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Emma Goldman

Emma Goldman (June 27, 1869 – May 14, 1940) was a Russian-born anarchist, political activist, and writer. She played a pivotal role in the development of anarchist political philosophy in North America and Europe in the first half of the 20th century.

Emma Goldman
Goldman, c. 1911
Born(1869-06-27)June 27, 1869
DiedMay 14, 1940(1940-05-14) (aged 70)
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
School
Signature

Born in Kaunas, Lithuania (then within the Russian Empire), to an Orthodox Lithuanian Jewish family, Goldman emigrated to the United States in 1885.[2] Attracted to anarchism after the Chicago Haymarket affair, Goldman became a writer and a renowned lecturer on anarchist philosophy, women's rights, and social issues, attracting crowds of thousands.[2] She and anarchist writer Alexander Berkman, her lover and lifelong friend, planned to assassinate industrialist and financier Henry Clay Frick as an act of propaganda of the deed. Frick survived the attempt on his life in 1892, and Berkman was sentenced to 22 years in prison. Goldman was imprisoned several times in the years that followed, for "inciting to riot" and illegally distributing information about birth control. In 1906, Goldman founded the anarchist journal Mother Earth.

In 1917, Goldman and Berkman were sentenced to two years in jail for conspiring to "induce persons not to register" for the newly instated draft. After their release from prison, they were arrested—along with 248 others—in the so-called Palmer Raids during the First Red Scare and deported to Russia. Initially supportive of that country's October Revolution that brought the Bolsheviks to power, Goldman changed her opinion in the wake of the Kronstadt rebellion; she denounced the Soviet Union for its violent repression of independent voices. She left the Soviet Union and in 1923 published a book about her experiences, My Disillusionment in Russia. While living in England, Canada, and France, she wrote an autobiography called Living My Life. It was published in two volumes, in 1931 and 1935. After the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War, Goldman traveled to Spain to support the anarchist revolution there. She died in Toronto, Canada, on May 14, 1940, aged 70.

During her life, Goldman was lionized as a freethinking "rebel woman" by admirers, and denounced by detractors as an advocate of politically motivated murder and violent revolution.[3] Her writing and lectures spanned a wide variety of issues, including prisons, atheism, freedom of speech, militarism, capitalism, marriage, free love, and homosexuality. Although she distanced herself from first-wave feminism and its efforts toward women's suffrage, she developed new ways of incorporating gender politics into anarchism. After decades of obscurity, Goldman gained iconic status in the 1970s by a revival of interest in her life, when feminist and anarchist scholars rekindled popular interest.

Biography

Family

Emma Goldman was born into an Orthodox Jewish family in Kovno in Lithuania, then within the Russian Empire.[4] Goldman's mother Taube Bienowitch had been married before to a man with whom she had two daughters—Helena in 1860 and Lena in 1862. When her first husband died of tuberculosis, Taube was devastated. Goldman later wrote: "Whatever love she had had died with the young man to whom she had been married at the age of fifteen."[5]

Taube's second marriage was arranged by her family and, as Goldman puts it, "mismated from the first".[5] Her second husband, Abraham Goldman, invested Taube's inheritance in a business that quickly failed. The ensuing hardship, combined with the emotional distance between husband and wife, made the household a tense place for the children. When Taube became pregnant, Abraham hoped desperately for a son; a daughter, he believed, would be one more sign of failure.[6] They eventually had three sons, but their first child was Emma.[7]

Emma Goldman was born on June 27, 1869.[8][9] Her father used violence to punish his children, beating them when they disobeyed him. He used a whip on Emma, the most rebellious of them.[10] Her mother provided scarce comfort, rarely calling on Abraham to tone down his beatings.[11] Goldman later speculated that her father's furious temper was at least partly a result of sexual frustration.[5]

Goldman's relationships with her elder half-sisters, Helena and Lena, were a study in contrasts. Helena, the oldest, provided the comfort the children lacked from their mother and filled Goldman's childhood with "whatever joy it had".[12] Lena, however, was distant and uncharitable.[13] The three sisters were joined by brothers Louis (who died at the age of six), Herman (born in 1872), and Moishe (born in 1879).[14]

Adolescence

 
Emma Goldman's family in St. Petersburg, Russia in 1882. From left to right: Emma, standing; Helena, seated, with Morris on her lap; Taube; Herman; Abraham.

When Emma Goldman was a young girl, the Goldman family moved to the village of Papilė, where her father ran an inn. While her sisters worked, she became friends with a servant named Petrushka, who excited her "first erotic sensations".[15] Later in Papilė she witnessed a peasant being whipped with a knout in the street. This event traumatized her and contributed to her lifelong distaste for violent authority.[16]

At the age of seven, Goldman moved with her family to the Prussian city of Königsberg (then part of the German Empire), and she was enrolled in a Realschule. One teacher punished disobedient students—targeting Goldman in particular—by beating their hands with a ruler. Another teacher tried to molest his female students and was fired when Goldman fought back. She found a sympathetic mentor in her German-language teacher, who loaned her books and took her to an opera. A passionate student, Goldman passed the exam for admission into a gymnasium, but her religion teacher refused to provide a certificate of good behavior and she was unable to attend.[17]

The family moved to the Russian capital of Saint Petersburg, where her father opened one unsuccessful store after another. Their poverty forced the children to work, and Goldman took an assortment of jobs, including one in a corset shop.[18] As a teenager Goldman begged her father to allow her to return to school, but instead he threw her French book into the fire and shouted: "Girls do not have to learn much! All a Jewish daughter needs to know is how to prepare gefilte fish, cut noodles fine, and give the man plenty of children."[19]

Goldman pursued an independent education on her own. She studied the political turmoil around her, particularly the Nihilists responsible for assassinating Alexander II of Russia. The ensuing turmoil intrigued Goldman, although she did not fully understand it at the time.[20] When she read Nikolai Chernyshevsky's novel, What Is to Be Done? (1863), she found a role model in the protagonist Vera. She adopts a Nihilist philosophy and escapes her repressive family to live freely and organize a sewing cooperative. The book enthralled Goldman and remained a source of inspiration throughout her life.[21]

Her father, meanwhile, continued to insist on a domestic future for her, and he tried to arrange for her to be married at the age of fifteen. They fought about the issue constantly; he complained that she was becoming a "loose" woman, and she insisted that she would marry for love alone.[22] At the corset shop, she was forced to fend off unwelcome advances from Russian officers and other men. One man took her into a hotel room and committed what Goldman described as "violent contact";[23] two biographers call it rape.[24] She was stunned by the experience, overcome by "shock at the discovery that the contact between man and woman could be so brutal and painful."[25] Goldman felt that the encounter forever soured her interactions with men.[25]

Rochester, New York

 
Emma Goldman in 1886

In 1885, her sister Helena made plans to move to New York in the United States to join her sister Lena and her husband. Goldman wanted to join her sister, but their father refused to allow it. Despite Helena's offer to pay for the trip, Abraham turned a deaf ear to their pleas. Desperate, Goldman threatened to throw herself into the Neva River if she could not go. Their father finally agreed. On December 29, 1885, Helena and Emma arrived at New York City's Castle Garden, the entry for immigrants.[26]

They settled upstate, living in the Rochester home which Lena had made with her husband Samuel. Fleeing the rising antisemitism of Saint Petersburg, their parents and brothers joined them a year later. Goldman began working as a seamstress, sewing overcoats for more than ten hours a day, earning two and a half dollars a week. She asked for a raise and was denied; she quit and took work at a smaller shop nearby.[27]

At her new job, Goldman met a fellow worker named Jacob Kershner, who shared her love for books, dancing, and traveling, as well as her frustration with the monotony of factory work. After four months, they married in February 1887.[28] Once he moved in with Goldman's family, their relationship faltered. On their wedding night she discovered that he was impotent; they became emotionally and physically distant. Before long he became jealous and suspicious and threatened to commit suicide lest she left him. Meanwhile, Goldman was becoming more engaged with the political turmoil around her, particularly the aftermath of executions related to the 1886 Haymarket affair in Chicago and the anti-authoritarian political philosophy of anarchism.[29]

Less than a year after the wedding, the couple were divorced; Kershner begged Goldman to return and threatened to poison himself if she did not. They reunited, but after three months she left once again. Her parents considered her behavior "loose" and refused to allow Goldman into their home.[30] Carrying her sewing machine in one hand and a bag with five dollars in the other, she left Rochester and headed southeast to New York City.[31]

Most and Berkman

 
Goldman enjoyed a decades-long relationship with her lover Alexander Berkman. Photo c. 1917–1919.

On her first day in the city, Goldman met two men who greatly changed her life. At Sachs' Café, a gathering place for radicals, she was introduced to Alexander Berkman, an anarchist who invited her to a public speech that evening. They went to hear Johann Most, editor of a radical publication called Freiheit and an advocate of "propaganda of the deed"—the use of violence to instigate change.[32] She was impressed by his fiery oration, and Most took her under his wing, training her in methods of public speaking. He encouraged her vigorously, telling her that she was "to take my place when I am gone."[33] One of her first public talks in support of "the Cause" was in Rochester. After convincing Helena not to tell their parents of her speech, Goldman found her mind a blank once on stage. She later wrote, suddenly:[34]

something strange happened. In a flash I saw it—every incident of my three years in Rochester: the Garson factory, its drudgery and humiliation, the failure of my marriage, the Chicago crime...I began to speak. Words I had never heard myself utter before came pouring forth, faster and faster. They came with passionate intensity...The audience had vanished, the hall itself had disappeared; I was conscious only of my own words, of my ecstatic song.

Excited by the experience, Goldman refined her public persona during subsequent engagements. She quickly found herself arguing with Most over her independence. After a momentous speech in Cleveland, she felt as though she had become "a parrot repeating Most's views"[35] and resolved to express herself on the stage. When she returned to New York, Most became furious and told her: "Who is not with me is against me!"[36] She left Freiheit and joined another publication, Die Autonomie.[37]

Meanwhile, Goldman had begun a friendship with Berkman, whom she affectionately called Sasha. Before long they became lovers and moved into a communal apartment with his cousin Modest "Fedya" Stein and Goldman's friend, Helen Minkin, on 42nd Street.[38] Although their relationship had numerous difficulties, Goldman and Berkman would share a close bond for decades, united by their anarchist principles and commitment to personal equality.[39]

In 1892, Goldman joined with Berkman and Stein in opening an ice cream shop in Worcester, Massachusetts. After a few months of operating the shop, Goldman and Berkman were diverted to participate in the Homestead Strike near Pittsburgh.[40][41]

Homestead plot

Berkman and Goldman came together through the Homestead Strike. In June 1892, a steel plant in Homestead, Pennsylvania, owned by Andrew Carnegie became the focus of national attention when talks between the Carnegie Steel Company and the Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel Workers (AA) broke down. The factory's manager was Henry Clay Frick, a fierce opponent of the union. When a final round of talks failed at the end of June, management closed the plant and locked out the workers, who immediately went on strike. Strikebreakers were brought in and the company hired Pinkerton guards to protect them. On July 6, a fight broke out between 300 Pinkerton guards and a crowd of armed union workers. During the twelve-hour gunfight, seven guards and nine strikers were killed.[42]

 
Goldman and Berkman believed that a retaliatory assassination of Carnegie Steel Company manager Henry Clay Frick (pictured) would "strike terror into the soul of his class" and "bring the teachings of Anarchism before the world".[43]

When a majority of the nation's newspapers expressed support of the strikers, Goldman and Berkman resolved to assassinate Frick, an action they expected would inspire the workers to revolt against the capitalist system. Berkman chose to carry out the assassination, and ordered Goldman to stay behind in order to explain his motives after he went to jail. He would be in charge of "the deed"; she of the associated propaganda.[44] Berkman set off for Pittsburgh on his way to Homestead, where he planned to shoot Frick.[45]

Goldman, meanwhile, decided to help fund the scheme through prostitution. Remembering the character of Sonya in Fyodor Dostoevsky's novel Crime and Punishment (1866), she mused: "She had become a prostitute in order to support her little brothers and sisters...Sensitive Sonya could sell her body; why not I?"[46] Once on the street, Goldman caught the eye of a man who took her into a saloon, bought her a beer, gave her ten dollars, informed her she did not have "the knack," and told her to quit the business. She was "too astounded for speech".[46] She wrote to Helena, claiming illness, and asked her for fifteen dollars.[47]

On July 23, Berkman gained access to Frick's office while carrying a concealed handgun; he shot Frick three times, and stabbed him in the leg. A group of workers—far from joining in his attentat—beat Berkman unconscious, and he was carried away by the police.[48] Berkman was convicted of attempted murder[49] and sentenced to 22 years in prison.[50] Goldman suffered during his long absence.[45]

Convinced Goldman was involved in the plot, police raided her apartment. Although they found no evidence, they pressured her landlord into evicting her. Worse, the attentat had failed to rouse the masses: workers and anarchists alike condemned Berkman's action. Johann Most, their former mentor, lashed out at Berkman and the assassination attempt. Furious at these attacks, Goldman brought a toy horsewhip to a public lecture and demanded, onstage, that Most explain his betrayal. He dismissed her, whereupon she struck him with the whip, broke it on her knee, and hurled the pieces at him.[51][52] She later regretted her assault, confiding to a friend: "At the age of twenty-three, one does not reason."[53]

"Inciting to riot"

When the Panic of 1893 struck in the following year, the United States suffered one of its worst economic crises. By year's end, the unemployment rate was higher than 20%,[54] and "hunger demonstrations" sometimes gave way to riots. Goldman began speaking to crowds of frustrated men and women in New York City. On August 21, she spoke to a crowd of nearly 3,000 people in Union Square, where she encouraged unemployed workers to take immediate action. Her exact words are unclear: undercover agents insist she ordered the crowd to "take everything ... by force".[55] But Goldman later recounted this message: "Well then, demonstrate before the palaces of the rich; demand work. If they do not give you work, demand bread. If they deny you both, take bread."[56] Later in court, Detective-Sergeant Charles Jacobs offered yet another version of her speech.[57]

 
Goldman (shown here in Union Square, New York in 1916) urged unemployed workers to take direct action rather than depend on charity or government aid.

A week later, Goldman was arrested in Philadelphia and returned to New York City for trial, charged with "inciting to riot".[58] During the train ride, Jacobs offered to drop the charges against her if she would inform on other radicals in the area. She responded by throwing a glass of ice water in his face.[59] As she awaited trial, Goldman was visited by Nellie Bly, a reporter for the New York World. She spent two hours talking to Goldman and wrote a positive article about the woman she described as a "modern Joan of Arc."[60]

Despite this positive publicity, the jury was persuaded by Jacobs' testimony and frightened by Goldman's politics. The assistant District Attorney questioned Goldman about her anarchism, as well as her atheism; the judge spoke of her as "a dangerous woman".[61] She was sentenced to one year in the Blackwell's Island Penitentiary. Once inside she suffered an attack of rheumatism and was sent to the infirmary; there she befriended a visiting doctor and began studying medicine. She also read dozens of books, including works by the American activist-writers Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau; novelist Nathaniel Hawthorne; poet Walt Whitman, and philosopher John Stuart Mill.[62] When Goldman was released after ten months, a raucous crowd of nearly 3,000 people greeted her at the Thalia Theater in New York City. She soon became swamped with requests for interviews and lectures.[63]

To make money, Goldman decided to continue the medical studies she had started in prison but her preferred fields of specialization—midwifery and massage—were unavailable to nursing students in the US. She sailed to Europe, lecturing in London, Glasgow, and Edinburgh. She met with renowned anarchists such as Errico Malatesta, Louise Michel, and Peter Kropotkin. In Vienna, she received two diplomas for midwifery and put them immediately to use back in the US.[64]

Alternating between lectures and midwifery, Goldman conducted the first cross-country tour by an anarchist speaker. In November 1899 she returned to Europe to speak, where she met the Czech anarchist Hippolyte Havel in London. They went together to France and helped organize the 1900 International Anarchist Congress on the outskirts of Paris.[65] Afterward Havel immigrated to the United States, traveling with Goldman to Chicago. They shared a residence there with friends of Goldman.[66]

McKinley assassination

 
Leon Czolgosz insisted that Goldman had not guided his plan to assassinate US President William McKinley, but she was arrested and held for two weeks.

On September 6, 1901, Leon Czolgosz, an unemployed factory worker and registered Republican, shot US President William McKinley twice during a public speaking event in Buffalo, New York. McKinley was hit in the breastbone and stomach, and died eight days later.[67] Czolgosz was arrested, and interrogated around the clock. During interrogation he claimed to be an anarchist and said he had been inspired to act after attending a speech by Goldman. The authorities used this as a pretext to charge Goldman with planning McKinley's assassination. They tracked her to the residence in Chicago she shared with Havel, as well as with Mary and Abe Isaak, an anarchist couple and their family.[68] Goldman was arrested, along with Isaak, Havel, and ten other anarchists.[69]

Earlier, Czolgosz had tried but failed to become friends with Goldman and her companions. During a talk in Cleveland, Czolgosz had approached Goldman and asked her advice on which books he should read. In July 1901, he had appeared at the Isaak house, asking a series of unusual questions. They assumed he was an infiltrator, like a number of police agents sent to spy on radical groups. They had remained distant from him, and Abe Isaak sent a notice to associates warning of "another spy".[70]

Although Czolgosz repeatedly denied Goldman's involvement, the police held her in close custody, subjecting her to what she called the "third degree".[71] She explained her housemates' distrust of Czolgosz, and the police finally recognized that she had not had any significant contact with the attacker. No evidence was found linking Goldman to the attack, and she was released after two weeks of detention. Before McKinley died, Goldman offered to provide nursing care, referring to him as "merely a human being".[72] Czolgosz, despite considerable evidence of mental illness, was convicted of murder and executed.[73]

Throughout her detention and after her release, Goldman steadfastly refused to condemn Czolgosz's actions, standing virtually alone in doing so. Friends and supporters—including Berkman—urged her to quit his cause. But Goldman defended Czolgosz as a "supersensitive being" and chastised other anarchists for abandoning him.[74] She was vilified in the press as the "high priestess of anarchy",[75] while many newspapers declared the anarchist movement responsible for the murder.[76] In the wake of these events, socialism gained support over anarchism among US radicals. McKinley's successor, Theodore Roosevelt, declared his intent to crack down "not only against anarchists, but against all active and passive sympathizers with anarchists".[77]

Mother Earth and Berkman's release

After Czolgosz was executed, Goldman withdrew from the world and, from 1903 to 1913, lived at 208–210 East 13th Street, New York City.[78] Scorned by her fellow anarchists, vilified by the press, and separated from her love, Berkman, she retreated into anonymity and nursing. "It was bitter and hard to face life anew," she wrote later.[79]

Using the name E. G. Smith, she left public life and took on a series of private nursing jobs while suffering from severe depression.[80] The US Congress' passage of the Anarchist Exclusion Act (1903) stirred a new wave of oppositional activism, pulling Goldman back into the movement. A coalition of people and organizations across the left end of the political spectrum opposed the law on grounds that it violated freedom of speech, and she had the nation's ear once again.[81]

After an English anarchist named John Turner was arrested under the Anarchist Exclusion Act and threatened with deportation, Goldman joined forces with the Free Speech League to champion his cause.[82] The league enlisted the aid of noted attorneys Clarence Darrow and Edgar Lee Masters, who took Turner's case to the US Supreme Court. Although Turner and the League lost, Goldman considered it a victory of propaganda.[83] She had returned to anarchist activism, but it was taking its toll on her. "I never felt so weighed down," she wrote to Berkman. "I fear I am forever doomed to remain public property and to have my life worn out through the care for the lives of others."[84]

In 1906, Goldman decided to start a publication, "a place of expression for the young idealists in arts and letters".[85] Mother Earth was staffed by a cadre of radical activists, including Hippolyte Havel, Max Baginski, and Leonard Abbott. In addition to publishing original works by its editors and anarchists around the world, Mother Earth reprinted selections from a variety of writers. These included the French philosopher Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, Russian anarchist Peter Kropotkin, German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, and British writer Mary Wollstonecraft. Goldman wrote frequently about anarchism, politics, labor issues, atheism, sexuality, and feminism, and was the first editor of the magazine.[86][87]

 
Goldman's Mother Earth magazine became a home to radical activists and literary free thinkers around the US.

On May 18 of the same year, Alexander Berkman was released from prison. Carrying a bouquet of roses, Goldman met him on the train platform and found herself "seized by terror and pity"[88] as she beheld his gaunt, pale form. Neither was able to speak; they returned to her home in silence. For weeks, he struggled to readjust to life on the outside: An abortive speaking tour ended in failure, and in Cleveland he purchased a revolver with the intent of killing himself.[89][90] Upon returning to New York, he learned that Goldman had been arrested with a group of activists meeting to reflect on Czolgosz. Invigorated anew by this violation of freedom of assembly, he declared, "My resurrection has come!"[91] and set about securing their release.[92]

Berkman took the helm of Mother Earth in 1907, while Goldman toured the country to raise funds to keep it operating. Editing the magazine was a revitalizing experience for Berkman. But his relationship with Goldman faltered, and he had an affair with a 15-year-old anarchist named Becky Edelsohn. Goldman was pained by his rejection of her, but considered it a consequence of his prison experience.[93] Later that year she served as a delegate from the US to the International Anarchist Congress of Amsterdam. Anarchists and syndicalists from around the world gathered to sort out the tension between the two ideologies, but no decisive agreement was reached. Goldman returned to the US and continued speaking to large audiences.[94]

Reitman, essays, and birth control

For the next ten years, Goldman traveled around the country nonstop, delivering lectures and agitating for anarchism. The coalitions formed in opposition to the Anarchist Exclusion Act had given her an appreciation for reaching out to those of other political positions. When the US Justice Department sent spies to observe, they reported the meetings as "packed".[95] Writers, journalists, artists, judges, and workers from across the spectrum spoke of her "magnetic power", her "convincing presence", her "force, eloquence, and fire".[96]

 
Goldman joined Margaret Sanger in crusading for women's access to birth control; both women were arrested for violating the Comstock Law.

In the spring of 1908, Goldman met and fell in love with Ben Reitman, the so-called "Hobo doctor". Having grown up in Chicago's Tenderloin District, Reitman spent several years as a drifter before earning a medical degree from the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Chicago. As a doctor, he treated people suffering from poverty and illness, particularly venereal diseases. He and Goldman began an affair. They shared a commitment to free love and Reitman took a variety of lovers, but Goldman did not. She tried to reconcile her feelings of jealousy with a belief in freedom of the heart, but found it difficult.[97]

Two years later, Goldman began feeling frustrated with lecture audiences. She yearned to "reach the few who really want to learn, rather than the many who come to be amused".[98] She collected a series of speeches and items she had written for Mother Earth and published a book titled Anarchism and Other Essays. Covering a wide variety of topics, Goldman tried to represent "the mental and soul struggles of twenty-one years".[98]

When Margaret Sanger, an advocate of access to contraception, coined the term "birth control" and disseminated information about various methods in the June 1914 issue of her magazine The Woman Rebel, she received aggressive support from Goldman. The latter had already been active in efforts to increase birth control access for several years. In 1916, Goldman was arrested for giving lessons in public on how to use contraceptives.[99] Sanger, too, was arrested under the Comstock Law, which prohibited the dissemination of "obscene, lewd, or lascivious articles", which authorities defined as including information relating to birth control.[100]

Although they later split from Sanger over charges of insufficient support, Goldman and Reitman distributed copies of Sanger's pamphlet Family Limitation (along with a similar essay of Reitman's). In 1915 Goldman conducted a nationwide speaking tour, in part to raise awareness about contraception options. Although the nation's attitude toward the topic seemed to be liberalizing, Goldman was arrested on February 11, 1916, as she was about to give another public lecture.[101] Goldman was charged with violating the Comstock Law. Refusing to pay a $100 fine, she spent two weeks in a prison workhouse, which she saw as an "opportunity" to reconnect with those rejected by society.[102]

World War I

Although President Woodrow Wilson was re-elected in 1916 under the slogan "He kept us out of the war", at the start of his second term, he announced that Germany's continued deployment of unrestricted submarine warfare was sufficient cause for the US to enter the Great War. Shortly afterward, Congress passed the Selective Service Act of 1917, which required all males aged 21–30 to register for military conscription. Goldman saw the decision as an exercise in militarist aggression, driven by capitalism. She declared in Mother Earth her intent to resist conscription, and to oppose US involvement in the war.[103][104]

 
Goldman on a streetcar in 1917, perhaps during a strike or demonstration

To this end, she and Berkman organized the No Conscription League of New York, which proclaimed: "We oppose conscription because we are internationalists, antimilitarists, and opposed to all wars waged by capitalistic governments."[105] The group became a vanguard for anti-draft activism, and chapters began to appear in other cities. When police began raiding the group's public events to find young men who had not registered for the draft, Goldman and others focused their efforts on distributing pamphlets and other writings.[103] In the midst of the nation's patriotic fervor, many elements of the political left refused to support the League's efforts. The Women's Peace Party, for example, ceased its opposition to the war once the US entered it. The Socialist Party of America took an official stance against US involvement, but supported Wilson in most of his activities.[106]

On June 15, 1917, Goldman and Berkman were arrested during a raid of their offices, in which authorities seized "a wagon load of anarchist records and propaganda".[107] The New York Times reported that Goldman asked to change into a more appropriate outfit, and emerged in a gown of "royal purple".[107][108] The pair were charged with conspiracy to "induce persons not to register"[109] under the newly enacted Espionage Act,[110] and were held on US$25,000 bail each. Defending herself and Berkman during their trial, Goldman invoked the First Amendment, asking how the government could claim to fight for democracy abroad while suppressing free speech at home:[111]

We say that if America has entered the war to make the world safe for democracy, she must first make democracy safe in America. How else is the world to take America seriously, when democracy at home is daily being outraged, free speech suppressed, peaceable assemblies broken up by overbearing and brutal gangsters in uniform; when free press is curtailed and every independent opinion gagged? Verily, poor as we are in democracy, how can we give of it to the world?

The jury found Goldman and Berkman guilty. Judge Julius Marshuetz Mayer imposed the maximum sentence: two years' imprisonment, a $10,000 fine each, and the possibility of deportation after their release from prison. As she was transported to Missouri State Penitentiary, Goldman wrote to a friend: "Two years imprisonment for having made an uncompromising stand for one's ideal. Why that is a small price."[112]

In prison, she was assigned to work as a seamstress, under the eye of a "miserable gutter-snipe of a 21-year-old boy paid to get results".[113] She met the socialist Kate Richards O'Hare, who had also been imprisoned under the Espionage Act. Although they differed on political strategy—O'Hare believed in voting to achieve state power—the two women came together to agitate for better conditions among prisoners.[114] Goldman also met and became friends with Gabriella Segata Antolini, an anarchist and follower of Luigi Galleani. Antolini had been arrested transporting a satchel filled with dynamite on a Chicago-bound train. She had refused to cooperate with authorities, and was sent to prison for 14 months. Working together to make life better for the other inmates, the three women became known as "The Trinity". Goldman was released on September 27, 1919.[115]

Deportation

 
Goldman's deportation photo, 1919

Goldman and Berkman were released from prison during the United States' Red Scare of 1919–20, when public anxiety about wartime pro-German activities had expanded into a pervasive fear of Bolshevism and the prospect of an imminent radical revolution. It was a time of social unrest due to union organizing strikes and actions by activist immigrants. Attorney General Alexander Mitchell Palmer and J. Edgar Hoover, head of the US Department of Justice's General Intelligence Division (now the FBI), were intent on using the Anarchist Exclusion Act and its 1918 expansion to deport any non-citizens they could identify as advocates of anarchy or revolution. "Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman," Hoover wrote while they were in prison, "are, beyond doubt, two of the most dangerous anarchists in this country and return to the community will result in undue harm."[116]

At her deportation hearing on October 27, Goldman refused to answer questions about her beliefs, on the grounds that her American citizenship invalidated any attempt to deport her under the Anarchist Exclusion Act, which could be enforced only against non-citizens of the US. She presented a written statement instead: "Today so-called aliens are deported. Tomorrow native Americans will be banished. Already some patrioteers are suggesting that native American sons to whom democracy is a sacred ideal should be exiled."[117] Louis Post at the Department of Labor, which had ultimate authority over deportation decisions, determined that the revocation of her husband Kershner's American citizenship in 1908 after his conviction had revoked hers as well. After initially promising a court fight,[118] Goldman decided not to appeal his ruling.[119]

The Labor Department included Goldman and Berkman among 249 aliens it deported en masse, mostly people with only vague associations with radical groups, who had been swept up in government raids in November.[120] Buford, a ship the press nicknamed the "Soviet Ark", sailed from the Army's New York Port of Embarkation on December 21.[121][122] Some 58 enlisted men and four officers provided security on the journey, and pistols were distributed to the crew.[121][123] Most of the press approved enthusiastically. The Cleveland Plain Dealer wrote: "It is hoped and expected that other vessels, larger, more commodious, carrying similar cargoes, will follow in her wake."[124] The ship landed her charges in Hanko, Finland, on Saturday, January 17, 1920.[125] Upon arrival in Finland, authorities there conducted the deportees to the Russian frontier under a flag of truce.[126]

Russia

 
Here, Emma Goldman delivers a eulogy at Peter Kropotkin's funeral procession. Immediately in front of Goldman stands her lifelong comrade Alexander Berkman. Kropotkin's funeral was the occasion of the last great demonstration of anarchists in Moscow—tens of thousands of people poured into the streets to pay their respects.

Goldman initially viewed the Bolshevik revolution in a positive light. She wrote in Mother Earth that despite its dependence on Communist government, it represented "the most fundamental, far-reaching and all-embracing principles of human freedom and of economic well-being".[127] By the time she neared Europe, she expressed fears about what was to come. She was worried about the ongoing Russian Civil War and the possibility of being seized by anti-Bolshevik forces. The state, anti-capitalist though it was, also posed a threat. "I could never in my life work within the confines of the State," she wrote to her niece, "Bolshevist or otherwise."[128]

She quickly discovered that her fears were justified. Days after returning to Petrograd (Saint Petersburg), she was shocked to hear a party official refer to free speech as a "bourgeois superstition".[129] As she and Berkman traveled around the country, they found repression, mismanagement, and corruption[130] instead of the equality and worker empowerment they had dreamed of. Those who questioned the government were demonized as counter-revolutionaries,[130] and workers labored under severe conditions.[130] They met with Vladimir Lenin, who assured them that government suppression of press liberties was justified. He told them: "There can be no free speech in a revolutionary period."[131] Berkman was more willing to forgive the government's actions in the name of "historical necessity", but he eventually joined Goldman in opposing the Soviet state's authority.[132]

In March 1921, strikes erupted in Petrograd when workers took to the streets demanding better food rations and more union autonomy. Goldman and Berkman felt a responsibility to support the strikers, stating: "To remain silent now is impossible, even criminal."[133] The unrest spread to the port town of Kronstadt, where the government ordered a military response to suppress striking soldiers and sailors. In the Kronstadt rebellion, approximately 1,000 rebelling sailors and soldiers were killed and two thousand more were arrested; many were later executed. In the wake of these events, Goldman and Berkman decided there was no future in the country for them. "More and more", she wrote, "we have come to the conclusion that we can do nothing here. And as we can not keep up a life of inactivity much longer we have decided to leave."[134]

In December 1921, they left the country and went to the Latvian capital city of Riga. The US commissioner in that city wired officials in Washington DC, who began requesting information from other governments about the couple's activities. After a short trip to Stockholm, they moved to Berlin for several years; during this time Goldman agreed to write a series of articles about her time in Russia for Joseph Pulitzer's newspaper, the New York World. These were later collected and published in book form as My Disillusionment in Russia (1923) and My Further Disillusionment in Russia (1924). The publishers added these titles to attract attention; Goldman protested, albeit in vain.[135]

England, Canada, and France

Goldman found it difficult to acclimate to the German leftist community in Berlin. Communists despised her outspokenness about Soviet repression; liberals derided her radicalism. While Berkman remained in Berlin helping Russian exiles, Goldman moved to London in September 1924. Upon her arrival, the novelist Rebecca West arranged a reception dinner for her, attended by philosopher Bertrand Russell, novelist H. G. Wells, and more than 200 other guests. When she spoke of her dissatisfaction with the Soviet government, the audience was shocked. Some left the gathering; others berated her for prematurely criticizing the Communist experiment.[136] Later, in a letter, Russell declined to support her efforts at systemic change in the Soviet Union and ridiculed her anarchist idealism.[137]

 
The 1927 executions of Italian anarchists Nicola Sacco (right) and Bartolomeo Vanzetti were troubling for Goldman, then living alone in Canada.

In 1925, the spectre of deportation loomed again, but James Colton, a Scottish anarchist Goldman had first met In Glasgow whilst on a speaking tour in 1895,[138] had offered to marry her and provide British citizenship. Although they were only distant acquaintances, she accepted and they were married on June 27, 1925, Goldman's 58th birthday. Her new status gave her peace of mind, and allowed her to travel to France and Canada.[139] The pair sporadically exchanged correspondence until Colton's death in 1936.[140][141] Life in London was stressful for Goldman; she wrote to Berkman: "I am awfully tired and so lonely and heartsick. It is a dreadful feeling to come back here from lectures and find not a kindred soul, no one who cares whether one is dead or alive."[142] She worked on analytical studies of drama, expanding on the work she had published in 1914. But the audiences were "awful," and she never finished her second book on the subject.[143]

Goldman traveled to Canada in 1927, just in time to receive news of the impending executions of Italian anarchists Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti in Boston. Angered by the many irregularities of the case, she saw it as another travesty of justice in the US. She longed to join the mass demonstrations in Boston; memories of the Haymarket affair overwhelmed her, compounded by her isolation. "Then," she wrote, "I had my life before me to take up the cause for those killed. Now I have nothing."[144][145]

In 1928, she began writing her autobiography, with the support of a group of American admirers, including journalist H. L. Mencken, poet Edna St. Vincent Millay, novelist Theodore Dreiser and art collector Peggy Guggenheim, who raised $4,000 for her.[146] She secured a cottage in the French coastal city of Saint-Tropez and spent two years recounting her life. Berkman offered sharply critical feedback, which she eventually incorporated at the price of a strain on their relationship.[147] Goldman intended the book, Living My Life, as a single volume for a price the working class could afford (she urged no more than $5.00); her publisher Alfred A. Knopf released it as two volumes sold together for $7.50. Goldman was furious, but unable to force a change. Due in large part to the Great Depression, sales were sluggish despite keen interest from libraries around the US.[148] Critical reviews were generally enthusiastic; The New York Times, The New Yorker, and Saturday Review of Literature all listed it as one of the year's top non-fiction books.[149]

In 1933, Goldman received permission to lecture in the United States under the condition that she speak only about drama and her autobiography—but not current political events. She returned to New York on February 2, 1934, to generally positive press coverage—except from Communist publications. Soon she was surrounded by admirers and friends, besieged with invitations to talks and interviews. Her visa expired in May, and she went to Toronto in order to file another request to visit the US. This second attempt was denied. She stayed in Canada, writing articles for US publications.[150]

In February and March 1936, Berkman underwent a pair of prostate gland operations. Recuperating in Nice and cared for by his companion, Emmy Eckstein, he missed Goldman's sixty-seventh birthday in Saint-Tropez in June. She wrote in sadness, but he never read the letter; she received a call in the middle of the night that Berkman was in great distress. She left for Nice immediately but when she arrived that morning, Goldman found that he had shot himself and was in a nearly comatose paralysis. He died later that evening.[151]

Spanish Civil War

In July 1936, the Spanish Civil War started after an attempted coup d'état by parts of the Spanish Army against the government of the Second Spanish Republic. At the same time, the Spanish anarchists, fighting against the Nationalist forces, started an anarchist revolution. Goldman was invited to Barcelona and in an instant, as she wrote to her niece, "the crushing weight that was pressing down on my heart since Sasha's death left me as by magic".[152] She was welcomed by the Confederación Nacional del Trabajo (CNT) and Federación Anarquista Ibérica (FAI) organizations, and for the first time in her life lived in a community run by and for anarchists, according to true anarchist principles. "In all my life", she wrote later, "I have not met with such warm hospitality, comradeship and solidarity."[153] After touring a series of collectives in the province of Huesca, she told a group of workers: "Your revolution will destroy forever [the notion] that anarchism stands for chaos."[154] She began editing the weekly CNT-FAI Information Bulletin and responded to English-language mail.[155]

 
Goldman edited the English-language Bulletin of the Anarcho-syndicalist organizations Confederación Nacional del Trabajo (CNT) and Federación Anarquista Ibérica (FAI) during the Spanish Civil War.

Goldman began to worry about the future of Spain's anarchism when the CNT-FAI joined a coalition government in 1937—against the core anarchist principle of abstaining from state structures—and, more distressingly, made repeated concessions to Communist forces in the name of uniting against fascism. In November 1936, she wrote that cooperating with Communists in Spain was "a denial of our comrades in Stalin's concentration camps".[156] The USSR, meanwhile, refused to send weapons to anarchist forces, and disinformation campaigns were being waged against the anarchists across Europe and the US. Her faith in the movement unshaken, Goldman returned to London as an official representative of the CNT-FAI.[157]

Delivering lectures and giving interviews, Goldman enthusiastically supported the Spanish anarcho-syndicalists. She wrote regularly for Spain and the World, a biweekly newspaper focusing on the civil war. In May 1937, Communist-led forces attacked anarchist strongholds and broke up agrarian collectives. Newspapers in England and elsewhere accepted the timeline of events offered by the Second Spanish Republic at face value. British journalist George Orwell, present for the crackdown, wrote: "[T]he accounts of the Barcelona riots in May ... beat everything I have ever seen for lying."[158]

Goldman returned to Spain in September, but the CNT-FAI appeared to her like people "in a burning house". Worse, anarchists and other radicals around the world refused to support their cause.[159] The Nationalist forces declared victory in Spain just before she returned to London. Frustrated by England's repressive atmosphere—which she called "more fascist than the fascists"[160]—she returned to Canada in 1939. Her service to the anarchist cause in Spain was not forgotten. On her seventieth birthday, the former Secretary-General of the CNT-FAI, Mariano Vázquez, sent a message to her from Paris, praising her for her contributions and naming her as "our spiritual mother". She called it "the most beautiful tribute I have ever received".[161]

Final years

 
Goldman's grave in Illinois' Forest Home Cemetery, near those of the anarchists executed for the Haymarket affair. The dates on the stone are incorrect.

As the events preceding World War II began to unfold in Europe, Goldman reiterated her opposition to wars waged by governments. "[M]uch as I loathe Hitler, Mussolini, Stalin and Franco", she wrote to a friend, "I would not support a war against them and for the democracies which, in the last analysis, are only Fascist in disguise."[162] She felt that Britain and France had missed their opportunity to oppose fascism, and that the coming war would only result in "a new form of madness in the world".[162]

Death

On Saturday, February 17, 1940, Goldman suffered a debilitating stroke. She became paralyzed on her right side, and although her hearing was unaffected, she could not speak. As one friend described it: "Just to think that here was Emma, the greatest orator in America, unable to utter one word."[163] For three months she improved slightly, receiving visitors and on one occasion gesturing to her address book to signal that a friend might find friendly contacts during a trip to Mexico. She suffered another stroke on May 8 and she died six days later in Toronto, aged 70.[164][165]

The US Immigration and Naturalization Service allowed her body to be brought back to the United States. She was buried in German Waldheim Cemetery (now named Forest Home Cemetery) in Forest Park, Illinois, a western suburb of Chicago, near the graves of those executed after the Haymarket affair.[166] The bas relief on her grave marker was created by sculptor Jo Davidson,[167] and the stone includes the quote "Liberty will not descend to a people, a people must raise themselves to liberty".

Philosophy

Goldman spoke and wrote extensively on a wide variety of issues. While she rejected orthodoxy and fundamentalist thinking, she was an important contributor to several fields of modern political philosophy.

She was influenced by many diverse thinkers and writers, including Mikhail Bakunin, Henry David Thoreau, Peter Kropotkin, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nikolai Chernyshevsky, and Mary Wollstonecraft. Another philosopher who influenced Goldman was Friedrich Nietzsche. In her autobiography, she wrote: "Nietzsche was not a social theorist, but a poet, a rebel, and innovator. His aristocracy was neither of birth nor of purse; it was the spirit. In that respect Nietzsche was an anarchist, and all true anarchists were aristocrats."[168]

Anarchism

Anarchism was central to Goldman's view of the world and she is today considered one of the most important figures in the history of anarchism. First drawn to it during the persecution of anarchists after the 1886 Haymarket affair, she wrote and spoke regularly on behalf of anarchism. In the title essay of her book Anarchism and Other Essays, she wrote:[169]

Anarchism, then, really stands for the liberation of the human mind from the dominion of religion; the liberation of the human body from the dominion of property; liberation from the shackles and restraint of government. Anarchism stands for a social order based on the free grouping of individuals for the purpose of producing real social wealth; an order that will guarantee to every human being free access to the earth and full enjoyment of the necessities of life, according to individual desires, tastes, and inclinations.

Goldman's anarchism was intensely personal. She believed it was necessary for anarchist thinkers to live their beliefs, demonstrating their convictions with every action and word. "I don't care if a man's theory for tomorrow is correct," she once wrote. "I care if his spirit of today is correct."[170] Anarchism and free association were to her logical responses to the confines of government control and capitalism. "It seems to me that these are the new forms of life," she wrote, "and that they will take the place of the old, not by preaching or voting, but by living them."[170]

At the same time, she believed that the movement on behalf of human liberty must be staffed by liberated humans. While dancing among fellow anarchists one evening, she was chided by an associate for her carefree demeanor. In her autobiography, Goldman wrote:[171]

I told him to mind his own business, I was tired of having the Cause constantly thrown in my face. I did not believe that a Cause which stood for a beautiful ideal, for anarchism, for release and freedom from conventions and prejudice, should demand denial of life and joy. I insisted that our Cause could not expect me to behave as a nun and that the movement should not be turned into a cloister. If it meant that, I did not want it. "I want freedom, the right to self-expression, everybody's right to beautiful, radiant things."

Tactical uses of violence

Goldman, in her political youth, held targeted violence to be a legitimate means of revolutionary struggle. Goldman at the time believed that the use of violence, while distasteful, could be justified in relation to the social benefits it might accrue. She advocated propaganda of the deedattentat, or violence carried out to encourage the masses to revolt. She supported her partner Alexander Berkman's attempt to kill industrialist Henry Clay Frick, and even begged him to allow her to participate.[172] She believed that Frick's actions during the Homestead strike were reprehensible and that his murder would produce a positive result for working people. "Yes," she wrote later in her autobiography, "the end in this case justified the means."[172] While she never gave explicit approval of Leon Czolgosz's assassination of US President William McKinley, she defended his ideals and believed actions like his were a natural consequence of repressive institutions. As she wrote in "The Psychology of Political Violence": "the accumulated forces in our social and economic life, culminating in an act of violence, are similar to the terrors of the atmosphere, manifested in storm and lightning."[173]

Her experiences in Russia led her to qualify her earlier belief that revolutionary ends might justify violent means. In the afterword to My Disillusionment in Russia, she wrote: "There is no greater fallacy than the belief that aims and purposes are one thing, while methods and tactics are another.... The means employed become, through individual habit and social practice, part and parcel of the final purpose...." In the same chapter, Goldman affirmed that "Revolution is indeed a violent process," and noted that violence was the "tragic inevitability of revolutionary upheavals..."[174] Some misinterpreted her comments on the Bolshevik terror as a rejection of all militant force, but Goldman corrected this in the preface to the first US edition of My Disillusionment in Russia:[175]

The argument that destruction and terror are part of revolution I do not dispute. I know that in the past every great political and social change necessitated violence. [...] Black slavery might still be a legalized institution in the United States but for the militant spirit of the John Browns. I have never denied that violence is inevitable, nor do I gainsay it now. Yet it is one thing to employ violence in combat, as a means of defense. It is quite another thing to make a principle of terrorism, to institutionalize it, to assign it the most vital place in the social struggle. Such terrorism begets counter-revolution and in turn itself becomes counter-revolutionary.

Goldman saw the militarization of Soviet society not as a result of armed resistance per se, but of the statist vision of the Bolsheviks, writing that "an insignificant minority bent on creating an absolute State is necessarily driven to oppression and terrorism."[176]

Capitalism and labor

Goldman believed that the economic system of capitalism was incompatible with human liberty. "The only demand that property recognizes," she wrote in Anarchism and Other Essays, "is its own gluttonous appetite for greater wealth, because wealth means power; the power to subdue, to crush, to exploit, the power to enslave, to outrage, to degrade."[177] She also argued that capitalism dehumanized workers, "turning the producer into a mere particle of a machine, with less will and decision than his master of steel and iron."[177]

Originally opposed to anything less than complete revolution, Goldman was challenged during one talk by an elderly worker in the front row. In her autobiography, she wrote:[35]

He said that he understood my impatience with such small demands as a few hours less a day, or a few dollars more a week.... But what were men of his age to do? They were not likely to live to see the ultimate overthrow of the capitalist system. Were they also to forgo the release of perhaps two hours a day from the hated work? That was all they could hope to see realized in their lifetime.

State

Goldman viewed the state as essentially and inevitably a tool of control and domination.[178] and as a result of her anti-state views, Goldman believed that voting was useless at best and dangerous at worst. Voting, she wrote, provided an illusion of participation while masking the true structures of decision-making. Instead, Goldman advocated targeted resistance in the form of strikes, protests, and "direct action against the invasive, meddlesome authority of our moral code".[178] She maintained an anti-voting position even when many anarcho-syndicalists in 1930s Spain voted for the formation of a liberal republic. Goldman wrote that any power anarchists wielded as a voting bloc should instead be used to strike across the country.[179] She disagreed with the movement for women's suffrage, which demanded the right of women to vote. In her essay "Woman Suffrage", she ridicules the idea that women's involvement would infuse the democratic state with a more just orientation: "As if women have not sold their votes, as if women politicians cannot be bought!"[180] She agreed with the suffragists' assertion that women are equal to men but disagreed that their participation alone would make the state more just. "To assume, therefore, that she would succeed in purifying something which is not susceptible of purification, is to credit her with supernatural powers."[181] Goldman was also critical of Zionism, which she saw as another failed experiment in state control.[182]

Goldman was also a passionate critic of the prison system, critiquing both the treatment of prisoners and the social causes of crime. Goldman viewed crime as a natural outgrowth of an unjust economic system, and in her essay "Prisons: A Social Crime and Failure", she quoted liberally from the 19th-century authors Fyodor Dostoevsky and Oscar Wilde on prisons, and wrote:[183]

Year after year the gates of prison hells return to the world an emaciated, deformed, will-less, shipwrecked crew of humanity, with the Cain mark on their foreheads, their hopes crushed, all their natural inclinations thwarted. With nothing but hunger and inhumanity to greet them, these victims soon sink back into crime as the only possibility of existence.

Goldman was a committed war resister and was particularly opposed to the draft, viewing it as one of the worst of the state's forms of coercion, and was one of the founders of the No-Conscription League for which she was ultimately arrested and imprisoned in 1917 before being deported in 1919.[184]

Goldman was routinely surveilled, arrested, and imprisoned for her speech and organizing activities in support of workers and various strikes, access to birth control, and in opposition to World War I. As a result, she became active in the early 20th century free speech movement, seeing freedom of expression as a fundamental necessity for achieving social change.[185][186][187][188] Her outspoken championship of her ideals, in the face of persistent arrests, inspired Roger Baldwin, one of the founders of the American Civil Liberties Union.[189] Goldman's and Reitman's experiences with vigilantism in the San Diego free speech fight in 1912 is an example of their persistence in the fight for free speech despite risking their safety.[190][191]

Feminism and sexuality

Although she was hostile to the suffragist goals of first-wave feminism, Goldman advocated passionately for the rights of women, and is today heralded as a founder of anarcha-feminism, which challenges patriarchy as a hierarchy to be resisted alongside state power and class divisions.[192] In 1897, she wrote: "I demand the independence of woman, her right to support herself; to live for herself; to love whomever she pleases, or as many as she pleases. I demand freedom for both sexes, freedom of action, freedom in love and freedom in motherhood."[193]

 
Anarcha-feminists at an anti-globalization protest quote Emma Goldman.

A nurse by training, Goldman was an early advocate for educating women concerning contraception. Like many feminists of her time, she saw abortion as a tragic consequence of social conditions, and birth control as a positive alternative. Goldman was also an advocate of free love, and a strong critic of marriage. She saw early feminists as confined in their scope and bounded by social forces of Puritanism and capitalism. She wrote: "We are in need of unhampered growth out of old traditions and habits. The movement for women's emancipation has so far made but the first step in that direction."[194][195]

Goldman was also an outspoken critic of prejudice against homosexuals. Her belief that social liberation should extend to gay men and lesbians was virtually unheard of at the time, even among anarchists.[196] As German sexologist Magnus Hirschfeld wrote, "she was the first and only woman, indeed the first and only American, to take up the defense of homosexual love before the general public."[197] In numerous speeches and letters, she defended the right of gay men and lesbians to love as they pleased and condemned the fear and stigma associated with homosexuality. As Goldman wrote in a letter to Hirschfeld, "It is a tragedy, I feel, that people of a different sexual type are caught in a world which shows so little understanding for homosexuals and is so crassly indifferent to the various gradations and variations of gender and their great significance in life."[197]

Atheism

A committed atheist, Goldman viewed religion as another instrument of control and domination. Her essay "The Philosophy of Atheism" quoted Bakunin at length on the subject and added:[198]

Consciously or unconsciously, most theists see in gods and devils, heaven and hell, reward and punishment, a whip to lash the people into obedience, meekness and contentment.... The philosophy of Atheism expresses the expansion and growth of the human mind. The philosophy of theism, if we can call it a philosophy, is static and fixed.

In essays like "The Hypocrisy of Puritanism" and a speech entitled "The Failure of Christianity", Goldman made more than a few enemies among religious communities by attacking their moralistic attitudes and efforts to control human behavior. She blamed Christianity for "the perpetuation of a slave society", arguing that it dictated individuals' actions on Earth and offered poor people a false promise of a plentiful future in heaven.[199]

Legacy

 
Goldman's image, often accompanying a popular paraphrase of her ideas—"If I can't dance, I don't want to be in your revolution"—has been reproduced on countless walls, garments, stickers, and posters as an icon of freedom.

Goldman was well known during her life, described as—among other things—"the most dangerous woman in America".[200] After her death and through the middle part of the 20th century, her fame faded. Scholars and historians of anarchism viewed her as a great speaker and activist, but did not regard her as a philosophical or theoretical thinker on par with, for example, Kropotkin.[201]

In 1970, Dover Press reissued Goldman's biography, Living My Life, and in 1972, feminist writer Alix Kates Shulman issued a collection of Goldman's writing and speeches, Red Emma Speaks. These works brought Goldman's life and writings to a larger audience, and she was in particular lionized by the women's movement of the late 20th century. In 1973, Shulman was asked by a printer friend for a quotation by Goldman for use on a T-shirt. She sent him the selection from Living My Life about "the right to self-expression, everybody's right to beautiful, radiant things", recounting that she had been admonished "that it did not behoove an agitator to dance".[202] The printer created a statement based on these sentiments that has become one of Goldman's most famous quotations, even though she probably never said or wrote it as such: "If I can't dance I don't want to be in your revolution."[203] Variations of this saying have appeared on thousands of T-shirts, buttons, posters, bumper stickers, coffee mugs, hats, and other items.[202]

The women's movement of the 1970s that "rediscovered" Goldman was accompanied by a resurgent anarchist movement, beginning in the late 1960s, which also reinvigorated scholarly attention to earlier anarchists. The growth of feminism also initiated some reevaluation of Goldman's philosophical work, with scholars pointing out the significance of Goldman's contributions to anarchist thought in her time. Goldman's belief in the value of aesthetics, for example, can be seen in the later influences of anarchism and the arts. Similarly, Goldman is now given credit for significantly influencing and broadening the scope of activism on issues of sexual liberty, reproductive rights, and freedom of expression.[204]

Goldman has been depicted in numerous works of fiction over the years, including Warren Beatty's 1981 film Reds, in which she was portrayed by Maureen Stapleton, who won an Academy Award for her performance. Goldman has also been a character in two Broadway musicals, Ragtime and Assassins. Plays depicting Goldman's life include Howard Zinn's play, Emma;[205] Martin Duberman's Mother Earth;[206] Jessica Litwak's Emma Goldman: Love, Anarchy, and Other Affairs (about Goldman's relationship with Berkman and her arrest in connection with McKinley's assassination); Lynn Rogoff's Love Ben, Love Emma (about Goldman's relationship with Reitman);[207] Carol Bolt's Red Emma;[208] and Alexis Roblan's Red Emma and the Mad Monk.[209] Ethel Mannin's 1941 novel Red Rose is also based on Goldman's Life.[210]

Goldman has been honored by a number of organizations named in her memory. The Emma Goldman Clinic, a women's health center located in Iowa City, Iowa, selected Goldman as a namesake "in recognition of her challenging spirit."[211] Red Emma's Bookstore Coffeehouse, an infoshop in Baltimore, Maryland adopted her name out of their belief "in the ideas and ideals that she fought for her entire life: free speech, sexual and racial equality and independence, the right to organize in our jobs and in our own lives, ideas and ideals that we continue to fight for, even today".[212]

Works

Goldman was a prolific writer, penning countless pamphlets and articles on a diverse range of subjects.[213] She authored six books, including an autobiography, Living My Life, and a biography of fellow anarchist Voltairine de Cleyre.[214]

Books

Edited collections

  • Red Emma Speaks: Selected Writings and Speeches. New York: Random House, 1972. ISBN 0-394-47095-8.
  • Emma Goldman: A Documentary History of the American Years, Volume 1 – Made for America, 1890–1901. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2003. ISBN 0-520-08670-8.
  • Emma Goldman: A Documentary History of the American Years, Volume 2 – Making Speech Free, 1902–1909. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2004. ISBN 0-520-22569-4.
  • Emma Goldman: A Documentary History of the American Years, Volume 3 – Light and Shadows, 1910–1916. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2012. ISBN 0-8047-7854-X.

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ Diggs, Nancy Brown (1998). Steel Butterflies: Japanese Women and the American Experience. Albany: State Univ. of New York Press. p. 99. ISBN 0791436233. Like other radicals of the time, Noe Itō was most influenced by none other than Emma Goldman.
  2. ^ a b University of Illinois at Chicago Biography of Emma Goldman September 11, 2013, at the Wayback Machine. UIC Library Emma Goldman Collection. Retrieved on December 13, 2008.
  3. ^ Streitmatter, Rodger (2001). Voices of Revolution: The Dissident Press in America. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 122–134. ISBN 0-231-12249-7.
  4. ^ Goldman 1970a, p. 24.
  5. ^ a b c Goldman 1970a, p. 447.
  6. ^ Drinnon 1961, p. 5.
  7. ^ The order of birth is unclear; Wexler 1984, p. 13 notes that although Goldman writes as being her mother's fourth child, her brother Louis (who died at the age of six) was probably born after her.
  8. ^ Chalberg 1991, p. 12.
  9. ^ Wexler 1984, p. 6.
  10. ^ Chalberg 1991, p. 13.
  11. ^ Drinnon 1961, p. 12.
  12. ^ Goldman 1970a, p. 11.
  13. ^ Wexler 1984, p. 12.
  14. ^ Wexler 1984, pp. 13–14.
  15. ^ Goldman 1970a, p. 20.
  16. ^ Goldman 1970a, p. 28.
  17. ^ Drinnon 1961, pp. 6–7.
  18. ^ Chalberg 1991, p. 15.
  19. ^ Goldman 1970a, p. 12.
  20. ^ Wexler 1984, pp. 23–25.
  21. ^ Wexler 1984, p. 26.
  22. ^ Chalberg 1991, p. 16.
  23. ^ Goldman 1970a, p. 22.
  24. ^ Chalberg 1991, p. 16; Falk 1984, p. 14.
  25. ^ a b Goldman 1970a, p. 23.
  26. ^ Wexler 1984, p. 27.
  27. ^ Wexler 1984, p. 30.
  28. ^ Falk 1984, pp. 15–16.
  29. ^ Wexler 1984, p. 31.
  30. ^ Drinnon 1961, pp. 15–17.
  31. ^ Chalberg 1991, p. 27.
  32. ^ Chalberg 1991, pp. 27–28.
  33. ^ Goldman 1970a, p. 40.
  34. ^ Goldman 1970a, p. 51.
  35. ^ a b Goldman 1970a, p. 52.
  36. ^ Goldman 1970a, p. 54.
  37. ^ Wexler 1984, p. 53.
  38. ^ Wexler 1984, p. 57.
  39. ^ Wexler 1984, pp. 57–58.
  40. ^ . PBS. March 11, 2004. Archived from the original on July 12, 2015. Retrieved July 10, 2015.
  41. ^ Southwick, Albert B. (June 26, 2014). . Telegram & Gazette. Worcester, Massachusetts. Archived from the original on July 1, 2004. Retrieved July 10, 2015.
  42. ^ Wexler 1984, pp. 61–62.
  43. ^ Quoted in Wexler 1984, p. 63.
  44. ^ Wexler 1984, pp. 63–65.
  45. ^ a b Wexler 1984, p. 65.
  46. ^ a b Goldman 1970a, p. 91.
  47. ^ Drinnon 1961, p. 45.
  48. ^ Chalberg 1991; Falk 1984, p. 25; Wexler 1984, p. 65.
  49. ^ "Alexander Berkman, the Anarchist, to Be Deported; Case of Emma Goldman Now Up for Decision". The New York Times. November 26, 1919.
  50. ^ Goldman 1970a, p. 106.
  51. ^ Wexler 1984, pp. 65–66.
  52. ^ Goldman 1970a, p. 105.
  53. ^ Quoted in Wexler 1984, p. 66.
  54. ^ "Panic of 1893" May 7, 2008, at the Wayback Machine. Ohio History Central. Ohio Historical Society, 2007. Retrieved on December 18, 2007.
  55. ^ Quoted in Chalberg 1991, p. 46.
  56. ^ Goldman 1970a, p. 123.
  57. ^ Drinnon 1961, pp. 58–59.
  58. ^ Wexler 1984, p. 76.
  59. ^ Drinnon 1961, p. 57.
  60. ^ Nellie Bly, , New York World, September 17, 1893.
  61. ^ Drinnon 1961, p. 60.
  62. ^ Wexler 1984, p. 78.
  63. ^ Wexler 1984, pp. 78–79.
  64. ^ Wexler 1984, pp. 84–85.
  65. ^ Wexler 1984, pp. 85–89.
  66. ^ Drinnon 1961, p. 68.
  67. ^ Chalberg 1991, pp. 65–66.
  68. ^ Drinnon 1961, p. 68; Chalberg 1991, p. 73.
  69. ^ Wexler 1984, p. 104.
  70. ^ Wexler 1984, pp. 103–104.
  71. ^ Goldman 1970a, p. 300.
  72. ^ Quoted in Chalberg 1991, p. 76.
  73. ^ Drinnon 1961, p. 74.
  74. ^ Chalberg 1991, p. 78.
  75. ^ Falk 2003, p. 461.
  76. ^ Wexler 1984, pp. 106–112.
  77. ^ Quoted in Chalberg 1991, p. 81.
  78. ^ Greenhouse, Steven (August 30, 1996). "New York, Cradle Of Labor History". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved May 1, 2021.
  79. ^ Goldman 1970a, p. 318.
  80. ^ Wexler 1984, p. 115.
  81. ^ Wexler 1984, p. 116.
  82. ^ Falk 2004, p. 557.
  83. ^ Chalberg 1991, pp. 84–87.
  84. ^ Quoted in Chalberg 1991, p. 87.
  85. ^ Goldman 1970a, p. 377.
  86. ^ Chalberg 1991, pp. 88–91.
  87. ^ Wexler 1984, pp. 121–130.
  88. ^ Goldman 1970a, p. 384.
  89. ^ Chalberg 1991, p. 94.
  90. ^ Drinnon 1961, pp. 97–98.
  91. ^ Quoted in Goldman 1970a, p. 391.
  92. ^ Drinnon 1961, p. 98.
  93. ^ Chalberg 1991, p. 97.
  94. ^ Wexler 1984, pp. 135–137.
  95. ^ Wexler 1984, p. 166.
  96. ^ Wexler 1984, p. 168.
  97. ^ Wexler 1984, pp. 140–147.
  98. ^ a b Goldman 1969, p. 45.
  99. ^ Alice S. Rossi. The Feminist Papers: From Adams to de Beauvoir. Lebanon, New Hampshire: Northeastern University Press, 1988, p. 507
  100. ^ Quoted in Wexler 1984, pp. 210–211.
  101. ^ "Today in History: February 11". Library of Congress. Retrieved January 28, 2014.
  102. ^ Wexler 1984, pp. 211–215.
  103. ^ a b Drinnon 1961, pp. 186–187.
  104. ^ Wexler 1984, p. 230.
  105. ^ Berkman 1992, p. 155.
  106. ^ Chalberg 1991, p. 129.
  107. ^ a b "Emma Goldman and A. Berkman Behind the Bars". The New York Times. June 16, 1917. Retrieved December 17, 2007.
  108. ^ Quoted in Wexler 1984, p. 232.
  109. ^ Quoted in Chalberg 1991, p. 134.
  110. ^ Shaw, Francis H. (July 1964). "The Trials of Emma Goldman, Anarchist". The Review of Politics. 26 (3): 444–445. doi:10.1017/S0034670500005210. S2CID 143738107. Prosecuted under the Espionage Act of 1917 for obstructing the draft, Emma Goldman...
  111. ^ Trial and Speeches of Alexander Berkman and Emma Goldman in the United States District Court, in the City of New York, July 1917 (New York: Mother Earth Publishing Association, 1917)
  112. ^ Wexler 1984, pp. 235–244.
  113. ^ Quoted in Chalberg 1991, p. 141.
  114. ^ Chalberg 1991, pp. 141–142.
  115. ^ Wexler 1984, pp. 253–263.
  116. ^ Quoted in Drinnon 1961, p. 215.
  117. ^ "Deportation Defied by Emma Goldman". The New York Times. October 28, 1919. Retrieved February 4, 2010.
  118. ^ "Will Fight Deportation". The New York Times. December 1, 1919. Retrieved February 4, 2010.
  119. ^ Post 1923, pp. 13–14.
  120. ^ McCormick 1997, pp. 158–163.
  121. ^ a b "'Ark' with 300 Reds Sails Early Today for Unnamed Port". The New York Times. December 21, 1919. Retrieved February 1, 2010.
  122. ^ Clay, Steven E. (2011). U. S. Army Order Of Battle 1919–1941 (PDF). Volume 4. The Services: Quartermaster, Medical, Military Police, Signal Corps, Chemical Warfare, And Miscellaneous Organizations, 1919–41. Vol. 4. Fort Leavenworth, KS: Combat Studies Institute Press. ISBN 978-0984190140. LCCN 2010022326. Retrieved October 23, 2014.
  123. ^ Post 1923, p. 4.
  124. ^ Murray 1955, pp. 208–209.
  125. ^ "Soviet Ark Lands its Reds in Finland". The New York Times. January 18, 1920. Retrieved February 1, 2010.
  126. ^ Murray 1955, pp. 207–208; Post 1923, pp. 1–11.
  127. ^ Quoted in Wexler 1984, p. 243.
  128. ^ Quoted in Wexler 1989, p. 17.
  129. ^ Quoted in Chalberg 1991, p. 150.
  130. ^ a b c Goldman, Emma. Living My Life. 1931. New York: Dover Publications Inc., 1970. ISBN 0-486-22543-7.
  131. ^ Quoted in Drinnon 1961, p. 235.
  132. ^ Drinnon 1961, pp. 236–237.
  133. ^ Quoted in Drinnon 1961, p. 237.
  134. ^ Wexler 1989, pp. 47–49.
  135. ^ Wexler 1989, pp. 56–58.
  136. ^ Chalberg 1991, pp. 161–162.
  137. ^ Quoted in Wexler 1989, p. 96.
  138. ^ Goldman, Emma; Porter, David (2006) [1983]. Vision on fire : Emma Goldman on the Spanish Revolution (2nd ed.). Edinburgh: AK Press. p. 36. ISBN 1-904859-57-7. OCLC 71239513.
  139. ^ Falk 1984, pp. 209–210.
  140. ^ "Letters of Emma Goldman and James Colton". The Anarchist Library. Retrieved March 3, 2022.
  141. ^ "Colton, James, 1860–1936". libcom.org. Retrieved March 3, 2022.
  142. ^ Quoted in Wexler 1989, p. 111.
  143. ^ Wexler 1989, p. 115.
  144. ^ Quoted in Chalberg 1991, p. 164.
  145. ^ Wexler 1989, p. 122.
  146. ^ Mary V. Dearborn, Mistress of Modernism: The Life of Peggy Guggenheim, Houghton Mifflin, 2004, pp. 61–62
  147. ^ Wexler 1989, p. 135.
  148. ^ Chalberg 1991, pp. 165–166.
  149. ^ Wexler 1989, p. 154.
  150. ^ Wexler 1989, pp. 158–164.
  151. ^ Wexler 1989, pp. 193–194; Drinnon 1961, pp. 298–300.
  152. ^ Drinnon 1961, pp. 301–302.
  153. ^ Quoted in Wexler 1989, p. 232.
  154. ^ Quoted in Drinnon 1961, p. 303.
  155. ^ Wexler 1989, p. 205.
  156. ^ Quoted in Wexler 1989, p. 209.
  157. ^ Wexler 1989, pp. 209–210.
  158. ^ Quoted in Wexler 1989, p. 216.
  159. ^ Wexler 1989, p. 222.
  160. ^ Quoted in Wexler 1989, p. 226.
  161. ^ Both quoted in Wexler 1989, p. 232.
  162. ^ a b Quoted in Wexler 1989, p. 236.
  163. ^ Quoted in Wexler 1989, p. 240.
  164. ^ Wexler 1989, pp. 240–241.
  165. ^ "Emma Goldman, Anarchist, Dead. Internationally Known Figure, Deported From The U.S., Is Stricken In Toronto. Disillusioned By Soviets Opposed Lenin And Trotsky As Betrayers Of Socialism Through Despotism". The New York Times. May 14, 1940. Retrieved April 20, 2008. Emma Goldman, internationally known anarchist, died early today at her home here after an illness of several months. She was 70 years old.
  166. ^ Drinnon 1961, pp. 312–313.
  167. ^ Avrich, Paul (2005). Anarchist Voices: An Oral History of Anarchism in America. AK Press. p. 491. ISBN 978-1904859277. Retrieved December 14, 2015.
  168. ^ Goldman 1970a, p. 194.
  169. ^ Goldman 1969, p. 62.
  170. ^ a b Quoted in Wexler 1984, p. 92.
  171. ^ Goldman 1970a, p. 56.
  172. ^ a b Goldman 1970a, p. 88.
  173. ^ Goldman 1969, p. 79.
  174. ^ Goldman 1970b, pp. 260–264.
  175. ^ Goldman 1970b, p. 8.
  176. ^ (Emma Goldman Papers Project, University of California-Berkeley).
  177. ^ a b Goldman 1969, p. 54.
  178. ^ a b Wexler 1984, p. 91.
  179. ^ Wexler 1989, p. 167.
  180. ^ Goldman 1969, p. 205.
  181. ^ Goldman 1969, p. 198.
  182. ^ Wexler 1989, p. 41.
  183. ^ Goldman 1969, p. 120.
  184. ^ Pribanic-Smith & Schroeder 2018, pp. 1–2.
  185. ^ See generally Goldman 1970a.
  186. ^ See Geoffrey R. Stone, Perilous Times: Free Speech in Wartime, From the Sedition Act of 1798 to the War on Terrorism (2004), pp. 139–152 (discussing persecution of Goldman and other anti-war activists, and the passage of the Espionage Act of 1917).
  187. ^ Falk 2004.
  188. ^ David M. Rabban, Free Speech In Its Forgotten Years (1997).
  189. ^ Christopher M. Finan, From the Palmer Raids to the Patriot Act: A History of the Fight for Free Speech in America, p. 18.
  190. ^ Wexler 1984, pp. 181–182.
  191. ^ "May 20, 1913: Emma Goldman returns". San Diego Union-Tribune. May 20, 2018. from the original on October 27, 2018. Retrieved August 20, 2022.
  192. ^ Marshall 1992, p. 409.
  193. ^ Quoted in Wexler 1984, p. 94.
  194. ^ Goldman 1969, p. 224.
  195. ^ See generally Haaland 1993; Goldman 1970c; Goldman, "On Love".
  196. ^ Katz, Jonathan Ned (1992). Gay American History: Lesbians and Gay Men in the U.S.A. New York City: Penguin Books. pp. 376–380.
  197. ^ a b Goldman, Emma (1923). "Offener Brief an den Herausgeber der Jahrbücher über Louise Michel" with a preface by Magnus Hirschfeld. Jahrbuch für sexuelle Zwischenstufen. 23: 70. Translated from German by James Steakley. Goldman's original letter in English is not known to be extant.
  198. ^ Goldman, Emma (February 1916). "The Philosophy of Atheism". Mother Earth. Retrieved December 7, 2007.
  199. ^ Goldman, "The Failure of Christianity" May 12, 2008, at the Wayback Machine. Mother Earth, April 1913.
  200. ^ Avrich, Paul (2006). Anarchist Voices: An Oral History of Anarchism in America. AK Press. p. 45. ISBN 1-904859-27-5.
  201. ^ Marshall 1992, pp. 396–401.
  202. ^ a b Wexler 1989, p. 1.
  203. ^ Shulman, Alix Kates. "". Women's Review of Books, Vol. IX, #3. December 1991. Retrieved on February 16, 2017.
  204. ^ Marshall 1992, pp. 408–409.
  205. ^ Zinn, Howard (2002). Emma: A Play in Two Acts about Emma Goldman, American Anarchist. South End Press. ISBN 0-89608-664-X.
  206. ^ Duberman, Martin (1991). Mother Earth: An Epic Drama of Emma Goldman's Life. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0-312-05954-X.
  207. ^ Lynn Rogoff January 5, 2008, at the Wayback Machine at doollee.com: The Playwrights Database
  208. ^ Wexler 1989, p. 249.
  209. ^ Vincentelli, Elisabeth (August 21, 2018). "Review: Besties With Rasputin in 'Red Emma and the Mad Monk'". The New York Times. Archived from the original on January 1, 2022. Retrieved August 28, 2018.
  210. ^ Mannin, Ethel (1941). Red Rose: A Novel Based on the Life of Emma Goldman ("Red Emma"). Jarrolds.
  211. ^ "About Us 2008-01-08 at the Wayback Machine". The Emma Goldman Clinic. 2007. Retrieved on December 15, 2007.
  212. ^ . Red Emma's Bookstore Coffeehouse. Archived from the original on May 6, 2008. Retrieved February 24, 2008.
  213. ^ Falk 2004, p. 45.
  214. ^ Goldman, Emma (1932). . Berkeley Heights, New Jersey: Oriole Press. OCLC 12414567. Archived from the original on March 28, 2015. Retrieved February 11, 2011.

General and cited sources

Further reading

External links

Digital collections
  • Works by Emma Goldman in eBook form at Standard Ebooks
  • Works by Emma Goldman at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Emma Goldman at Internet Archive
  • PBS American Experience: Emma Goldman
  • Works by Emma Goldman at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Works by Emma Goldman at the Anarchist Library
  • Works of Emma Goldman, online
Physical collections

emma, goldman, june, 1869, 1940, russian, born, anarchist, political, activist, writer, played, pivotal, role, development, anarchist, political, philosophy, north, america, europe, first, half, 20th, century, goldman, 1911born, 1869, june, 1869kovno, kovno, g. Emma Goldman June 27 1869 May 14 1940 was a Russian born anarchist political activist and writer She played a pivotal role in the development of anarchist political philosophy in North America and Europe in the first half of the 20th century Emma GoldmanGoldman c 1911Born 1869 06 27 June 27 1869Kovno Kovno Governorate Russian EmpireDiedMay 14 1940 1940 05 14 aged 70 Toronto Ontario CanadaSchoolAnarchismfeminismInfluences Friedrich NietzscheJohann MostHenry David ThoreauRalph Waldo EmersonPeter KropotkinMikhail BakuninMary WollstonecraftNikolay ChernyshevskyOscar WildeMax StirnerInfluenced Roger Nash BaldwinBa JinNoe Ito 1 Margaret SangerSignatureBorn in Kaunas Lithuania then within the Russian Empire to an Orthodox Lithuanian Jewish family Goldman emigrated to the United States in 1885 2 Attracted to anarchism after the Chicago Haymarket affair Goldman became a writer and a renowned lecturer on anarchist philosophy women s rights and social issues attracting crowds of thousands 2 She and anarchist writer Alexander Berkman her lover and lifelong friend planned to assassinate industrialist and financier Henry Clay Frick as an act of propaganda of the deed Frick survived the attempt on his life in 1892 and Berkman was sentenced to 22 years in prison Goldman was imprisoned several times in the years that followed for inciting to riot and illegally distributing information about birth control In 1906 Goldman founded the anarchist journal Mother Earth In 1917 Goldman and Berkman were sentenced to two years in jail for conspiring to induce persons not to register for the newly instated draft After their release from prison they were arrested along with 248 others in the so called Palmer Raids during the First Red Scare and deported to Russia Initially supportive of that country s October Revolution that brought the Bolsheviks to power Goldman changed her opinion in the wake of the Kronstadt rebellion she denounced the Soviet Union for its violent repression of independent voices She left the Soviet Union and in 1923 published a book about her experiences My Disillusionment in Russia While living in England Canada and France she wrote an autobiography called Living My Life It was published in two volumes in 1931 and 1935 After the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War Goldman traveled to Spain to support the anarchist revolution there She died in Toronto Canada on May 14 1940 aged 70 During her life Goldman was lionized as a freethinking rebel woman by admirers and denounced by detractors as an advocate of politically motivated murder and violent revolution 3 Her writing and lectures spanned a wide variety of issues including prisons atheism freedom of speech militarism capitalism marriage free love and homosexuality Although she distanced herself from first wave feminism and its efforts toward women s suffrage she developed new ways of incorporating gender politics into anarchism After decades of obscurity Goldman gained iconic status in the 1970s by a revival of interest in her life when feminist and anarchist scholars rekindled popular interest Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Family 1 2 Adolescence 1 3 Rochester New York 1 4 Most and Berkman 1 5 Homestead plot 1 6 Inciting to riot 1 7 McKinley assassination 1 8 Mother Earth and Berkman s release 1 9 Reitman essays and birth control 1 10 World War I 1 11 Deportation 1 12 Russia 1 13 England Canada and France 1 14 Spanish Civil War 1 15 Final years 1 16 Death 2 Philosophy 2 1 Anarchism 2 1 1 Tactical uses of violence 2 2 Capitalism and labor 2 3 State 2 4 Feminism and sexuality 2 5 Atheism 3 Legacy 4 Works 4 1 Books 4 2 Edited collections 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 General and cited sources 7 Further reading 8 External linksBiographyFamily Emma Goldman was born into an Orthodox Jewish family in Kovno in Lithuania then within the Russian Empire 4 Goldman s mother Taube Bienowitch had been married before to a man with whom she had two daughters Helena in 1860 and Lena in 1862 When her first husband died of tuberculosis Taube was devastated Goldman later wrote Whatever love she had had died with the young man to whom she had been married at the age of fifteen 5 Taube s second marriage was arranged by her family and as Goldman puts it mismated from the first 5 Her second husband Abraham Goldman invested Taube s inheritance in a business that quickly failed The ensuing hardship combined with the emotional distance between husband and wife made the household a tense place for the children When Taube became pregnant Abraham hoped desperately for a son a daughter he believed would be one more sign of failure 6 They eventually had three sons but their first child was Emma 7 Emma Goldman was born on June 27 1869 8 9 Her father used violence to punish his children beating them when they disobeyed him He used a whip on Emma the most rebellious of them 10 Her mother provided scarce comfort rarely calling on Abraham to tone down his beatings 11 Goldman later speculated that her father s furious temper was at least partly a result of sexual frustration 5 Goldman s relationships with her elder half sisters Helena and Lena were a study in contrasts Helena the oldest provided the comfort the children lacked from their mother and filled Goldman s childhood with whatever joy it had 12 Lena however was distant and uncharitable 13 The three sisters were joined by brothers Louis who died at the age of six Herman born in 1872 and Moishe born in 1879 14 Adolescence Emma Goldman s family in St Petersburg Russia in 1882 From left to right Emma standing Helena seated with Morris on her lap Taube Herman Abraham When Emma Goldman was a young girl the Goldman family moved to the village of Papile where her father ran an inn While her sisters worked she became friends with a servant named Petrushka who excited her first erotic sensations 15 Later in Papile she witnessed a peasant being whipped with a knout in the street This event traumatized her and contributed to her lifelong distaste for violent authority 16 At the age of seven Goldman moved with her family to the Prussian city of Konigsberg then part of the German Empire and she was enrolled in a Realschule One teacher punished disobedient students targeting Goldman in particular by beating their hands with a ruler Another teacher tried to molest his female students and was fired when Goldman fought back She found a sympathetic mentor in her German language teacher who loaned her books and took her to an opera A passionate student Goldman passed the exam for admission into a gymnasium but her religion teacher refused to provide a certificate of good behavior and she was unable to attend 17 The family moved to the Russian capital of Saint Petersburg where her father opened one unsuccessful store after another Their poverty forced the children to work and Goldman took an assortment of jobs including one in a corset shop 18 As a teenager Goldman begged her father to allow her to return to school but instead he threw her French book into the fire and shouted Girls do not have to learn much All a Jewish daughter needs to know is how to prepare gefilte fish cut noodles fine and give the man plenty of children 19 Goldman pursued an independent education on her own She studied the political turmoil around her particularly the Nihilists responsible for assassinating Alexander II of Russia The ensuing turmoil intrigued Goldman although she did not fully understand it at the time 20 When she read Nikolai Chernyshevsky s novel What Is to Be Done 1863 she found a role model in the protagonist Vera She adopts a Nihilist philosophy and escapes her repressive family to live freely and organize a sewing cooperative The book enthralled Goldman and remained a source of inspiration throughout her life 21 Her father meanwhile continued to insist on a domestic future for her and he tried to arrange for her to be married at the age of fifteen They fought about the issue constantly he complained that she was becoming a loose woman and she insisted that she would marry for love alone 22 At the corset shop she was forced to fend off unwelcome advances from Russian officers and other men One man took her into a hotel room and committed what Goldman described as violent contact 23 two biographers call it rape 24 She was stunned by the experience overcome by shock at the discovery that the contact between man and woman could be so brutal and painful 25 Goldman felt that the encounter forever soured her interactions with men 25 Rochester New York Emma Goldman in 1886 In 1885 her sister Helena made plans to move to New York in the United States to join her sister Lena and her husband Goldman wanted to join her sister but their father refused to allow it Despite Helena s offer to pay for the trip Abraham turned a deaf ear to their pleas Desperate Goldman threatened to throw herself into the Neva River if she could not go Their father finally agreed On December 29 1885 Helena and Emma arrived at New York City s Castle Garden the entry for immigrants 26 They settled upstate living in the Rochester home which Lena had made with her husband Samuel Fleeing the rising antisemitism of Saint Petersburg their parents and brothers joined them a year later Goldman began working as a seamstress sewing overcoats for more than ten hours a day earning two and a half dollars a week She asked for a raise and was denied she quit and took work at a smaller shop nearby 27 At her new job Goldman met a fellow worker named Jacob Kershner who shared her love for books dancing and traveling as well as her frustration with the monotony of factory work After four months they married in February 1887 28 Once he moved in with Goldman s family their relationship faltered On their wedding night she discovered that he was impotent they became emotionally and physically distant Before long he became jealous and suspicious and threatened to commit suicide lest she left him Meanwhile Goldman was becoming more engaged with the political turmoil around her particularly the aftermath of executions related to the 1886 Haymarket affair in Chicago and the anti authoritarian political philosophy of anarchism 29 Less than a year after the wedding the couple were divorced Kershner begged Goldman to return and threatened to poison himself if she did not They reunited but after three months she left once again Her parents considered her behavior loose and refused to allow Goldman into their home 30 Carrying her sewing machine in one hand and a bag with five dollars in the other she left Rochester and headed southeast to New York City 31 Most and Berkman Goldman enjoyed a decades long relationship with her lover Alexander Berkman Photo c 1917 1919 On her first day in the city Goldman met two men who greatly changed her life At Sachs Cafe a gathering place for radicals she was introduced to Alexander Berkman an anarchist who invited her to a public speech that evening They went to hear Johann Most editor of a radical publication called Freiheit and an advocate of propaganda of the deed the use of violence to instigate change 32 She was impressed by his fiery oration and Most took her under his wing training her in methods of public speaking He encouraged her vigorously telling her that she was to take my place when I am gone 33 One of her first public talks in support of the Cause was in Rochester After convincing Helena not to tell their parents of her speech Goldman found her mind a blank once on stage She later wrote suddenly 34 something strange happened In a flash I saw it every incident of my three years in Rochester the Garson factory its drudgery and humiliation the failure of my marriage the Chicago crime I began to speak Words I had never heard myself utter before came pouring forth faster and faster They came with passionate intensity The audience had vanished the hall itself had disappeared I was conscious only of my own words of my ecstatic song Excited by the experience Goldman refined her public persona during subsequent engagements She quickly found herself arguing with Most over her independence After a momentous speech in Cleveland she felt as though she had become a parrot repeating Most s views 35 and resolved to express herself on the stage When she returned to New York Most became furious and told her Who is not with me is against me 36 She left Freiheit and joined another publication Die Autonomie 37 Meanwhile Goldman had begun a friendship with Berkman whom she affectionately called Sasha Before long they became lovers and moved into a communal apartment with his cousin Modest Fedya Stein and Goldman s friend Helen Minkin on 42nd Street 38 Although their relationship had numerous difficulties Goldman and Berkman would share a close bond for decades united by their anarchist principles and commitment to personal equality 39 In 1892 Goldman joined with Berkman and Stein in opening an ice cream shop in Worcester Massachusetts After a few months of operating the shop Goldman and Berkman were diverted to participate in the Homestead Strike near Pittsburgh 40 41 Homestead plot Further information Homestead Strike Berkman and Goldman came together through the Homestead Strike In June 1892 a steel plant in Homestead Pennsylvania owned by Andrew Carnegie became the focus of national attention when talks between the Carnegie Steel Company and the Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel Workers AA broke down The factory s manager was Henry Clay Frick a fierce opponent of the union When a final round of talks failed at the end of June management closed the plant and locked out the workers who immediately went on strike Strikebreakers were brought in and the company hired Pinkerton guards to protect them On July 6 a fight broke out between 300 Pinkerton guards and a crowd of armed union workers During the twelve hour gunfight seven guards and nine strikers were killed 42 Goldman and Berkman believed that a retaliatory assassination of Carnegie Steel Company manager Henry Clay Frick pictured would strike terror into the soul of his class and bring the teachings of Anarchism before the world 43 When a majority of the nation s newspapers expressed support of the strikers Goldman and Berkman resolved to assassinate Frick an action they expected would inspire the workers to revolt against the capitalist system Berkman chose to carry out the assassination and ordered Goldman to stay behind in order to explain his motives after he went to jail He would be in charge of the deed she of the associated propaganda 44 Berkman set off for Pittsburgh on his way to Homestead where he planned to shoot Frick 45 Goldman meanwhile decided to help fund the scheme through prostitution Remembering the character of Sonya in Fyodor Dostoevsky s novel Crime and Punishment 1866 she mused She had become a prostitute in order to support her little brothers and sisters Sensitive Sonya could sell her body why not I 46 Once on the street Goldman caught the eye of a man who took her into a saloon bought her a beer gave her ten dollars informed her she did not have the knack and told her to quit the business She was too astounded for speech 46 She wrote to Helena claiming illness and asked her for fifteen dollars 47 On July 23 Berkman gained access to Frick s office while carrying a concealed handgun he shot Frick three times and stabbed him in the leg A group of workers far from joining in his attentat beat Berkman unconscious and he was carried away by the police 48 Berkman was convicted of attempted murder 49 and sentenced to 22 years in prison 50 Goldman suffered during his long absence 45 Convinced Goldman was involved in the plot police raided her apartment Although they found no evidence they pressured her landlord into evicting her Worse the attentat had failed to rouse the masses workers and anarchists alike condemned Berkman s action Johann Most their former mentor lashed out at Berkman and the assassination attempt Furious at these attacks Goldman brought a toy horsewhip to a public lecture and demanded onstage that Most explain his betrayal He dismissed her whereupon she struck him with the whip broke it on her knee and hurled the pieces at him 51 52 She later regretted her assault confiding to a friend At the age of twenty three one does not reason 53 Inciting to riot When the Panic of 1893 struck in the following year the United States suffered one of its worst economic crises By year s end the unemployment rate was higher than 20 54 and hunger demonstrations sometimes gave way to riots Goldman began speaking to crowds of frustrated men and women in New York City On August 21 she spoke to a crowd of nearly 3 000 people in Union Square where she encouraged unemployed workers to take immediate action Her exact words are unclear undercover agents insist she ordered the crowd to take everything by force 55 But Goldman later recounted this message Well then demonstrate before the palaces of the rich demand work If they do not give you work demand bread If they deny you both take bread 56 Later in court Detective Sergeant Charles Jacobs offered yet another version of her speech 57 Goldman shown here in Union Square New York in 1916 urged unemployed workers to take direct action rather than depend on charity or government aid A week later Goldman was arrested in Philadelphia and returned to New York City for trial charged with inciting to riot 58 During the train ride Jacobs offered to drop the charges against her if she would inform on other radicals in the area She responded by throwing a glass of ice water in his face 59 As she awaited trial Goldman was visited by Nellie Bly a reporter for the New York World She spent two hours talking to Goldman and wrote a positive article about the woman she described as a modern Joan of Arc 60 Despite this positive publicity the jury was persuaded by Jacobs testimony and frightened by Goldman s politics The assistant District Attorney questioned Goldman about her anarchism as well as her atheism the judge spoke of her as a dangerous woman 61 She was sentenced to one year in the Blackwell s Island Penitentiary Once inside she suffered an attack of rheumatism and was sent to the infirmary there she befriended a visiting doctor and began studying medicine She also read dozens of books including works by the American activist writers Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau novelist Nathaniel Hawthorne poet Walt Whitman and philosopher John Stuart Mill 62 When Goldman was released after ten months a raucous crowd of nearly 3 000 people greeted her at the Thalia Theater in New York City She soon became swamped with requests for interviews and lectures 63 To make money Goldman decided to continue the medical studies she had started in prison but her preferred fields of specialization midwifery and massage were unavailable to nursing students in the US She sailed to Europe lecturing in London Glasgow and Edinburgh She met with renowned anarchists such as Errico Malatesta Louise Michel and Peter Kropotkin In Vienna she received two diplomas for midwifery and put them immediately to use back in the US 64 Alternating between lectures and midwifery Goldman conducted the first cross country tour by an anarchist speaker In November 1899 she returned to Europe to speak where she met the Czech anarchist Hippolyte Havel in London They went together to France and helped organize the 1900 International Anarchist Congress on the outskirts of Paris 65 Afterward Havel immigrated to the United States traveling with Goldman to Chicago They shared a residence there with friends of Goldman 66 McKinley assassination Further information Assassination of William McKinley Leon Czolgosz insisted that Goldman had not guided his plan to assassinate US President William McKinley but she was arrested and held for two weeks On September 6 1901 Leon Czolgosz an unemployed factory worker and registered Republican shot US President William McKinley twice during a public speaking event in Buffalo New York McKinley was hit in the breastbone and stomach and died eight days later 67 Czolgosz was arrested and interrogated around the clock During interrogation he claimed to be an anarchist and said he had been inspired to act after attending a speech by Goldman The authorities used this as a pretext to charge Goldman with planning McKinley s assassination They tracked her to the residence in Chicago she shared with Havel as well as with Mary and Abe Isaak an anarchist couple and their family 68 Goldman was arrested along with Isaak Havel and ten other anarchists 69 Earlier Czolgosz had tried but failed to become friends with Goldman and her companions During a talk in Cleveland Czolgosz had approached Goldman and asked her advice on which books he should read In July 1901 he had appeared at the Isaak house asking a series of unusual questions They assumed he was an infiltrator like a number of police agents sent to spy on radical groups They had remained distant from him and Abe Isaak sent a notice to associates warning of another spy 70 Although Czolgosz repeatedly denied Goldman s involvement the police held her in close custody subjecting her to what she called the third degree 71 She explained her housemates distrust of Czolgosz and the police finally recognized that she had not had any significant contact with the attacker No evidence was found linking Goldman to the attack and she was released after two weeks of detention Before McKinley died Goldman offered to provide nursing care referring to him as merely a human being 72 Czolgosz despite considerable evidence of mental illness was convicted of murder and executed 73 Throughout her detention and after her release Goldman steadfastly refused to condemn Czolgosz s actions standing virtually alone in doing so Friends and supporters including Berkman urged her to quit his cause But Goldman defended Czolgosz as a supersensitive being and chastised other anarchists for abandoning him 74 She was vilified in the press as the high priestess of anarchy 75 while many newspapers declared the anarchist movement responsible for the murder 76 In the wake of these events socialism gained support over anarchism among US radicals McKinley s successor Theodore Roosevelt declared his intent to crack down not only against anarchists but against all active and passive sympathizers with anarchists 77 Mother Earth and Berkman s release Main article Mother Earth magazine After Czolgosz was executed Goldman withdrew from the world and from 1903 to 1913 lived at 208 210 East 13th Street New York City 78 Scorned by her fellow anarchists vilified by the press and separated from her love Berkman she retreated into anonymity and nursing It was bitter and hard to face life anew she wrote later 79 Using the name E G Smith she left public life and took on a series of private nursing jobs while suffering from severe depression 80 The US Congress passage of the Anarchist Exclusion Act 1903 stirred a new wave of oppositional activism pulling Goldman back into the movement A coalition of people and organizations across the left end of the political spectrum opposed the law on grounds that it violated freedom of speech and she had the nation s ear once again 81 After an English anarchist named John Turner was arrested under the Anarchist Exclusion Act and threatened with deportation Goldman joined forces with the Free Speech League to champion his cause 82 The league enlisted the aid of noted attorneys Clarence Darrow and Edgar Lee Masters who took Turner s case to the US Supreme Court Although Turner and the League lost Goldman considered it a victory of propaganda 83 She had returned to anarchist activism but it was taking its toll on her I never felt so weighed down she wrote to Berkman I fear I am forever doomed to remain public property and to have my life worn out through the care for the lives of others 84 In 1906 Goldman decided to start a publication a place of expression for the young idealists in arts and letters 85 Mother Earth was staffed by a cadre of radical activists including Hippolyte Havel Max Baginski and Leonard Abbott In addition to publishing original works by its editors and anarchists around the world Mother Earth reprinted selections from a variety of writers These included the French philosopher Pierre Joseph Proudhon Russian anarchist Peter Kropotkin German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche and British writer Mary Wollstonecraft Goldman wrote frequently about anarchism politics labor issues atheism sexuality and feminism and was the first editor of the magazine 86 87 Goldman s Mother Earth magazine became a home to radical activists and literary free thinkers around the US On May 18 of the same year Alexander Berkman was released from prison Carrying a bouquet of roses Goldman met him on the train platform and found herself seized by terror and pity 88 as she beheld his gaunt pale form Neither was able to speak they returned to her home in silence For weeks he struggled to readjust to life on the outside An abortive speaking tour ended in failure and in Cleveland he purchased a revolver with the intent of killing himself 89 90 Upon returning to New York he learned that Goldman had been arrested with a group of activists meeting to reflect on Czolgosz Invigorated anew by this violation of freedom of assembly he declared My resurrection has come 91 and set about securing their release 92 Berkman took the helm of Mother Earth in 1907 while Goldman toured the country to raise funds to keep it operating Editing the magazine was a revitalizing experience for Berkman But his relationship with Goldman faltered and he had an affair with a 15 year old anarchist named Becky Edelsohn Goldman was pained by his rejection of her but considered it a consequence of his prison experience 93 Later that year she served as a delegate from the US to the International Anarchist Congress of Amsterdam Anarchists and syndicalists from around the world gathered to sort out the tension between the two ideologies but no decisive agreement was reached Goldman returned to the US and continued speaking to large audiences 94 Reitman essays and birth control For the next ten years Goldman traveled around the country nonstop delivering lectures and agitating for anarchism The coalitions formed in opposition to the Anarchist Exclusion Act had given her an appreciation for reaching out to those of other political positions When the US Justice Department sent spies to observe they reported the meetings as packed 95 Writers journalists artists judges and workers from across the spectrum spoke of her magnetic power her convincing presence her force eloquence and fire 96 Goldman joined Margaret Sanger in crusading for women s access to birth control both women were arrested for violating the Comstock Law In the spring of 1908 Goldman met and fell in love with Ben Reitman the so called Hobo doctor Having grown up in Chicago s Tenderloin District Reitman spent several years as a drifter before earning a medical degree from the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Chicago As a doctor he treated people suffering from poverty and illness particularly venereal diseases He and Goldman began an affair They shared a commitment to free love and Reitman took a variety of lovers but Goldman did not She tried to reconcile her feelings of jealousy with a belief in freedom of the heart but found it difficult 97 Two years later Goldman began feeling frustrated with lecture audiences She yearned to reach the few who really want to learn rather than the many who come to be amused 98 She collected a series of speeches and items she had written for Mother Earth and published a book titled Anarchism and Other Essays Covering a wide variety of topics Goldman tried to represent the mental and soul struggles of twenty one years 98 When Margaret Sanger an advocate of access to contraception coined the term birth control and disseminated information about various methods in the June 1914 issue of her magazine The Woman Rebel she received aggressive support from Goldman The latter had already been active in efforts to increase birth control access for several years In 1916 Goldman was arrested for giving lessons in public on how to use contraceptives 99 Sanger too was arrested under the Comstock Law which prohibited the dissemination of obscene lewd or lascivious articles which authorities defined as including information relating to birth control 100 Although they later split from Sanger over charges of insufficient support Goldman and Reitman distributed copies of Sanger s pamphlet Family Limitation along with a similar essay of Reitman s In 1915 Goldman conducted a nationwide speaking tour in part to raise awareness about contraception options Although the nation s attitude toward the topic seemed to be liberalizing Goldman was arrested on February 11 1916 as she was about to give another public lecture 101 Goldman was charged with violating the Comstock Law Refusing to pay a 100 fine she spent two weeks in a prison workhouse which she saw as an opportunity to reconnect with those rejected by society 102 World War I Although President Woodrow Wilson was re elected in 1916 under the slogan He kept us out of the war at the start of his second term he announced that Germany s continued deployment of unrestricted submarine warfare was sufficient cause for the US to enter the Great War Shortly afterward Congress passed the Selective Service Act of 1917 which required all males aged 21 30 to register for military conscription Goldman saw the decision as an exercise in militarist aggression driven by capitalism She declared in Mother Earth her intent to resist conscription and to oppose US involvement in the war 103 104 Goldman on a streetcar in 1917 perhaps during a strike or demonstration To this end she and Berkman organized the No Conscription League of New York which proclaimed We oppose conscription because we are internationalists antimilitarists and opposed to all wars waged by capitalistic governments 105 The group became a vanguard for anti draft activism and chapters began to appear in other cities When police began raiding the group s public events to find young men who had not registered for the draft Goldman and others focused their efforts on distributing pamphlets and other writings 103 In the midst of the nation s patriotic fervor many elements of the political left refused to support the League s efforts The Women s Peace Party for example ceased its opposition to the war once the US entered it The Socialist Party of America took an official stance against US involvement but supported Wilson in most of his activities 106 On June 15 1917 Goldman and Berkman were arrested during a raid of their offices in which authorities seized a wagon load of anarchist records and propaganda 107 The New York Times reported that Goldman asked to change into a more appropriate outfit and emerged in a gown of royal purple 107 108 The pair were charged with conspiracy to induce persons not to register 109 under the newly enacted Espionage Act 110 and were held on US 25 000 bail each Defending herself and Berkman during their trial Goldman invoked the First Amendment asking how the government could claim to fight for democracy abroad while suppressing free speech at home 111 We say that if America has entered the war to make the world safe for democracy she must first make democracy safe in America How else is the world to take America seriously when democracy at home is daily being outraged free speech suppressed peaceable assemblies broken up by overbearing and brutal gangsters in uniform when free press is curtailed and every independent opinion gagged Verily poor as we are in democracy how can we give of it to the world The jury found Goldman and Berkman guilty Judge Julius Marshuetz Mayer imposed the maximum sentence two years imprisonment a 10 000 fine each and the possibility of deportation after their release from prison As she was transported to Missouri State Penitentiary Goldman wrote to a friend Two years imprisonment for having made an uncompromising stand for one s ideal Why that is a small price 112 In prison she was assigned to work as a seamstress under the eye of a miserable gutter snipe of a 21 year old boy paid to get results 113 She met the socialist Kate Richards O Hare who had also been imprisoned under the Espionage Act Although they differed on political strategy O Hare believed in voting to achieve state power the two women came together to agitate for better conditions among prisoners 114 Goldman also met and became friends with Gabriella Segata Antolini an anarchist and follower of Luigi Galleani Antolini had been arrested transporting a satchel filled with dynamite on a Chicago bound train She had refused to cooperate with authorities and was sent to prison for 14 months Working together to make life better for the other inmates the three women became known as The Trinity Goldman was released on September 27 1919 115 Deportation Goldman s deportation photo 1919 Goldman and Berkman were released from prison during the United States Red Scare of 1919 20 when public anxiety about wartime pro German activities had expanded into a pervasive fear of Bolshevism and the prospect of an imminent radical revolution It was a time of social unrest due to union organizing strikes and actions by activist immigrants Attorney General Alexander Mitchell Palmer and J Edgar Hoover head of the US Department of Justice s General Intelligence Division now the FBI were intent on using the Anarchist Exclusion Act and its 1918 expansion to deport any non citizens they could identify as advocates of anarchy or revolution Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman Hoover wrote while they were in prison are beyond doubt two of the most dangerous anarchists in this country and return to the community will result in undue harm 116 At her deportation hearing on October 27 Goldman refused to answer questions about her beliefs on the grounds that her American citizenship invalidated any attempt to deport her under the Anarchist Exclusion Act which could be enforced only against non citizens of the US She presented a written statement instead Today so called aliens are deported Tomorrow native Americans will be banished Already some patrioteers are suggesting that native American sons to whom democracy is a sacred ideal should be exiled 117 Louis Post at the Department of Labor which had ultimate authority over deportation decisions determined that the revocation of her husband Kershner s American citizenship in 1908 after his conviction had revoked hers as well After initially promising a court fight 118 Goldman decided not to appeal his ruling 119 The Labor Department included Goldman and Berkman among 249 aliens it deported en masse mostly people with only vague associations with radical groups who had been swept up in government raids in November 120 Buford a ship the press nicknamed the Soviet Ark sailed from the Army s New York Port of Embarkation on December 21 121 122 Some 58 enlisted men and four officers provided security on the journey and pistols were distributed to the crew 121 123 Most of the press approved enthusiastically The Cleveland Plain Dealer wrote It is hoped and expected that other vessels larger more commodious carrying similar cargoes will follow in her wake 124 The ship landed her charges in Hanko Finland on Saturday January 17 1920 125 Upon arrival in Finland authorities there conducted the deportees to the Russian frontier under a flag of truce 126 Russia Here Emma Goldman delivers a eulogy at Peter Kropotkin s funeral procession Immediately in front of Goldman stands her lifelong comrade Alexander Berkman Kropotkin s funeral was the occasion of the last great demonstration of anarchists in Moscow tens of thousands of people poured into the streets to pay their respects Goldman initially viewed the Bolshevik revolution in a positive light She wrote in Mother Earth that despite its dependence on Communist government it represented the most fundamental far reaching and all embracing principles of human freedom and of economic well being 127 By the time she neared Europe she expressed fears about what was to come She was worried about the ongoing Russian Civil War and the possibility of being seized by anti Bolshevik forces The state anti capitalist though it was also posed a threat I could never in my life work within the confines of the State she wrote to her niece Bolshevist or otherwise 128 She quickly discovered that her fears were justified Days after returning to Petrograd Saint Petersburg she was shocked to hear a party official refer to free speech as a bourgeois superstition 129 As she and Berkman traveled around the country they found repression mismanagement and corruption 130 instead of the equality and worker empowerment they had dreamed of Those who questioned the government were demonized as counter revolutionaries 130 and workers labored under severe conditions 130 They met with Vladimir Lenin who assured them that government suppression of press liberties was justified He told them There can be no free speech in a revolutionary period 131 Berkman was more willing to forgive the government s actions in the name of historical necessity but he eventually joined Goldman in opposing the Soviet state s authority 132 In March 1921 strikes erupted in Petrograd when workers took to the streets demanding better food rations and more union autonomy Goldman and Berkman felt a responsibility to support the strikers stating To remain silent now is impossible even criminal 133 The unrest spread to the port town of Kronstadt where the government ordered a military response to suppress striking soldiers and sailors In the Kronstadt rebellion approximately 1 000 rebelling sailors and soldiers were killed and two thousand more were arrested many were later executed In the wake of these events Goldman and Berkman decided there was no future in the country for them More and more she wrote we have come to the conclusion that we can do nothing here And as we can not keep up a life of inactivity much longer we have decided to leave 134 In December 1921 they left the country and went to the Latvian capital city of Riga The US commissioner in that city wired officials in Washington DC who began requesting information from other governments about the couple s activities After a short trip to Stockholm they moved to Berlin for several years during this time Goldman agreed to write a series of articles about her time in Russia for Joseph Pulitzer s newspaper the New York World These were later collected and published in book form as My Disillusionment in Russia 1923 and My Further Disillusionment in Russia 1924 The publishers added these titles to attract attention Goldman protested albeit in vain 135 England Canada and France Goldman found it difficult to acclimate to the German leftist community in Berlin Communists despised her outspokenness about Soviet repression liberals derided her radicalism While Berkman remained in Berlin helping Russian exiles Goldman moved to London in September 1924 Upon her arrival the novelist Rebecca West arranged a reception dinner for her attended by philosopher Bertrand Russell novelist H G Wells and more than 200 other guests When she spoke of her dissatisfaction with the Soviet government the audience was shocked Some left the gathering others berated her for prematurely criticizing the Communist experiment 136 Later in a letter Russell declined to support her efforts at systemic change in the Soviet Union and ridiculed her anarchist idealism 137 The 1927 executions of Italian anarchists Nicola Sacco right and Bartolomeo Vanzetti were troubling for Goldman then living alone in Canada In 1925 the spectre of deportation loomed again but James Colton a Scottish anarchist Goldman had first met In Glasgow whilst on a speaking tour in 1895 138 had offered to marry her and provide British citizenship Although they were only distant acquaintances she accepted and they were married on June 27 1925 Goldman s 58th birthday Her new status gave her peace of mind and allowed her to travel to France and Canada 139 The pair sporadically exchanged correspondence until Colton s death in 1936 140 141 Life in London was stressful for Goldman she wrote to Berkman I am awfully tired and so lonely and heartsick It is a dreadful feeling to come back here from lectures and find not a kindred soul no one who cares whether one is dead or alive 142 She worked on analytical studies of drama expanding on the work she had published in 1914 But the audiences were awful and she never finished her second book on the subject 143 Goldman traveled to Canada in 1927 just in time to receive news of the impending executions of Italian anarchists Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti in Boston Angered by the many irregularities of the case she saw it as another travesty of justice in the US She longed to join the mass demonstrations in Boston memories of the Haymarket affair overwhelmed her compounded by her isolation Then she wrote I had my life before me to take up the cause for those killed Now I have nothing 144 145 In 1928 she began writing her autobiography with the support of a group of American admirers including journalist H L Mencken poet Edna St Vincent Millay novelist Theodore Dreiser and art collector Peggy Guggenheim who raised 4 000 for her 146 She secured a cottage in the French coastal city of Saint Tropez and spent two years recounting her life Berkman offered sharply critical feedback which she eventually incorporated at the price of a strain on their relationship 147 Goldman intended the book Living My Life as a single volume for a price the working class could afford she urged no more than 5 00 her publisher Alfred A Knopf released it as two volumes sold together for 7 50 Goldman was furious but unable to force a change Due in large part to the Great Depression sales were sluggish despite keen interest from libraries around the US 148 Critical reviews were generally enthusiastic The New York Times The New Yorker and Saturday Review of Literature all listed it as one of the year s top non fiction books 149 In 1933 Goldman received permission to lecture in the United States under the condition that she speak only about drama and her autobiography but not current political events She returned to New York on February 2 1934 to generally positive press coverage except from Communist publications Soon she was surrounded by admirers and friends besieged with invitations to talks and interviews Her visa expired in May and she went to Toronto in order to file another request to visit the US This second attempt was denied She stayed in Canada writing articles for US publications 150 In February and March 1936 Berkman underwent a pair of prostate gland operations Recuperating in Nice and cared for by his companion Emmy Eckstein he missed Goldman s sixty seventh birthday in Saint Tropez in June She wrote in sadness but he never read the letter she received a call in the middle of the night that Berkman was in great distress She left for Nice immediately but when she arrived that morning Goldman found that he had shot himself and was in a nearly comatose paralysis He died later that evening 151 Spanish Civil War In July 1936 the Spanish Civil War started after an attempted coup d etat by parts of the Spanish Army against the government of the Second Spanish Republic At the same time the Spanish anarchists fighting against the Nationalist forces started an anarchist revolution Goldman was invited to Barcelona and in an instant as she wrote to her niece the crushing weight that was pressing down on my heart since Sasha s death left me as by magic 152 She was welcomed by the Confederacion Nacional del Trabajo CNT and Federacion Anarquista Iberica FAI organizations and for the first time in her life lived in a community run by and for anarchists according to true anarchist principles In all my life she wrote later I have not met with such warm hospitality comradeship and solidarity 153 After touring a series of collectives in the province of Huesca she told a group of workers Your revolution will destroy forever the notion that anarchism stands for chaos 154 She began editing the weekly CNT FAI Information Bulletin and responded to English language mail 155 Goldman edited the English language Bulletin of the Anarcho syndicalist organizations Confederacion Nacional del Trabajo CNT and Federacion Anarquista Iberica FAI during the Spanish Civil War Goldman began to worry about the future of Spain s anarchism when the CNT FAI joined a coalition government in 1937 against the core anarchist principle of abstaining from state structures and more distressingly made repeated concessions to Communist forces in the name of uniting against fascism In November 1936 she wrote that cooperating with Communists in Spain was a denial of our comrades in Stalin s concentration camps 156 The USSR meanwhile refused to send weapons to anarchist forces and disinformation campaigns were being waged against the anarchists across Europe and the US Her faith in the movement unshaken Goldman returned to London as an official representative of the CNT FAI 157 Delivering lectures and giving interviews Goldman enthusiastically supported the Spanish anarcho syndicalists She wrote regularly for Spain and the World a biweekly newspaper focusing on the civil war In May 1937 Communist led forces attacked anarchist strongholds and broke up agrarian collectives Newspapers in England and elsewhere accepted the timeline of events offered by the Second Spanish Republic at face value British journalist George Orwell present for the crackdown wrote T he accounts of the Barcelona riots in May beat everything I have ever seen for lying 158 Goldman returned to Spain in September but the CNT FAI appeared to her like people in a burning house Worse anarchists and other radicals around the world refused to support their cause 159 The Nationalist forces declared victory in Spain just before she returned to London Frustrated by England s repressive atmosphere which she called more fascist than the fascists 160 she returned to Canada in 1939 Her service to the anarchist cause in Spain was not forgotten On her seventieth birthday the former Secretary General of the CNT FAI Mariano Vazquez sent a message to her from Paris praising her for her contributions and naming her as our spiritual mother She called it the most beautiful tribute I have ever received 161 Final years Goldman s grave in Illinois Forest Home Cemetery near those of the anarchists executed for the Haymarket affair The dates on the stone are incorrect As the events preceding World War II began to unfold in Europe Goldman reiterated her opposition to wars waged by governments M uch as I loathe Hitler Mussolini Stalin and Franco she wrote to a friend I would not support a war against them and for the democracies which in the last analysis are only Fascist in disguise 162 She felt that Britain and France had missed their opportunity to oppose fascism and that the coming war would only result in a new form of madness in the world 162 Death On Saturday February 17 1940 Goldman suffered a debilitating stroke She became paralyzed on her right side and although her hearing was unaffected she could not speak As one friend described it Just to think that here was Emma the greatest orator in America unable to utter one word 163 For three months she improved slightly receiving visitors and on one occasion gesturing to her address book to signal that a friend might find friendly contacts during a trip to Mexico She suffered another stroke on May 8 and she died six days later in Toronto aged 70 164 165 The US Immigration and Naturalization Service allowed her body to be brought back to the United States She was buried in German Waldheim Cemetery now named Forest Home Cemetery in Forest Park Illinois a western suburb of Chicago near the graves of those executed after the Haymarket affair 166 The bas relief on her grave marker was created by sculptor Jo Davidson 167 and the stone includes the quote Liberty will not descend to a people a people must raise themselves to liberty PhilosophyGoldman spoke and wrote extensively on a wide variety of issues While she rejected orthodoxy and fundamentalist thinking she was an important contributor to several fields of modern political philosophy She was influenced by many diverse thinkers and writers including Mikhail Bakunin Henry David Thoreau Peter Kropotkin Ralph Waldo Emerson Nikolai Chernyshevsky and Mary Wollstonecraft Another philosopher who influenced Goldman was Friedrich Nietzsche In her autobiography she wrote Nietzsche was not a social theorist but a poet a rebel and innovator His aristocracy was neither of birth nor of purse it was the spirit In that respect Nietzsche was an anarchist and all true anarchists were aristocrats 168 Anarchism Anarchism was central to Goldman s view of the world and she is today considered one of the most important figures in the history of anarchism First drawn to it during the persecution of anarchists after the 1886 Haymarket affair she wrote and spoke regularly on behalf of anarchism In the title essay of her book Anarchism and Other Essays she wrote 169 Anarchism then really stands for the liberation of the human mind from the dominion of religion the liberation of the human body from the dominion of property liberation from the shackles and restraint of government Anarchism stands for a social order based on the free grouping of individuals for the purpose of producing real social wealth an order that will guarantee to every human being free access to the earth and full enjoyment of the necessities of life according to individual desires tastes and inclinations Goldman s anarchism was intensely personal She believed it was necessary for anarchist thinkers to live their beliefs demonstrating their convictions with every action and word I don t care if a man s theory for tomorrow is correct she once wrote I care if his spirit of today is correct 170 Anarchism and free association were to her logical responses to the confines of government control and capitalism It seems to me that these are the new forms of life she wrote and that they will take the place of the old not by preaching or voting but by living them 170 At the same time she believed that the movement on behalf of human liberty must be staffed by liberated humans While dancing among fellow anarchists one evening she was chided by an associate for her carefree demeanor In her autobiography Goldman wrote 171 I told him to mind his own business I was tired of having the Cause constantly thrown in my face I did not believe that a Cause which stood for a beautiful ideal for anarchism for release and freedom from conventions and prejudice should demand denial of life and joy I insisted that our Cause could not expect me to behave as a nun and that the movement should not be turned into a cloister If it meant that I did not want it I want freedom the right to self expression everybody s right to beautiful radiant things Tactical uses of violence Goldman in her political youth held targeted violence to be a legitimate means of revolutionary struggle Goldman at the time believed that the use of violence while distasteful could be justified in relation to the social benefits it might accrue She advocated propaganda of the deed attentat or violence carried out to encourage the masses to revolt She supported her partner Alexander Berkman s attempt to kill industrialist Henry Clay Frick and even begged him to allow her to participate 172 She believed that Frick s actions during the Homestead strike were reprehensible and that his murder would produce a positive result for working people Yes she wrote later in her autobiography the end in this case justified the means 172 While she never gave explicit approval of Leon Czolgosz s assassination of US President William McKinley she defended his ideals and believed actions like his were a natural consequence of repressive institutions As she wrote in The Psychology of Political Violence the accumulated forces in our social and economic life culminating in an act of violence are similar to the terrors of the atmosphere manifested in storm and lightning 173 Her experiences in Russia led her to qualify her earlier belief that revolutionary ends might justify violent means In the afterword to My Disillusionment in Russia she wrote There is no greater fallacy than the belief that aims and purposes are one thing while methods and tactics are another The means employed become through individual habit and social practice part and parcel of the final purpose In the same chapter Goldman affirmed that Revolution is indeed a violent process and noted that violence was the tragic inevitability of revolutionary upheavals 174 Some misinterpreted her comments on the Bolshevik terror as a rejection of all militant force but Goldman corrected this in the preface to the first US edition of My Disillusionment in Russia 175 The argument that destruction and terror are part of revolution I do not dispute I know that in the past every great political and social change necessitated violence Black slavery might still be a legalized institution in the United States but for the militant spirit of the John Browns I have never denied that violence is inevitable nor do I gainsay it now Yet it is one thing to employ violence in combat as a means of defense It is quite another thing to make a principle of terrorism to institutionalize it to assign it the most vital place in the social struggle Such terrorism begets counter revolution and in turn itself becomes counter revolutionary Goldman saw the militarization of Soviet society not as a result of armed resistance per se but of the statist vision of the Bolsheviks writing that an insignificant minority bent on creating an absolute State is necessarily driven to oppression and terrorism 176 Capitalism and labor Goldman believed that the economic system of capitalism was incompatible with human liberty The only demand that property recognizes she wrote in Anarchism and Other Essays is its own gluttonous appetite for greater wealth because wealth means power the power to subdue to crush to exploit the power to enslave to outrage to degrade 177 She also argued that capitalism dehumanized workers turning the producer into a mere particle of a machine with less will and decision than his master of steel and iron 177 Originally opposed to anything less than complete revolution Goldman was challenged during one talk by an elderly worker in the front row In her autobiography she wrote 35 He said that he understood my impatience with such small demands as a few hours less a day or a few dollars more a week But what were men of his age to do They were not likely to live to see the ultimate overthrow of the capitalist system Were they also to forgo the release of perhaps two hours a day from the hated work That was all they could hope to see realized in their lifetime State Goldman viewed the state as essentially and inevitably a tool of control and domination 178 and as a result of her anti state views Goldman believed that voting was useless at best and dangerous at worst Voting she wrote provided an illusion of participation while masking the true structures of decision making Instead Goldman advocated targeted resistance in the form of strikes protests and direct action against the invasive meddlesome authority of our moral code 178 She maintained an anti voting position even when many anarcho syndicalists in 1930s Spain voted for the formation of a liberal republic Goldman wrote that any power anarchists wielded as a voting bloc should instead be used to strike across the country 179 She disagreed with the movement for women s suffrage which demanded the right of women to vote In her essay Woman Suffrage she ridicules the idea that women s involvement would infuse the democratic state with a more just orientation As if women have not sold their votes as if women politicians cannot be bought 180 She agreed with the suffragists assertion that women are equal to men but disagreed that their participation alone would make the state more just To assume therefore that she would succeed in purifying something which is not susceptible of purification is to credit her with supernatural powers 181 Goldman was also critical of Zionism which she saw as another failed experiment in state control 182 Goldman was also a passionate critic of the prison system critiquing both the treatment of prisoners and the social causes of crime Goldman viewed crime as a natural outgrowth of an unjust economic system and in her essay Prisons A Social Crime and Failure she quoted liberally from the 19th century authors Fyodor Dostoevsky and Oscar Wilde on prisons and wrote 183 Year after year the gates of prison hells return to the world an emaciated deformed will less shipwrecked crew of humanity with the Cain mark on their foreheads their hopes crushed all their natural inclinations thwarted With nothing but hunger and inhumanity to greet them these victims soon sink back into crime as the only possibility of existence Goldman was a committed war resister and was particularly opposed to the draft viewing it as one of the worst of the state s forms of coercion and was one of the founders of the No Conscription League for which she was ultimately arrested and imprisoned in 1917 before being deported in 1919 184 Goldman was routinely surveilled arrested and imprisoned for her speech and organizing activities in support of workers and various strikes access to birth control and in opposition to World War I As a result she became active in the early 20th century free speech movement seeing freedom of expression as a fundamental necessity for achieving social change 185 186 187 188 Her outspoken championship of her ideals in the face of persistent arrests inspired Roger Baldwin one of the founders of the American Civil Liberties Union 189 Goldman s and Reitman s experiences with vigilantism in the San Diego free speech fight in 1912 is an example of their persistence in the fight for free speech despite risking their safety 190 191 Feminism and sexuality Although she was hostile to the suffragist goals of first wave feminism Goldman advocated passionately for the rights of women and is today heralded as a founder of anarcha feminism which challenges patriarchy as a hierarchy to be resisted alongside state power and class divisions 192 In 1897 she wrote I demand the independence of woman her right to support herself to live for herself to love whomever she pleases or as many as she pleases I demand freedom for both sexes freedom of action freedom in love and freedom in motherhood 193 Anarcha feminists at an anti globalization protest quote Emma Goldman A nurse by training Goldman was an early advocate for educating women concerning contraception Like many feminists of her time she saw abortion as a tragic consequence of social conditions and birth control as a positive alternative Goldman was also an advocate of free love and a strong critic of marriage She saw early feminists as confined in their scope and bounded by social forces of Puritanism and capitalism She wrote We are in need of unhampered growth out of old traditions and habits The movement for women s emancipation has so far made but the first step in that direction 194 195 Goldman was also an outspoken critic of prejudice against homosexuals Her belief that social liberation should extend to gay men and lesbians was virtually unheard of at the time even among anarchists 196 As German sexologist Magnus Hirschfeld wrote she was the first and only woman indeed the first and only American to take up the defense of homosexual love before the general public 197 In numerous speeches and letters she defended the right of gay men and lesbians to love as they pleased and condemned the fear and stigma associated with homosexuality As Goldman wrote in a letter to Hirschfeld It is a tragedy I feel that people of a different sexual type are caught in a world which shows so little understanding for homosexuals and is so crassly indifferent to the various gradations and variations of gender and their great significance in life 197 Atheism A committed atheist Goldman viewed religion as another instrument of control and domination Her essay The Philosophy of Atheism quoted Bakunin at length on the subject and added 198 Consciously or unconsciously most theists see in gods and devils heaven and hell reward and punishment a whip to lash the people into obedience meekness and contentment The philosophy of Atheism expresses the expansion and growth of the human mind The philosophy of theism if we can call it a philosophy is static and fixed In essays like The Hypocrisy of Puritanism and a speech entitled The Failure of Christianity Goldman made more than a few enemies among religious communities by attacking their moralistic attitudes and efforts to control human behavior She blamed Christianity for the perpetuation of a slave society arguing that it dictated individuals actions on Earth and offered poor people a false promise of a plentiful future in heaven 199 Legacy Goldman s image often accompanying a popular paraphrase of her ideas If I can t dance I don t want to be in your revolution has been reproduced on countless walls garments stickers and posters as an icon of freedom Goldman was well known during her life described as among other things the most dangerous woman in America 200 After her death and through the middle part of the 20th century her fame faded Scholars and historians of anarchism viewed her as a great speaker and activist but did not regard her as a philosophical or theoretical thinker on par with for example Kropotkin 201 In 1970 Dover Press reissued Goldman s biography Living My Life and in 1972 feminist writer Alix Kates Shulman issued a collection of Goldman s writing and speeches Red Emma Speaks These works brought Goldman s life and writings to a larger audience and she was in particular lionized by the women s movement of the late 20th century In 1973 Shulman was asked by a printer friend for a quotation by Goldman for use on a T shirt She sent him the selection from Living My Life about the right to self expression everybody s right to beautiful radiant things recounting that she had been admonished that it did not behoove an agitator to dance 202 The printer created a statement based on these sentiments that has become one of Goldman s most famous quotations even though she probably never said or wrote it as such If I can t dance I don t want to be in your revolution 203 Variations of this saying have appeared on thousands of T shirts buttons posters bumper stickers coffee mugs hats and other items 202 The women s movement of the 1970s that rediscovered Goldman was accompanied by a resurgent anarchist movement beginning in the late 1960s which also reinvigorated scholarly attention to earlier anarchists The growth of feminism also initiated some reevaluation of Goldman s philosophical work with scholars pointing out the significance of Goldman s contributions to anarchist thought in her time Goldman s belief in the value of aesthetics for example can be seen in the later influences of anarchism and the arts Similarly Goldman is now given credit for significantly influencing and broadening the scope of activism on issues of sexual liberty reproductive rights and freedom of expression 204 Goldman has been depicted in numerous works of fiction over the years including Warren Beatty s 1981 film Reds in which she was portrayed by Maureen Stapleton who won an Academy Award for her performance Goldman has also been a character in two Broadway musicals Ragtime and Assassins Plays depicting Goldman s life include Howard Zinn s play Emma 205 Martin Duberman s Mother Earth 206 Jessica Litwak s Emma Goldman Love Anarchy and Other Affairs about Goldman s relationship with Berkman and her arrest in connection with McKinley s assassination Lynn Rogoff s Love Ben Love Emma about Goldman s relationship with Reitman 207 Carol Bolt s Red Emma 208 and Alexis Roblan s Red Emma and the Mad Monk 209 Ethel Mannin s 1941 novel Red Rose is also based on Goldman s Life 210 Goldman has been honored by a number of organizations named in her memory The Emma Goldman Clinic a women s health center located in Iowa City Iowa selected Goldman as a namesake in recognition of her challenging spirit 211 Red Emma s Bookstore Coffeehouse an infoshop in Baltimore Maryland adopted her name out of their belief in the ideas and ideals that she fought for her entire life free speech sexual and racial equality and independence the right to organize in our jobs and in our own lives ideas and ideals that we continue to fight for even today 212 WorksGoldman was a prolific writer penning countless pamphlets and articles on a diverse range of subjects 213 She authored six books including an autobiography Living My Life and a biography of fellow anarchist Voltairine de Cleyre 214 Books Anarchism and Other Essays New York Mother Earth Publishing Association 1910 The Social Significance of the Modern Drama Boston Gorham Press 1914 My Disillusionment in Russia Garden City New York Doubleday Page and Co 1923 My Further Disillusionment in Russia Garden City New York Doubleday Page and Co 1924 Living My Life New York Knopf 1931 Voltairine de Cleyre Berkeley Heights New Jersey Oriole Press 1932 Edited collections Red Emma Speaks Selected Writings and Speeches New York Random House 1972 ISBN 0 394 47095 8 Emma Goldman A Documentary History of the American Years Volume 1 Made for America 1890 1901 Berkeley University of California Press 2003 ISBN 0 520 08670 8 Emma Goldman A Documentary History of the American Years Volume 2 Making Speech Free 1902 1909 Berkeley University of California Press 2004 ISBN 0 520 22569 4 Emma Goldman A Documentary History of the American Years Volume 3 Light and Shadows 1910 1916 Stanford Stanford University Press 2012 ISBN 0 8047 7854 X See alsoEmma Goldman The Anarchist Guest Emma or Emma A Play in Two Acts about Emma Goldman American Anarchist a play by Howard Zinn Birth control movement in the United States John R Coryell List of peace activists List of women s rights activistsReferencesCitations Diggs Nancy Brown 1998 Steel Butterflies Japanese Women and the American Experience Albany State Univ of New York Press p 99 ISBN 0791436233 Like other radicals of the time Noe Itō was most influenced by none other than Emma Goldman a b University of Illinois at Chicago Biography of Emma Goldman Archived September 11 2013 at the Wayback Machine UIC Library Emma Goldman Collection Retrieved on December 13 2008 Streitmatter Rodger 2001 Voices of Revolution The Dissident Press in America New York Columbia University Press pp 122 134 ISBN 0 231 12249 7 Goldman 1970a p 24 a b c Goldman 1970a p 447 Drinnon 1961 p 5 The order of birth is unclear Wexler 1984 p 13 notes that although Goldman writes as being her mother s fourth child her brother Louis who died at the age of six was probably born after her Chalberg 1991 p 12 Wexler 1984 p 6 Chalberg 1991 p 13 Drinnon 1961 p 12 Goldman 1970a p 11 Wexler 1984 p 12 Wexler 1984 pp 13 14 Goldman 1970a p 20 Goldman 1970a p 28 Drinnon 1961 pp 6 7 Chalberg 1991 p 15 Goldman 1970a p 12 Wexler 1984 pp 23 25 Wexler 1984 p 26 Chalberg 1991 p 16 Goldman 1970a p 22 Chalberg 1991 p 16 Falk 1984 p 14 a b Goldman 1970a p 23 Wexler 1984 p 27 Wexler 1984 p 30 Falk 1984 pp 15 16 Wexler 1984 p 31 Drinnon 1961 pp 15 17 Chalberg 1991 p 27 Chalberg 1991 pp 27 28 Goldman 1970a p 40 Goldman 1970a p 51 a b Goldman 1970a p 52 Goldman 1970a p 54 Wexler 1984 p 53 Wexler 1984 p 57 Wexler 1984 pp 57 58 People amp Events Henry Clay Frick 1849 1919 PBS March 11 2004 Archived from the original on July 12 2015 Retrieved July 10 2015 Southwick Albert B June 26 2014 Emma Goldman pays a visit Telegram amp Gazette Worcester Massachusetts Archived from the original on July 1 2004 Retrieved July 10 2015 Wexler 1984 pp 61 62 Quoted in Wexler 1984 p 63 Wexler 1984 pp 63 65 a b Wexler 1984 p 65 a b Goldman 1970a p 91 Drinnon 1961 p 45 Chalberg 1991 Falk 1984 p 25 Wexler 1984 p 65 Alexander Berkman the Anarchist to Be Deported Case of Emma Goldman Now Up for Decision The New York Times November 26 1919 Goldman 1970a p 106 Wexler 1984 pp 65 66 Goldman 1970a p 105 Quoted in Wexler 1984 p 66 Panic of 1893 Archived May 7 2008 at the Wayback Machine Ohio History Central Ohio Historical Society 2007 Retrieved on December 18 2007 Quoted in Chalberg 1991 p 46 Goldman 1970a p 123 Drinnon 1961 pp 58 59 Wexler 1984 p 76 Drinnon 1961 p 57 Nellie Bly Nelly Bly Again She Interviews Emma Goldman and Other Anarchists New York World September 17 1893 Drinnon 1961 p 60 Wexler 1984 p 78 Wexler 1984 pp 78 79 Wexler 1984 pp 84 85 Wexler 1984 pp 85 89 Drinnon 1961 p 68 Chalberg 1991 pp 65 66 Drinnon 1961 p 68 Chalberg 1991 p 73 Wexler 1984 p 104 Wexler 1984 pp 103 104 Goldman 1970a p 300 Quoted in Chalberg 1991 p 76 Drinnon 1961 p 74 Chalberg 1991 p 78 Falk 2003 p 461 Wexler 1984 pp 106 112 Quoted in Chalberg 1991 p 81 Greenhouse Steven August 30 1996 New York Cradle Of Labor History The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 1 2021 Goldman 1970a p 318 Wexler 1984 p 115 Wexler 1984 p 116 Falk 2004 p 557 Chalberg 1991 pp 84 87 Quoted in Chalberg 1991 p 87 Goldman 1970a p 377 Chalberg 1991 pp 88 91 Wexler 1984 pp 121 130 Goldman 1970a p 384 Chalberg 1991 p 94 Drinnon 1961 pp 97 98 Quoted in Goldman 1970a p 391 Drinnon 1961 p 98 Chalberg 1991 p 97 Wexler 1984 pp 135 137 Wexler 1984 p 166 Wexler 1984 p 168 Wexler 1984 pp 140 147 a b Goldman 1969 p 45 Alice S Rossi The Feminist Papers From Adams to de Beauvoir Lebanon New Hampshire Northeastern University Press 1988 p 507 Quoted in Wexler 1984 pp 210 211 Today in History February 11 Library of Congress Retrieved January 28 2014 Wexler 1984 pp 211 215 a b Drinnon 1961 pp 186 187 Wexler 1984 p 230 Berkman 1992 p 155 Chalberg 1991 p 129 a b Emma Goldman and A Berkman Behind the Bars The New York Times June 16 1917 Retrieved December 17 2007 Quoted in Wexler 1984 p 232 Quoted in Chalberg 1991 p 134 Shaw Francis H July 1964 The Trials of Emma Goldman Anarchist The Review of Politics 26 3 444 445 doi 10 1017 S0034670500005210 S2CID 143738107 Prosecuted under the Espionage Act of 1917 for obstructing the draft Emma Goldman Trial and Speeches of Alexander Berkman and Emma Goldman in the United States District Court in the City of New York July 1917 New York Mother Earth Publishing Association 1917 Wexler 1984 pp 235 244 Quoted in Chalberg 1991 p 141 Chalberg 1991 pp 141 142 Wexler 1984 pp 253 263 Quoted in Drinnon 1961 p 215 Deportation Defied by Emma Goldman The New York Times October 28 1919 Retrieved February 4 2010 Will Fight Deportation The New York Times December 1 1919 Retrieved February 4 2010 Post 1923 pp 13 14 McCormick 1997 pp 158 163 a b Ark with 300 Reds Sails Early Today for Unnamed Port The New York Times December 21 1919 Retrieved February 1 2010 Clay Steven E 2011 U S Army Order Of Battle 1919 1941 PDF Volume 4 The Services Quartermaster Medical Military Police Signal Corps Chemical Warfare And Miscellaneous Organizations 1919 41 Vol 4 Fort Leavenworth KS Combat Studies Institute Press ISBN 978 0984190140 LCCN 2010022326 Retrieved October 23 2014 Post 1923 p 4 Murray 1955 pp 208 209 Soviet Ark Lands its Reds in Finland The New York Times January 18 1920 Retrieved February 1 2010 Murray 1955 pp 207 208 Post 1923 pp 1 11 Quoted in Wexler 1984 p 243 Quoted in Wexler 1989 p 17 Quoted in Chalberg 1991 p 150 a b c Goldman Emma Living My Life 1931 New York Dover Publications Inc 1970 ISBN 0 486 22543 7 Quoted in Drinnon 1961 p 235 Drinnon 1961 pp 236 237 Quoted in Drinnon 1961 p 237 Wexler 1989 pp 47 49 Wexler 1989 pp 56 58 Chalberg 1991 pp 161 162 Quoted in Wexler 1989 p 96 Goldman Emma Porter David 2006 1983 Vision on fire Emma Goldman on the Spanish Revolution 2nd ed Edinburgh AK Press p 36 ISBN 1 904859 57 7 OCLC 71239513 Falk 1984 pp 209 210 Letters of Emma Goldman and James Colton The Anarchist Library Retrieved March 3 2022 Colton James 1860 1936 libcom org Retrieved March 3 2022 Quoted in Wexler 1989 p 111 Wexler 1989 p 115 Quoted in Chalberg 1991 p 164 Wexler 1989 p 122 Mary V Dearborn Mistress of Modernism The Life of Peggy Guggenheim Houghton Mifflin 2004 pp 61 62 Wexler 1989 p 135 Chalberg 1991 pp 165 166 Wexler 1989 p 154 Wexler 1989 pp 158 164 Wexler 1989 pp 193 194 Drinnon 1961 pp 298 300 Drinnon 1961 pp 301 302 Quoted in Wexler 1989 p 232 Quoted in Drinnon 1961 p 303 Wexler 1989 p 205 Quoted in Wexler 1989 p 209 Wexler 1989 pp 209 210 Quoted in Wexler 1989 p 216 Wexler 1989 p 222 Quoted in Wexler 1989 p 226 Both quoted in Wexler 1989 p 232 a b Quoted in Wexler 1989 p 236 Quoted in Wexler 1989 p 240 Wexler 1989 pp 240 241 Emma Goldman Anarchist Dead Internationally Known Figure Deported From The U S Is Stricken In Toronto Disillusioned By Soviets Opposed Lenin And Trotsky As Betrayers Of Socialism Through Despotism The New York Times May 14 1940 Retrieved April 20 2008 Emma Goldman internationally known anarchist died early today at her home here after an illness of several months She was 70 years old Drinnon 1961 pp 312 313 Avrich Paul 2005 Anarchist Voices An Oral History of Anarchism in America AK Press p 491 ISBN 978 1904859277 Retrieved December 14 2015 Goldman 1970a p 194 Goldman 1969 p 62 a b Quoted in Wexler 1984 p 92 Goldman 1970a p 56 a b Goldman 1970a p 88 Goldman 1969 p 79 Goldman 1970b pp 260 264 Goldman 1970b p 8 Preface to First Volume of American Edition for My Disillusionment in Russia Emma Goldman Papers Project University of California Berkeley a b Goldman 1969 p 54 a b Wexler 1984 p 91 Wexler 1989 p 167 Goldman 1969 p 205 Goldman 1969 p 198 Wexler 1989 p 41 Goldman 1969 p 120 Pribanic Smith amp Schroeder 2018 pp 1 2 See generally Goldman 1970a See Geoffrey R Stone Perilous Times Free Speech in Wartime From the Sedition Act of 1798 to the War on Terrorism 2004 pp 139 152 discussing persecution of Goldman and other anti war activists and the passage of the Espionage Act of 1917 Falk 2004 David M Rabban Free Speech In Its Forgotten Years 1997 Christopher M Finan From the Palmer Raids to the Patriot Act A History of the Fight for Free Speech in America p 18 Wexler 1984 pp 181 182 May 20 1913 Emma Goldman returns San Diego Union Tribune May 20 2018 Archived from the original on October 27 2018 Retrieved August 20 2022 Marshall 1992 p 409 Quoted in Wexler 1984 p 94 Goldman 1969 p 224 See generally Haaland 1993 Goldman 1970c Goldman On Love Katz Jonathan Ned 1992 Gay American History Lesbians and Gay Men in the U S A New York City Penguin Books pp 376 380 a b Goldman Emma 1923 Offener Brief an den Herausgeber der Jahrbucher uber Louise Michel with a preface by Magnus Hirschfeld Jahrbuch fur sexuelle Zwischenstufen 23 70 Translated from German by James Steakley Goldman s original letter in English is not known to be extant Goldman Emma February 1916 The Philosophy of Atheism Mother Earth Retrieved December 7 2007 Goldman The Failure of Christianity Archived May 12 2008 at the Wayback Machine Mother Earth April 1913 Avrich Paul 2006 Anarchist Voices An Oral History of Anarchism in America AK Press p 45 ISBN 1 904859 27 5 Marshall 1992 pp 396 401 a b Wexler 1989 p 1 Shulman Alix Kates Dances with Feminists Women s Review of Books Vol IX 3 December 1991 Retrieved on February 16 2017 Marshall 1992 pp 408 409 Zinn Howard 2002 Emma A Play in Two Acts about Emma Goldman American Anarchist South End Press ISBN 0 89608 664 X Duberman Martin 1991 Mother Earth An Epic Drama of Emma Goldman s Life St Martin s Press ISBN 0 312 05954 X Lynn Rogoff Archived January 5 2008 at the Wayback Machine at doollee com The Playwrights Database Wexler 1989 p 249 Vincentelli Elisabeth August 21 2018 Review Besties With Rasputin in Red Emma and the Mad Monk The New York Times Archived from the original on January 1 2022 Retrieved August 28 2018 Mannin Ethel 1941 Red Rose A Novel Based on the Life of Emma Goldman Red Emma Jarrolds About Us Archived 2008 01 08 at the Wayback Machine The Emma Goldman Clinic 2007 Retrieved on December 15 2007 Red Emma s Bookstore Coffeehouse Who is Red Emma Red Emma s Bookstore Coffeehouse Archived from the original on May 6 2008 Retrieved February 24 2008 Falk 2004 p 45 Goldman Emma 1932 Voltairine de Cleyre Berkeley Heights New Jersey Oriole Press OCLC 12414567 Archived from the original on March 28 2015 Retrieved February 11 2011 General and cited sources Berkman Alexander 1992 Fellner Gene ed Life of an Anarchist The Alexander Berkman Reader Four Walls Eight Windows ISBN 978 0 941423 77 9 OCLC 24905653 Chalberg John 1991 Handlin Oscar ed Emma Goldman American Individualist HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 673 52102 6 OCLC 22629881 Drinnon Richard 1961 Rebel in Paradise A Biography of Emma Goldman University of Chicago Press OCLC 266217 Falk Candace 1984 Love Anarchy and Emma Goldman Holt Rinehart amp Winston ISBN 978 0 03 043626 0 OCLC 9918504 ed 2003 Emma Goldman A Documentary History of the American Years Vol 1 Made for America 1890 1901 University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 08670 8 ed 2004 Emma Goldman A Documentary History of the American Years Vol 2 Making Speech Free 1902 1909 University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 22569 5 Goldman Emma 1969 1917 Anarchism and Other Essays 3rd ed Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 22484 8 OCLC 1089171334 1970a 1931 Living My Life Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 22543 2 OCLC 93436 1970b 1923 My Disillusionment in Russia Thomas Y Crowell Co OCLC 76645 1970c The Traffic in Women and Other Essays on Feminism Times Change Press ISBN 978 0 87810 001 9 OCLC 22596878 Haaland Bonnie 1993 Emma Goldman Sexuality and the Impurity of the State Black Rose Books ISBN 978 1 895431 64 3 OCLC 27678158 Marshall Peter 1992 Demanding the Impossible A History of Anarchism HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 00 217855 6 McCormick Charles H 1997 Seeing Reds Federal Surveillance of Radicals in the Pittsburgh Mill District 1917 1921 University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 978 0 585 09911 8 OCLC 42331016 Murray Robert K 1955 Red Scare A Study in National Hysteria 1919 1920 University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0 8166 5833 6 OCLC 420192 Post Louis F 1923 The Deportations Delirium of Nineteen Twenty A Personal Narrative of an Historic Official Experience Charles H Kerr amp Company OCLC 394684 Pribanic Smith Erika J Schroeder Jared 2018 Emma Goldman s No Conscription League and the First Amendment Routledge ISBN 978 1 351 02797 7 OCLC 1066179265 Wexler Alice 1984 Emma Goldman An Intimate Life Pantheon Books ISBN 978 0 394 52975 2 OCLC 9970895 1989 Emma Goldman in Exile From the Russian Revolution to the Spanish Civil War Beacon Press ISBN 978 0 8070 7004 8 OCLC 19353853 Further readingAvrich Paul 1984 The Haymarket Tragedy Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 04711 9 Avrich Paul Avrich Karen 2012 Sasha and Emma The Anarchist Odyssey of Alexander Berkman and Emma Goldman Cambridge MA Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 06598 7 Drinnon Richard Drinnon Anna Maria eds 1975 Nowhere at Home Letters from Exile of Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman New York Schocken Books ISBN 978 0 8052 3537 1 Ferguson Kathy 2011 Emma Goldman Political Thinking in the Streets Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 4422 1048 6 LCCN 2010053529 Glassgold Peter ed 2001 Anarchy An Anthology of Emma Goldman s Mother Earth Washington D C Counterpoint ISBN 978 1 58243 040 9 OCLC 45002278 Moritz Theresa 2001 The World s Most Dangerous Woman A New Biography of Emma Goldman Subway Books ISBN 978 0 9681660 7 9 Weiss Penny A Kensinger Loretta eds 2007 Feminist Interpretations of Emma Goldman University Park PA Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 978 0 271 03480 5 OCLC 247557673 External linksEmma Goldman at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Digital collectionsWorks by Emma Goldman in eBook form at Standard Ebooks Works by Emma Goldman at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Emma Goldman at Internet Archive PBS American Experience Emma Goldman Works by Emma Goldman at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Works by Emma Goldman at the Anarchist Library Works of Emma Goldman onlinePhysical collectionsEmma Goldman entry at the Anarchy Archives Emma Goldman Women of Valor exhibit at the Jewish Women s Archive Emma Goldman Papers Project at University of California Berkeley Emma Goldman Papers at the International Institute of Social History Emma Goldman Papers Schlesinger Library Archived May 9 2012 at the Wayback Machine Radcliffe Institute Harvard University Emma Goldman Papers 1909 1941 Rubenstein Library Duke University Emma Goldman papers at the Sophia Smith Collection Smith College Special Collections Portals Anarchism Biography Feminism LGBT Libertarianism Religion Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Emma Goldman amp oldid 1135087672, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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