pp. 134–135; Graham 2018, p. 339; Turcato 2018, p. 241.
  4. ^ Esenwein 1989, p. 134.
  5. ^ Esenwein 1989, pp. 134–135.
  6. ^ Avrich 1978, pp. 149–150; Turcato 2018, p. 241.
  7. ^ Esenwein 1989, pp. 135–136.
  8. ^ Esenwein 1989, p. 136.
  9. ^ Avrich 1978, pp. 149–150; Esenwein 1989, pp. 136–137.
  10. ^ Esenwein 1989, p. 137.
  11. ^ Avrich 1978, pp. 149–150; Esenwein 1989, pp. 137–138.
  12. ^ Avrich 1978, pp. 149–150; Esenwein 1989, p. 138.
  13. ^ Esenwein 1989, p. 138.
  14. ^ Esenwein 1989, pp. 138–139.
  15. ^ Esenwein 1989, p. 139.
  16. ^ Esenwein 1989, p. 140.
  17. ^ Esenwein 1989, pp. 146–147.
  18. ^ Esenwein 1989, pp. 140–141.
  19. ^ Esenwein 1989, p. 152.
  20. ^ Esenwein 1989, pp. 152–153.
  21. ^ Esenwein 1989, p. 147.
  22. ^ Esenwein 1989, pp. 147–148.
  23. ^ Esenwein 1989, p. 153.
  24. ^ Campbell 2013, pp. 76–77; Shannon 2018, p. 99.
  25. ^ Avrich 1978, p. 150; Esenwein 1989, pp. 153–154.
  26. ^ Avrich 1978, p. 150.
  27. ^ Avrich 1978, p. 150; Esenwein 1989, pp. 153–154; Marshall 1993, pp. 349, 449; Turcato 2018, p. 241; Williams 2009, p. 192.
  28. ^ Esenwein 1989, pp. 153–154; Marshall 1993, pp. 349, 449; Turcato 2018, p. 241.
  29. ^ a b Williams 2009, p. 192.
  30. ^ Shannon 2018, p. 99.
  31. ^ Turcato 2018, p. 241.
  32. ^ Nettlau 1996, pp. 198–199.
  33. ^ Esenwein 1989, pp. 153–154.
  34. ^ Avrich 1995, pp. 5–6.
  35. ^ Avrich 1995, pp. 6–7.
  36. ^ Avrich 1978, p. 151.
  37. ^ Avrich 1978, pp. 151–152.
  38. ^ Avrich 1978, p. 152.
  39. ^ Avrich 1978, p. 153; Carson 2017, pp. 111–112; Heroux 2010, p. 28; Shannon 2018, p. 99; Williams 2009, p. 192.
  40. ^ Avrich 1978, p. 120; Campbell 2013, p. 76; Heroux 2010, p. 28.
  41. ^ Avrich 1978, p. 153; Campbell 2013, pp. 76; Carson 2017, pp. 111–112; Shannon 2018, p. 99.
  42. ^ Avrich 1978, p. 153; Carson 2017, pp. 111–112.
  43. ^ Avrich 1978, pp. 153–154; Carson 2017, pp. 111–112; Marshall 1993, p. 393; Sartwell 2017, p. 473.
  44. ^ Avrich 1978, pp. 153–154; Sartwell 2017, p. 473.
  45. ^ Avrich 1978, p. 153.
  46. ^ Avrich 1978, p. 154.
  47. ^ Avrich 1978, pp. 154–155.
  48. ^ Avrich 1978, p. 155.
  49. ^ Avrich 1978, pp. 148–149, 153–154; Campbell 2013, pp. 76–77; Marshall 1993, p. 393; Sartwell 2017, pp. 473, 477.
  50. ^ Avrich 1978, pp. 147–148; Sartwell 2017, pp. 473, 477.
  51. ^ Shannon 2018, pp. 98–99.
  52. ^ Avrich 1995, p. 157.
  53. ^ Avrich 1995, pp. 184–185.
  54. ^ Williams 2009, pp. 200–201, 207.
  55. ^ Campbell 2013, pp. 69–70.
  56. ^ Campbell 2013, pp. 79–80.
  57. ^ Marshall 1993, pp. 702–705.
  58. ^ Shannon 2018, pp. 99–100.
  59. ^ Heroux 2010, pp. 28–29.

Bibliography edit

  • Avrich, Paul (1978). "Anarchism without Adjectives". An American Anarchist: The Life of Voltairine de Cleyre. Princeton University Press. pp. 144–170. ISBN 0-691-04657-3. LCCN 78-51153.
  • Avrich, Paul (1995). Anarchist Voices: An Oral History of Anarchism in America. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-03412-5. OCLC 30476588.
  • Campbell, Michelle M. (2013). "Voltairine de Cleyre and the Anarchist Canon". Anarchist Developments in Cultural Studies (1): 64–81. ISSN 1923-5615.
  • Carson, Kevin (2017). "Anarchism and Markets". In Jun, Nathan (ed.). Brill's Companion to Anarchism and Philosophy. Leiden: Brill. pp. 81–119. doi:10.1163/9789004356894_005. ISBN 978-90-04-35689-4.
  • Esenwein, George Richard (1989). "Anarquismo sin adjectivos". Anarchist Ideology and the Working-class Movement in Spain, 1868-1898. University of California Press. pp. 134–154. ISBN 978-0520063983.
  • Heroux, Erick (2010). "PostAnarchia Repertoire". Anarchist Developments in Cultural Studies. 2010 (1): 19–30. ISSN 1923-5615.
  • Graham, Robert (2018). "Anarchism and the First International". In Adams, Matthew S.; Levy, Carl (eds.). The Palgrave Handbook of Anarchism. London: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 325–342. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-75620-2_19. ISBN 978-3319756196. S2CID 158605651.
  • Marshall, Peter H. (1993). Demanding the Impossible: A History of Anarchism. London: Fontana Press. ISBN 978-0-00-686245-1. OCLC 1042028128.
  • Nettlau, Max (1996). A Short History of Anarchism. Freedom Press. pp. 195–201. ISBN 978-0900384899. OCLC 37529250.
  • Sartwell, Crispin (2017). "Anarchism and Nineteenth-Century American Political Thought". In Jun, Nathan (ed.). Brill's Companion to Anarchism and Philosophy. Leiden: Brill. pp. 454–483. doi:10.1163/9789004356894. ISBN 978-90-04-35689-4. S2CID 171479284.
  • Shannon, Deric (2018). "Anti-Capitalism and Libertarian Political Economy". In Adams, Matthew S.; Levy, Carl (eds.). The Palgrave Handbook of Anarchism. London: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 91–106. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-75620-2_5. ISBN 978-3319756196. S2CID 242094330.
  • Turcato, Davide (2018). "Anarchist Communism". In Adams, Matthew S.; Levy, Carl (eds.). The Palgrave Handbook of Anarchism. London: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 237–248. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-75620-2_13. ISBN 978-3319756196. S2CID 242094330.
  • Williams, Dana M. (2009). "Red vs. green: regional variation of anarchist ideology in the United States". Journal of Political Ideologies. 14 (2): 189–210. doi:10.1080/13569310902925816. S2CID 33888366.

Further reading edit

anarchism, without, adjectives, pluralist, tendency, anarchism, that, opposes, sectarianism, advocates, cooperation, between, different, anarchist, schools, thought, first, formulated, spanish, anarchists, ricardo, mella, fernando, tarrida, mármol, bridge, ide. Anarchism without adjectives is a pluralist tendency of anarchism that opposes sectarianism and advocates for cooperation between different anarchist schools of thought First formulated by the Spanish anarchists Ricardo Mella and Fernando Tarrida del Marmol as a way to bridge the ideological divide between the collectivists and communist factions it was later adopted by the Italian anarchist Errico Malatesta and the American individualist Voltairine de Cleyre Anarchists without adjectives are suspicious of dogmatism and criticise prescriptions for a post capitalist future which they consider authoritarian Instead they hold that a new society should be allowed to emerge spontaneously after a social revolution which they believe could result in the experimental development of different economic forms in different locations They thus tend to focus on taking action in the present with contemporary forms outright rejecting utopianism Contents 1 Background 2 Development 2 1 By Tarrida 2 2 By Mella 3 Growth and adoption 3 1 In Europe 3 2 In the United States 4 Contemporary developments 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 Further readingBackground editWhen anarchist communism was first formulated in 1876 debates over its merits led to a split within the Anarchist International as French and Italian communists clashed with collectivists from Spain 1 At the 1877 Vervies Conference Swiss anarchist leader James Guillaume attempted to overcome the split by arguing that each group be free to determine its own solutions 2 This position was adopted by a number of Spanish anarchists who advocated for the tolerance of different coexisting anarchist schools of thought 3 In 1886 Catalan anarchists around the periodical Acracia es began attempting to settle the communist collectivist split by propagating a kind of non denominational anarchism Despite opposition from anarchist communists around the Tierra y Libertad paper these anarchists began referring to themselves as socialist anarchists and used terms such as indifferent anarchism or plain and simple anarchism in order to overcome the divide 4 In 1888 the anti sectarian campaign was adopted by a circle of anarchist intellectuals led by Antoni Pellicer who formulated a perspective that rejected any qualifying labels for anarchism 5 This perspective was developed further by the political theorists Fernando Tarrida del Marmol and Ricardo Mella who articulated an unhyphenated form of anarchism which they termed anarchism without adjectives Spanish Anarquismo sin adjetivos 6 Development editBy Tarrida edit nbsp Fernando Tarrida del Marmol the Spanish collectivist who coined the phrase anarchism without adjectives A pupil of Anselmo Lorenzo Tarrida had initially been attracted to collectivist anarchism through the federalism of Pierre Joseph Proudhon and Francesc Pi i Margall By 1889 he had become a prolific anarchist speaker and writer for Acracia winning support from many of Barcelona s workers who delegated him to the International Workers Congresses of Paris 7 Drawing from his background in mathematics Tarrida considered anarchism to be a universal philosophy with scientifically validated principles Although himself a collectivist he rejected rigid doctrine and refused to engage in the debate between the collectivists and communists instead upholding Pellicer s formula for an anarchism that included a diversity of economic systems From this position he first developed his theory of anarchism without adjectives 8 Tarrida first used the term at a November 1889 meeting in Barcelona when he called for anarchists to reject of all forms of dogma in order to conform closer with the principles of nature science and justice 9 The communist collectivist feud which dominated the anarchist discourse of the time had encouraged Tarrida to issue an appeal for an ecumenical approach to anarchism calling for tolerance between different anarchist tendencies in order to focus on the cause of revolutionary anarchism He concluded that if anarchists were to be consistent with their anti dogmatic tendencies which upheld freedom of thought they ought not to impose their own economic programmes on others Nevertheless the feud persisted with French communists denouncing the Spanish collectivists as authoritarian and scrutinising Tarrida s proposal for an anarchism without adjectives 10 The following year in the pages of the French communist newspaper Le Revolte Tarrida replied that the pursuit of anarchy and the abolition of the State ought to be emphasised as the common foundation of anarchism 11 He held the economic question to be of secondary importance rejecting any rigid systematic theory and upholding the complimentary potential of different anarchist economic propositions 12 The French communists he argued had become too ideologically rigid and puritanical which had isolated them from other anarchist groups and rendered them ineffective as a force against the bourgeoisie He concluded by encouraging them to drop their utopian tendencies to preconceive an immutable future anarchist society so that they could better adapt to the changing social and economic conditions of the present 13 He also criticised the French communists for attempting to impose a foreign style of anarchism on Spanish collectivists whose organisationalist tendencies had arisen from different material conditions and had proven an effective response to those conditions 14 Although Tarrida rejected the communists indiscriminate anti organizational stance he was also opposed to rigidity within Spanish collectivism arguing that the Federation of Workers of the Spanish Region FTRE had outlived its usefulness by growing increasingly bureaucratic and accepting its dissolution 15 By Mella edit nbsp Ricardo Mella another of the principle advocates of anarchism without adjectives as a means to resolve the collectivist communist schism A different approach to anarchism without adjectives was taken up by the prolific anarchist theorist Ricardo Mella In contrast to Tarrida who recommended that different anarchist systems be synthesised Mella called for free experimentation to determine the best system for a given circumstance Mella believed that the great divide within anarchism wasn t between communism and collectivism but between tolerance and intransigence the latter of which created divisions over the supremacy of different forms of dogma 16 When Mella began writing for Acracia he initially called for tolerance between anarchist tendencies as a way to prevent communist ideas from becoming predominant in Spain In his article La reaccion y la revolucion Mella argued against dogmatic economic prescriptions for a future anarchist society declaring that a revolutionary movement could only arise from a diversity of perspectives that could proceed according to whatever traditions and customs best suited the circumstances at hand 17 Although Mella remained a staunch collectivist and anti communist 18 he nevertheless opposed the internecine split between the two factions attempting to keep the debate between them healthy by continuing his advocacy of non denominational anarchism 19 As time went on he became more tolerant of communism considering it to be possible for it to coexist alongside other economic systems He even went on to defend anarchist communists from attacks by the Italian criminologist Cesare Lombroso and translated the work of Peter Kropotkin although he remained uncomfortable fully endorsing communist views for the rest of his life 20 In 1889 Mella published the apotheosis of his development of anarchism without adjectives his utopian novella La Nueva Utopia which examined the possible social and economic forms of a future anarchist society In the book Mella depicts a society that had undergone a social revolution resulting in the complete satisfaction of their needs and a harmonious cooperation between its inhabitants 21 Such an economic and social reorganization of society had been achieved after multiple centuries of experimentation and hard work driven by scientific and technological progress which had eliminated both toil and environmental pollution 22 Growth and adoption editIn Europe edit Throughout the 1890s Tarrida and Mella continued their campaign for the adoption of a non sectarian form of anarchism eventually achieving some success Many other anarchists including Anselmo Lorenzo and Joan Montseny began calling for an end to the dogmatic schism between communists and collectivists with the adjectives themselves even taking on negative connotations among those that had tired of the split 23 Inspired by Tarrida and Mella many other European anarchists began to eschew hyphenated labels and refer solely to anarchy as their end goal rejecting prescriptions for a future society as inherently authoritarian 24 Anarchism without adjectives was taken up by Elisee Reclus and Max Nettlau 25 the latter of whom called for a non sectarian anarchism that accounted for both communism and individualism without universalizing either leaving room for experimentation in different possibilities of economic organization 26 nbsp Errico Malatesta an Italian anarchist socialist who advocated for anarchists of different schools of thought to cooperate within a single plural organisation The position was also adopted by the Italian communist Errico Malatesta 27 who likewise argued against dogmatism within the anarchist movement 28 declaring Let us do away with all exclusivism of schools of thinking 29 Malatesta warned that one must beware at the risk of certain disaster of supposing that one s system is the only and infallible one and that its success must be assured at all costs by means other than those which depend on persuasion which spring from the evidence of facts 30 Malatesta posited that as anarchism centres spontaneity it would be wrong for anarchists to impose economic prescriptions He concluded that different anarchist tendencies should therefore unite within a single organisation which centred a shared anarchist method Malatesta also began referring to himself as an anarchist socialist in order to promote inclusivity of different anarchist schools 31 In the pages of Le Revolte Malatesta declared that i t is not right for us to say the least to fall into strife over mere hypotheses 32 By the turn of the 20th century anarchism without adjectives had spread beyond Europe to the Americas where many anarchists were increasingly migrating In Buenos Aires Antoni Pellicer argued that Argentine workers ought to reject dogmatism and embrace anarchism without adjectives It also found its way to the United States where American anarchists were brought over to the idea by the arguments of Tarrida del Marmol 33 In the United States edit In the United States there was also an intense debate between individualist anarchists around Benjamin Tucker and the anarchist communists around Johann Most who dismissed each other s ideas as un anarchistic 34 Troubled by the bitter debates between anarchists from divergent schools of economic thought those who did not see a need to confine themselves to one particular school of thought called for more tolerance among anarchists with some of them explicitly terming it anarchism without adjectives 35 Starting in the 1880s many American anarchists began to prioritize their commonly held anti statism over their differing economic methods which they saw as of secondary importance and something to be left until the future 36 In 1893 William and Lizzie Holmes organized an international anarchist conference in Chicago where they attempted to formulate a common programme for anarchists to unite behind They were joined by Voltairine de Cleyre Honore Jackson C L James Lucy Parsons and William Henry van Ornum but the conference was boycotted by Benjamin Tucker and Johann Most who were still locked in an ideological conflict 37 Over the subsequent years the Holmes couple and their circle continued attempting to reconcile the different anarchist factions even going as far as to advocate for an anti authoritarian united front with Georgists socialists and nationalists In 1895 the Jewish anarchist J A Maryson began calling for a pure and simple anarchism that upheld freedom of opinion arguing that diversity was an essential component of freedom 38 nbsp Voltairine de Cleyre an American anarchist whose advocacy of anarchism without adjectives has inspired sections of contemporary anarchism By the 1900s the most visible American exponent of anarchism without adjectives was Voltairine de Cleyre 39 who adopted the term from Tarrida del Marmol 40 and likewise advocated for cooperation between different anarchist philosophies and strategies 41 She criticised economic dogmatism 42 believing that after the state was abolished different localities would be free to experiment in different economic forms of anarchism 43 ranging from mutualism to communism 44 During the last years of her life de Cleyre argued passionately against anarchist sectarianism declaring her desire to rid the anarchist movement of those outrageous excommunications which belong properly to the Church of Rome and which serve no purpose but to bring us into deserved contempt with outsiders 45 Skeptical of high sounding theories which she considered to be indicative of intellectual elitism de Cleyre preferred to support action in the present rather than indulge in debates over the future 46 She believed that a future free society could not be forecast due to the uncertainty of how society might evolve and thus upheld all experiments in the direction of greater freedom as intrinsically good 47 As she saw shortcomings in each anarchist school of thought arguing for the best elements of each to be synthesized into a more pragmatic philosophy historian Paul Avrich argued that de Cleyre cannot be fitted into any single anarchist category 48 Until the end of her life she insisted on labelling herself simply as an anarchist 49 even as she personally moved from American individualism towards the anarchist communism advocated by Emma Goldman 50 Herself inspired by Max Stirner s individualist anarchism Goldman also came to reject visionary thinking of blueprints for the future instead declaring that anarchist methods must be adapted depending on the circumstances of different places and times 51 Anarchism without adjectives was later taken up by Luigi Galleani and the Galleanisti who went so far as to reject formal organizational structures claiming the end point of any organization was to move towards conservatism and eventually become reactionary 52 Other Italian American anarchists who were not followers of Galleani also came to consider themselves anarchists without adjectives rejecting specific currents and individual leaders 53 Contemporary developments editEventually the term anarchism without adjectives largely fell out of use although its anti sectarian principles were still implicitly upheld by some contemporary anarchists following the development of diverse new social movements 29 Research by Dana M Williams found that North American anarchists were more likely to reject the labels of red or green anarchist in favour of simply identifying as anarchist anti authoritarian or some form of anarchist without adjectives 54 Voltairine de Cleyre s contributions to anarchism without adjectives have been particularly influential on the development of contemporary anarchism 55 which has often neglected prescriptive models for alternatives to globalization and neoliberalism 56 de Cleyre s conception of anarchism without adjectives was adopted by the anarchist historian Peter Marshall who argued against false binaries that separate economic systems or dichotomise the individual against the community 57 The anarchist communist Wayne Price has also proposed that a post capitalist transition would be carried out in an experimental pluralist and decentralized society which would utilise different solutions to the specific issues that affect them 58 Post anarchism while attaching an adjective to anarchism has also argued for a polythetic classification of different anarchist schools of thought proposing an anarchism with many possible adjectives 59 See also editSynthesis anarchismReferences edit Graham 2018 pp 338 339 Graham 2018 p 339 Nettlau 1996 p 140 Avrich 1978 pp 149 150 Esenwein 1989 pp 134 135 Graham 2018 p 339 Turcato 2018 p 241 Esenwein 1989 p 134 Esenwein 1989 pp 134 135 Avrich 1978 pp 149 150 Turcato 2018 p 241 Esenwein 1989 pp 135 136 Esenwein 1989 p 136 Avrich 1978 pp 149 150 Esenwein 1989 pp 136 137 Esenwein 1989 p 137 Avrich 1978 pp 149 150 Esenwein 1989 pp 137 138 Avrich 1978 pp 149 150 Esenwein 1989 p 138 Esenwein 1989 p 138 Esenwein 1989 pp 138 139 Esenwein 1989 p 139 Esenwein 1989 p 140 Esenwein 1989 pp 146 147 Esenwein 1989 pp 140 141 Esenwein 1989 p 152 Esenwein 1989 pp 152 153 Esenwein 1989 p 147 Esenwein 1989 pp 147 148 Esenwein 1989 p 153 Campbell 2013 pp 76 77 Shannon 2018 p 99 Avrich 1978 p 150 Esenwein 1989 pp 153 154 Avrich 1978 p 150 Avrich 1978 p 150 Esenwein 1989 pp 153 154 Marshall 1993 pp 349 449 Turcato 2018 p 241 Williams 2009 p 192 Esenwein 1989 pp 153 154 Marshall 1993 pp 349 449 Turcato 2018 p 241 a b Williams 2009 p 192 Shannon 2018 p 99 Turcato 2018 p 241 Nettlau 1996 pp 198 199 Esenwein 1989 pp 153 154 Avrich 1995 pp 5 6 Avrich 1995 pp 6 7 Avrich 1978 p 151 Avrich 1978 pp 151 152 Avrich 1978 p 152 Avrich 1978 p 153 Carson 2017 pp 111 112 Heroux 2010 p 28 Shannon 2018 p 99 Williams 2009 p 192 Avrich 1978 p 120 Campbell 2013 p 76 Heroux 2010 p 28 Avrich 1978 p 153 Campbell 2013 pp 76 Carson 2017 pp 111 112 Shannon 2018 p 99 Avrich 1978 p 153 Carson 2017 pp 111 112 Avrich 1978 pp 153 154 Carson 2017 pp 111 112 Marshall 1993 p 393 Sartwell 2017 p 473 Avrich 1978 pp 153 154 Sartwell 2017 p 473 Avrich 1978 p 153 Avrich 1978 p 154 Avrich 1978 pp 154 155 Avrich 1978 p 155 Avrich 1978 pp 148 149 153 154 Campbell 2013 pp 76 77 Marshall 1993 p 393 Sartwell 2017 pp 473 477 Avrich 1978 pp 147 148 Sartwell 2017 pp 473 477 Shannon 2018 pp 98 99 Avrich 1995 p 157 Avrich 1995 pp 184 185 Williams 2009 pp 200 201 207 Campbell 2013 pp 69 70 Campbell 2013 pp 79 80 Marshall 1993 pp 702 705 Shannon 2018 pp 99 100 Heroux 2010 pp 28 29 Bibliography editAvrich Paul 1978 Anarchism without Adjectives An American Anarchist The Life of Voltairine de Cleyre Princeton University Press pp 144 170 ISBN 0 691 04657 3 LCCN 78 51153 Avrich Paul 1995 Anarchist Voices An Oral History of Anarchism in America Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 03412 5 OCLC 30476588 Campbell Michelle M 2013 Voltairine de Cleyre and the Anarchist Canon Anarchist Developments in Cultural Studies 1 64 81 ISSN 1923 5615 Carson Kevin 2017 Anarchism and Markets In Jun Nathan ed Brill s Companion to Anarchism and Philosophy Leiden Brill pp 81 119 doi 10 1163 9789004356894 005 ISBN 978 90 04 35689 4 Esenwein George Richard 1989 Anarquismo sin adjectivos Anarchist Ideology and the Working class Movement in Spain 1868 1898 University of California Press pp 134 154 ISBN 978 0520063983 Heroux Erick 2010 PostAnarchia Repertoire Anarchist Developments in Cultural Studies 2010 1 19 30 ISSN 1923 5615 Graham Robert 2018 Anarchism and the First International In Adams Matthew S Levy Carl eds The Palgrave Handbook of Anarchism London Palgrave Macmillan pp 325 342 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 75620 2 19 ISBN 978 3319756196 S2CID 158605651 Marshall Peter H 1993 Demanding the Impossible A History of Anarchism London Fontana Press ISBN 978 0 00 686245 1 OCLC 1042028128 Nettlau Max 1996 A Short History of Anarchism Freedom Press pp 195 201 ISBN 978 0900384899 OCLC 37529250 Sartwell Crispin 2017 Anarchism and Nineteenth Century American Political Thought In Jun Nathan ed Brill s Companion to Anarchism and Philosophy Leiden Brill pp 454 483 doi 10 1163 9789004356894 ISBN 978 90 04 35689 4 S2CID 171479284 Shannon Deric 2018 Anti Capitalism and Libertarian Political Economy In Adams Matthew S Levy Carl eds The Palgrave Handbook of Anarchism London Palgrave Macmillan pp 91 106 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 75620 2 5 ISBN 978 3319756196 S2CID 242094330 Turcato Davide 2018 Anarchist Communism In Adams Matthew S Levy Carl eds The Palgrave Handbook of Anarchism London Palgrave Macmillan pp 237 248 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 75620 2 13 ISBN 978 3319756196 S2CID 242094330 Williams Dana M 2009 Red vs green regional variation of anarchist ideology in the United States Journal of Political Ideologies 14 2 189 210 doi 10 1080 13569310902925816 S2CID 33888366 Further reading editAragorn 2007 Anarchy Without Road Maps or Adjectives AJODA No 63 via The Anarchist Library De Cleyre Voltairine 1914a Anarchism In Berkman Alexander Havel Hippolyte eds Selected Works of Voltairine de Cleyre New York Mother Earth Publishing Association pp 96 117 OCLC 170244 De Cleyre Voltairine 1914b The Making of an Anarchist In Berkman Alexander Havel Hippolyte eds Selected Works of Voltairine de Cleyre New York Mother Earth Publishing Association pp 154 163 OCLC 170244 Gelderloos Peter 2007 A Survey of the US Anarchist Movement Social Anarchism No 40 ISSN 0196 4801 Goldman Emma 1910 Anarchism What It Really Stands For Anarchism and Other Essays Mother Earth Publishing Association OCLC 346693 Grubacic Andrej Graeber David 2004 Anarchism Or The Revolutionary Movement Of The Twenty first Century Z Network Holmes William 1896 The Historical Philosophical and Economic Bases of Anarchy Liberty Library No 1 Columbus Junction Iowa OCLC 83042711 via The Anarchist Library Lum Dyer 1886 Communal Anarchy The Alarm Vol 2 no 15 p 2 via The Libertarian Labyrinth Malatesta Errico 1965 Anarchist Communism In Richards Vernon ed Errico Malatesta His Life and Ideas London Freedom Press pp 34 37 OCLC 803165281 Malatesta Errico 2014 Our Plans In Turcato Davide ed The Method of Freedom An Errico Malatesta Reader Oakland California AK Press ISBN 9781849351447 LCCN 2013481880 OCLC 859185688 Mella Ricardo 1887 1888 La reaccion en la Revolucion Acracia in Spanish Vol 2 3 no 21 28 via The Libertarian Labyrinth Mella Ricardo 1889a Tolerancia e Intransigencia La Solidaridad in Spanish Translated by Wilbur Shawn via The Libertarian Labyrinth Mella Ricardo 1889b Evolucion y Revolucion La Solidaridad in Spanish via Ricardo Mella Archive Mella Ricardo 1890 La Nueva Utopia Certamen Socialista in Spanish Vol 2 via Ricardo Mella Archive Mella Ricardo 1900 Collectivism and Communism Les Temps Nouveaux Translated by Wilbur Shawn via The Libertarian Labyrinth Montseny Joan Mane Teresa 1891 Las Preocupaciones de los Despreocupados in Spanish Barcelona La Academia de Viuda OCLC 83043424 Neal Dave 1997 Anarchism Ideology or Methodology Spunk Library Nettlau Max 1914 Anarchism Communist or Individualist Both Mother Earth Vol 9 no 5 pp 170 175 via The Libertarian Labyrinth Tarrida del Marmol Fernando 1889 Revolutionary Theory Translated by Wilbur Shawn via The Libertarian Labyrinth Tarrida del Marmol Fernando 1890 Anarchism Without Adjectives La Revolte Vol 3 no 51 Translated by McNab Nestor via The Anarchist Library van Ornum William Henry 1896 Fundamentals in Reform Liberty Library No 5 Columbus Junction Iowa OCLC 367437215 via The Anarchist Library Winn Ross 1894 Let Us Unite Twentieth Century via Wikisource Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anarchism without adjectives amp oldid 1209905031, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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