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Han Ryner

Jacques Élie Henri Ambroise Ner (7 December 1861 – 6 February 1938), also known by the pseudonym Han Ryner, was a French individualist anarchist philosopher and activist and a novelist. He wrote for publications such as L'Art social, L'Humanité nouvelle, L'Ennemi du Peuple, L'Idée Libre de Lorulot; and L'En dehors and L'Unique of fellow anarchist individualist Émile Armand. His thought is mainly influenced by stoicism and epicureanism.

Jacques Élie Henri Ambroise Ner
Born7 December 1861
Died6 February 1938 (1938-02-07) (aged 76)
Era20th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolIndividualist anarchism
Main interests
The individual, ethics, sex, stoicism, epicureanism

Life edit

He was born in Nemours (now Ghazaouet, Tlemcen Province), Department of Orán, French Algeria in a modest religious family. After the death of his mother, he abandoned Catholicism, associated himself with Freemasons and started having an interest in social ideas.

He published 2 novels in 1894–1895 and later started working as a journalist. After that he took a teaching position but struggled at having to fit into such a disciplined environment. He becomes a prolific literary writer.

In 1896, he adopted the pseudonym "Han Ryner" and started writing for such magazines as L'Art social, L'Humanité nouvelle of Augustin Hamon, L'Ennemi du Peuple of Emile Janvion and L'Idée Libre. From here he started collaborating in the important individualist anarchist magazine L'EnDehors and L'Unique of Émile Armand.

In 1900 he wrote the essay Le crime d'obéir (the crime of obeying) and in 1903 he wrote the essay Petit manuel individualiste, in which he presented his anarchist individualist doctrine influenced by classic Greek stoicism in the works of Epictetus. By the 1920s his thought starts having an important influence in Spain within individualist anarchist circles especially through the translations of his work by Juan Elizalde. Han Ryner started writing in Spanish individualist journals such as Ética, which already had an important influence of the thought of Ryner.[1] The Brazilian individualist anarchist Maria Lacerda de Moura took the task of making his philosophy and writing become known in the Portuguese-speaking world.[2]

With the First World War approaching. Han Ryner embraced pacifist and anti-war positions and promotes conscience objection. In his anti-war activism he collaborates with Émile Armand.

He campaigned for the liberation of Eugène Dieudonné in 1913; for that of Émile Armand during the war; for the mutiny in the Black Sea, and for the Italian-American anarchists Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti and for the Ukrainian anarchist Nestor Makhno.

In May 1922 he attended the International Congress of Progressive Artists and signed the "Founding Proclamation of the Union of Progressive International Artists".[3]

A radical anticlerical, he adhered to the World Committee against War and Fascism. He also opposed World War I on pacifist anti militaristic grounds. He was a rare case of an anarchist participating in the Félibrige.

He died in Paris on 6 February 1938.

The individualist anarchism of Han Ryner edit

The mature thought of Han Ryner is influenced by stoicism and epicureanism. From this first position he shows a tendency to fatalism towards the pains of life and those produced by society. He wrote in "Mini-manual of individualism", "The Stoic Epictetus courageously bore poverty and slavery. He was perfectly happy in the situations most painful to ordinary men."[4] He then emphasized subjective will as a power which individuals can resort to.

He defined individualism as "the moral doctrine which, relying on no dogma, no tradition, no external determination, appeals only to the individual conscience".[4] As models of individualists he names Socrates, Epicurus, Jesus and Epictetus[4] and so these persons exemplify what he defines as "harmonic individualism".[5] For example, he admires from Epicurus his temperance and that "he showed that very little was needed to satisfy hunger and thirst, to defend oneself against heat and the cold. And he liberated himself from all other needs, that is, almost all the desires and all the fears that enslave men.".[4] From Jesus how "He lived free and a wanderer, foreign to any social ties. He was the enemy of priests, external cults and, in general, all organizations."[4] From these individualists as he defines them he distinguishes "conquering and aggressive egoists who proclaim themselves to be individualists" such as Stendhal and Nietzsche.

Han Ryner, as well as fellow French individualist anarchist Émile Armand, regarded individualist anarchism above all as a way of life. He regarded that the individualist act must be in accord with his ideas and he calls that "virtue".[4] For him, disinterested virtue creates happiness which for him meant feeling oneself free of all outside servitudes and in perfect accord with oneself.[4]

In relationships with others and things outside the individual he saw "Every person is a goal, an end"[4] and from this he saw that he can "ask people for services that they will freely accord me, either through benevolence or in exchange for other services".[4] He defined society as "a gathering of individuals for a common labor." From society's evils he advocated developing individual resistance towards building up indifference.[4] He understood happiness as something that can only be reached through oneself and sees that "Society has stolen from all, in order to turn over to a few, that great instrument of natural labor, the earth." He rejected crowds as he sees them as "the most brutal of natural forces."[4]

He saw work as an evil worsened by society and that "1—It arbitrarily dispenses a certain number of men from all work and places their part of the burden on other men. 2—It employs many men at useless labors and social functions. 3—It multiplies among all, and particularly among the rich, imaginary needs and it imposes on the poor the odious labor necessary for the satisfaction of these needs."[4]

In line with Stirner, he rejected sacrifices in the name of exterior "Idols" such as "In certain countries, the King or the Emperor, in others some fraud called the Will of the People. Everywhere Order, the Political party, Religion, the Fatherland, the Race, the Color.[4]" By color he meant race and he found deplorable that "The White color especially ... has managed to unite in one cult the French, Germans, Russians, and Italians and to obtain from these noble priests the bloody sacrifice of a great number of Chinese.... It is they who have made all of Africa a hell. It is they who destroyed the Indians of America and lynches Negroes."[4]

See also edit

Written works edit

  • Chair vaincue, roman psychologique (1889)
  • Les Chants du divorce, poésies (1892)
  • L'Humeur inquiète (1894)
  • La Folie de misère (1895)
  • Le Crime d'obéir (1900)
  • Le Soupçon (1900)
  • L'Homme fourmi, novel illustrated by Alexis Mérodack-Jeanneau (1901)
  • Les Voyages de Psychodore, philosophe cynique (1903) (translated by Brian Stableford and included in The Superhumans, q.v.)
  • Petit Manuel individualiste (1903)
  • La Fille manquée (1903) Rééd. QuestionDeGenre/GKC (2013)
  • Petit Manuel individualiste (1903)
  • Prostitués, études critiques sur les gens de lettres d'aujourd'hui (1904)
  • Les Chrétiens et les philosophes (1906)
  • Le Subjectivisme. Des bons et mauvais usages de la logique. La Métaphysique et les Sagesses positives. Le Déterminisme et la Liberté. Les Morales: Servilisme et Dominisme. Les Sagesses: Fraternisme et Subjectivisme. Les Étapes de la sagesse (1909)
  • Vive le roi, hypothèse en 3 actes. Les Esclaves, vision en un acte (1910)
  • Le Cinquième Évangile (1911)
  • Le Fils du silence (1911)
  • Les Paraboles cyniques (1913)
  • Les Apparitions d'Ahasvérus v. 1913)
  • Les Pacifiques (1914)
  • Le Père Diogène (v. 1915–1935)
  • Le Sphinx rouge (1918)
  • Le Poison, drame en 1 acte (1919)
  • La Tour des peuples (1919)
  • Le Père Diogène (1920). Réédition: Premières Pierres, 2007.
  • Dialogue du mariage philosophique ; suivi des Dicéphales (1922)
  • Les Véritables entretiens de Socrate (1922)
  • L'Individualisme dans l'antiquité (histoire et critique) (1924)
  • Le Communisme et la Liberté (1924)
  • Le Crime d'obéir, roman d'histoire contemporaine (1925)
  • Jusqu'à l'âme: drame moderne en 2 actes (1925)
  • L'Ingénieux Hidalgo Miguel Cervantès (1926)
  • La Vie éternelle, roman du mystère (1926)
  • Jésus est-il un personnage historique ou un personnage légendaire ? La Vérité sur Jésus (1926)[6]
  • L'Aventurier d'amour (1927)
  • L'Amour plural, roman d'aujourd'hui et de demain (1927)
  • Jeanne d'Arc fut-elle victime de l'Église ? (1927)
  • La Sagesse qui rit (1928)
  • Les Surhommes, roman prophétique (1929) (translated by Brian Stableford as The Superhumans, ISBN 978-1-935558-77-4)
  • Songes perdus (1929)
  • Chère Pucelle de France (1930)
  • Prenez-moi tous ! (1930)
  • Crépuscules. Bouddha. Platon. Épicure. Thraséas. Raymond Lulle. Rabelais. Leibniz. Hegel. Vigny. Élisée Reclus, etc. (1930)
  • Le Manœuvre: pièce en 3 actes (1931)
  • Dans le mortier. Zénon. Phocion, Saint Ignace ; Les Albigeois ; Michel Servet ; Pierre Ramus ; Vanini ; Brousson ; Francisco Ferrer (1932)
  • La Soutane et le veston, roman (1932)
  • Bouche d'or, patron des pacifistes (1934)
  • La Cruauté de l'Église (1937)
  • L'Église devant ses juges (1937)
  • Le Massacre des amazones: études critiques sur deux cents bas-bleus contemporains: Mmes Adam, Sarah Bernhardt, Marie-Anne de Bovet, Bradamante, Jeanne Chauvin, Alphonse Daudet (s. d.)
  • La Beauté: légende dramatique en quatre tableaux (1938)
  • Florilège de paraboles et de songes (1942)
  • Face au public. Première série, 1901–1919 (1948)
  • J'ai mon Éliacin, souvenirs d'enfance (1956)
  • Aux orties, souvenirs d'adolescence (1957)
  • Le Sillage parfumé (1958)
  • Les Grandes Fleurs du désert (1963)

References edit

  1. ^ "Voluntary non-submission. Spanish individualist anarchism during dictatorship and the second republic (1923–1938)" by Xavier Diez 2006-05-26 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Xavier Diez. L'Anarquisme individualista amb Espanya 2012-03-01 at the Wayback Machine.
  3. ^ van Doesburg, Theo. "De Stijl, "A Short Review of the Proceedings [of the Congress of International Progressive Artists], Followed by the Statements Made by the Artists' Groups" (1922)". modernistarchitecture.wordpress.com. Ross Lawrence Wolfe. Retrieved 30 November 2018.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Mini-Manual of Individualism" by Han Ryner
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 2012-02-15. Retrieved 2009-05-08.
  6. ^ Couchoud, Paul-Louis; Ryner, Han (1926). Jésus est-il un personnage historique ou un personnage légendaire ? La Vérité sur Jésus. Controverse publique entre MM. le docteur Couchoud et Han Ryner (compte rendu sténographique). Impr.-éditions de "l'Idée libre. The Truth About Jesus: Is Jesus a Historical Figure of a Legendary Figure?

View also edit

External links edit

  • Works by or about Han Ryner at Internet Archive
  • Han Ryner Archive including a translation of Mini-Manual of Individualism
  • Han Ryner blog
  • in French

ryner, jacques, Élie, henri, ambroise, december, 1861, february, 1938, also, known, pseudonym, french, individualist, anarchist, philosopher, activist, novelist, wrote, publications, such, social, humanité, nouvelle, ennemi, peuple, idée, libre, lorulot, dehor. Jacques Elie Henri Ambroise Ner 7 December 1861 6 February 1938 also known by the pseudonym Han Ryner was a French individualist anarchist philosopher and activist and a novelist He wrote for publications such as L Art social L Humanite nouvelle L Ennemi du Peuple L Idee Libre de Lorulot and L En dehors and L Unique of fellow anarchist individualist Emile Armand His thought is mainly influenced by stoicism and epicureanism Jacques Elie Henri Ambroise NerBorn7 December 1861Nemours Department of Oran French Algeria modern day Ghazaouet Tlemcen Province Algeria Died6 February 1938 1938 02 07 aged 76 Paris FranceEra20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolIndividualist anarchismMain interestsThe individual ethics sex stoicism epicureanism Contents 1 Life 2 The individualist anarchism of Han Ryner 3 See also 4 Written works 5 References 6 View also 7 External linksLife editHe was born in Nemours now Ghazaouet Tlemcen Province Department of Oran French Algeria in a modest religious family After the death of his mother he abandoned Catholicism associated himself with Freemasons and started having an interest in social ideas He published 2 novels in 1894 1895 and later started working as a journalist After that he took a teaching position but struggled at having to fit into such a disciplined environment He becomes a prolific literary writer In 1896 he adopted the pseudonym Han Ryner and started writing for such magazines as L Art social L Humanite nouvelle of Augustin Hamon L Ennemi du Peuple of Emile Janvion and L Idee Libre From here he started collaborating in the important individualist anarchist magazine L EnDehors and L Unique of Emile Armand In 1900 he wrote the essay Le crime d obeir the crime of obeying and in 1903 he wrote the essay Petit manuel individualiste in which he presented his anarchist individualist doctrine influenced by classic Greek stoicism in the works of Epictetus By the 1920s his thought starts having an important influence in Spain within individualist anarchist circles especially through the translations of his work by Juan Elizalde Han Ryner started writing in Spanish individualist journals such as Etica which already had an important influence of the thought of Ryner 1 The Brazilian individualist anarchist Maria Lacerda de Moura took the task of making his philosophy and writing become known in the Portuguese speaking world 2 With the First World War approaching Han Ryner embraced pacifist and anti war positions and promotes conscience objection In his anti war activism he collaborates with Emile Armand He campaigned for the liberation of Eugene Dieudonne in 1913 for that of Emile Armand during the war for the mutiny in the Black Sea and for the Italian American anarchists Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti and for the Ukrainian anarchist Nestor Makhno In May 1922 he attended the International Congress of Progressive Artists and signed the Founding Proclamation of the Union of Progressive International Artists 3 A radical anticlerical he adhered to the World Committee against War and Fascism He also opposed World War I on pacifist anti militaristic grounds He was a rare case of an anarchist participating in the Felibrige He died in Paris on 6 February 1938 The individualist anarchism of Han Ryner editThe mature thought of Han Ryner is influenced by stoicism and epicureanism From this first position he shows a tendency to fatalism towards the pains of life and those produced by society He wrote in Mini manual of individualism The Stoic Epictetus courageously bore poverty and slavery He was perfectly happy in the situations most painful to ordinary men 4 He then emphasized subjective will as a power which individuals can resort to He defined individualism as the moral doctrine which relying on no dogma no tradition no external determination appeals only to the individual conscience 4 As models of individualists he names Socrates Epicurus Jesus and Epictetus 4 and so these persons exemplify what he defines as harmonic individualism 5 For example he admires from Epicurus his temperance and that he showed that very little was needed to satisfy hunger and thirst to defend oneself against heat and the cold And he liberated himself from all other needs that is almost all the desires and all the fears that enslave men 4 From Jesus how He lived free and a wanderer foreign to any social ties He was the enemy of priests external cults and in general all organizations 4 From these individualists as he defines them he distinguishes conquering and aggressive egoists who proclaim themselves to be individualists such as Stendhal and Nietzsche Han Ryner as well as fellow French individualist anarchist Emile Armand regarded individualist anarchism above all as a way of life He regarded that the individualist act must be in accord with his ideas and he calls that virtue 4 For him disinterested virtue creates happiness which for him meant feeling oneself free of all outside servitudes and in perfect accord with oneself 4 In relationships with others and things outside the individual he saw Every person is a goal an end 4 and from this he saw that he can ask people for services that they will freely accord me either through benevolence or in exchange for other services 4 He defined society as a gathering of individuals for a common labor From society s evils he advocated developing individual resistance towards building up indifference 4 He understood happiness as something that can only be reached through oneself and sees that Society has stolen from all in order to turn over to a few that great instrument of natural labor the earth He rejected crowds as he sees them as the most brutal of natural forces 4 He saw work as an evil worsened by society and that 1 It arbitrarily dispenses a certain number of men from all work and places their part of the burden on other men 2 It employs many men at useless labors and social functions 3 It multiplies among all and particularly among the rich imaginary needs and it imposes on the poor the odious labor necessary for the satisfaction of these needs 4 In line with Stirner he rejected sacrifices in the name of exterior Idols such as In certain countries the King or the Emperor in others some fraud called the Will of the People Everywhere Order the Political party Religion the Fatherland the Race the Color 4 By color he meant race and he found deplorable that The White color especially has managed to unite in one cult the French Germans Russians and Italians and to obtain from these noble priests the bloody sacrifice of a great number of Chinese It is they who have made all of Africa a hell It is they who destroyed the Indians of America and lynches Negroes 4 See also editList of peace activistsWritten works editChair vaincue roman psychologique 1889 Les Chants du divorce poesies 1892 L Humeur inquiete 1894 La Folie de misere 1895 Le Crime d obeir 1900 Le Soupcon 1900 L Homme fourmi novel illustrated by Alexis Merodack Jeanneau 1901 Les Voyages de Psychodore philosophe cynique 1903 translated by Brian Stableford and included in The Superhumans q v Petit Manuel individualiste 1903 La Fille manquee 1903 Reed QuestionDeGenre GKC 2013 Petit Manuel individualiste 1903 Prostitues etudes critiques sur les gens de lettres d aujourd hui 1904 Les Chretiens et les philosophes 1906 Le Subjectivisme Des bons et mauvais usages de la logique La Metaphysique et les Sagesses positives Le Determinisme et la Liberte Les Morales Servilisme et Dominisme Les Sagesses Fraternisme et Subjectivisme Les Etapes de la sagesse 1909 Vive le roi hypothese en 3 actes Les Esclaves vision en un acte 1910 Le Cinquieme Evangile 1911 Le Fils du silence 1911 Les Paraboles cyniques 1913 Les Apparitions d Ahasverus v 1913 Les Pacifiques 1914 Le Pere Diogene v 1915 1935 Le Sphinx rouge 1918 Le Poison drame en 1 acte 1919 La Tour des peuples 1919 Le Pere Diogene 1920 Reedition Premieres Pierres 2007 Dialogue du mariage philosophique suivi des Dicephales 1922 Les Veritables entretiens de Socrate 1922 L Individualisme dans l antiquite histoire et critique 1924 Le Communisme et la Liberte 1924 Le Crime d obeir roman d histoire contemporaine 1925 Jusqu a l ame drame moderne en 2 actes 1925 L Ingenieux Hidalgo Miguel Cervantes 1926 La Vie eternelle roman du mystere 1926 Jesus est il un personnage historique ou un personnage legendaire La Verite sur Jesus 1926 6 L Aventurier d amour 1927 L Amour plural roman d aujourd hui et de demain 1927 Jeanne d Arc fut elle victime de l Eglise 1927 La Sagesse qui rit 1928 Les Surhommes roman prophetique 1929 translated by Brian Stableford as The Superhumans ISBN 978 1 935558 77 4 Songes perdus 1929 Chere Pucelle de France 1930 Prenez moi tous 1930 Crepuscules Bouddha Platon Epicure Thraseas Raymond Lulle Rabelais Leibniz Hegel Vigny Elisee Reclus etc 1930 Le Manœuvre piece en 3 actes 1931 Dans le mortier Zenon Phocion Saint Ignace Les Albigeois Michel Servet Pierre Ramus Vanini Brousson Francisco Ferrer 1932 La Soutane et le veston roman 1932 Bouche d or patron des pacifistes 1934 La Cruaute de l Eglise 1937 L Eglise devant ses juges 1937 Le Massacre des amazones etudes critiques sur deux cents bas bleus contemporains Mmes Adam Sarah Bernhardt Marie Anne de Bovet Bradamante Jeanne Chauvin Alphonse Daudet s d La Beaute legende dramatique en quatre tableaux 1938 Florilege de paraboles et de songes 1942 Face au public Premiere serie 1901 1919 1948 J ai mon Eliacin souvenirs d enfance 1956 Aux orties souvenirs d adolescence 1957 Le Sillage parfume 1958 Les Grandes Fleurs du desert 1963 References edit Voluntary non submission Spanish individualist anarchism during dictatorship and the second republic 1923 1938 by Xavier Diez Archived 2006 05 26 at the Wayback Machine Xavier Diez L Anarquisme individualista amb Espanya Archived 2012 03 01 at the Wayback Machine van Doesburg Theo De Stijl A Short Review of the Proceedings of the Congress of International Progressive Artists Followed by the Statements Made by the Artists Groups 1922 modernistarchitecture wordpress com Ross Lawrence Wolfe Retrieved 30 November 2018 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Mini Manual of Individualism by Han Ryner LECHA Gerard Han Ryner or the Social Thinking of an Individualist in the Early Part of the 20th Century Archived from the original on 2012 02 15 Retrieved 2009 05 08 Couchoud Paul Louis Ryner Han 1926 Jesus est il un personnage historique ou un personnage legendaire La Verite sur Jesus Controverse publique entre MM le docteur Couchoud et Han Ryner compte rendu stenographique Impr editions de l Idee libre The Truth About Jesus Is Jesus a Historical Figure of a Legendary Figure View also editIndividualist anarchism in EuropeExternal links editWorks by or about Han Ryner at Internet Archive Han Ryner Archive including a translation of Mini Manual of Individualism Han Ryner blog Bibliographical list of Han Ryner s works Han Ryner or the Social Thinking of an Individualist in the Early Part of the 20th Century by Gerard Lecha in French Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Han Ryner amp oldid 1052638378, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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