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Mikhail Bakunin

Mikhail Alexandrovich Bakunin[a] (/bəˈknɪn/ bə-KOO-nin;[5] 30 May 1814 – 1 July 1876) was a Russian revolutionary anarchist. He is among the most influential figures of anarchism and a major figure in the revolutionary socialist, social anarchist,[6] and collectivist anarchist traditions. Bakunin's prestige as a revolutionary also made him one of the most famous ideologues in Europe, gaining substantial influence among radicals throughout Russia and Europe.

Mikhail Bakunin
Born
Mikhail Alexandrovich Bakunin

(1814-05-30)30 May 1814 (N.S.)
Died1 July 1876(1876-07-01) (aged 62)
FamilyBakunin
Era19th century philosophy
Region
School
Signature

Bakunin grew up in Pryamukhino, a family estate in Tver Governorate. From 1840, he studied in Moscow, then in Berlin hoping to enter academia. Later in Paris, he met Karl Marx and Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, who deeply influenced him. Bakunin's increasing radicalism ended hopes of a professorial career. He was expelled from France for opposing the Russian Empire's occupation of Poland. After participating in the 1848 Prague and 1849 Dresden uprisings, Bakunin was imprisoned, tried, sentenced to death, and extradited multiple times. Finally exiled to Siberia in 1857, he escaped via Japan to the United States and then to London, where he worked with Alexander Herzen on the journal Kolokol (The Bell). In 1863, Bakunin left to join the insurrection in Poland, but he failed to reach it and instead spent time in Switzerland and Italy.

In 1868, Bakunin joined the International Workingmen's Association, leading the anarchist faction to rapidly grow in influence. The 1872 Hague Congress was dominated by a struggle between Bakunin and Marx, who was a key figure in the General Council of the International and argued for the use of the state to bring about socialism. In contrast, Bakunin and the anarchist faction argued for the replacement of the state by federations of self-governing workplaces and communes. Bakunin could not reach the Netherlands, and the anarchist faction lost the debate in his absence. Bakunin was expelled from the International for maintaining, in Marx's view, a secret organisation within the International, and founded the Anti-Authoritarian International in 1872. From 1870 until his death in 1876, Bakunin wrote his longer works such as Statism and Anarchy and God and the State, but he continued to directly participate in European worker and peasant movements. In 1870, he was involved in an insurrection in Lyon, France. Bakunin sought to take part in an anarchist insurrection in Bologna, Italy, but his declining health forced him to return to Switzerland in disguise.

Bakunin is remembered as a major figure in the history of anarchism, an opponent of Marxism, especially of the dictatorship of the proletariat; and for his predictions that Marxist regimes would be one-party dictatorships ruling over the proletariat, not rule by the proletariat. His book God and the State has been widely translated and remains in print. Bakunin has had a significant influence on thinkers such as Peter Kropotkin, Errico Malatesta, Herbert Marcuse, E. P. Thompson, Neil Postman and A. S. Neill as well as syndicalist organizations such as the Wobblies, the anarchists in the Spanish Civil War and contemporary anarchists involved in the modern-day anti-globalization movement.[7]

Life edit

Early life edit

On 30 May [O.S. 18 May] 1814, Mikhail Aleksandrovich Bakunin was born into Russian nobility on his family's estate in Priamukhino, Tver, in the country's northwest. His father, Alexander Mikhailovich Bakunin, was a Russian diplomat who had served in Italy. Upon returning to Priamukhino and marrying the much younger Varvara Aleksandrovna Murav'eva, the elder Bakunin raised his ten children in the model of Rousseauan pedagogy. Mikhail Bakunin, their oldest son, read the languages, literature, and philosophy of the period and described his youth as idyllic and sheltered from the realities of Russian life. As an early teenager, he began training for a military career at the St. Petersburg Artillery School, which he rejected. He left the school, despite his father's protests, in 1835 to study philosophy.[8]

Bakunin lived a bohemian, intellectual life in Moscow, where German Romantic literature and idealist philosophy were influential in the 1830s.[8] The metaphysics of Schelling, Fichte, and Hegel influenced Bakunin in particular.[8] He befriended Russian intellectuals including the literary critic Vissarion Belinsky, the poet Nikolay Ogarev, the novelist Ivan Turgenev, and the writer Alexander Herzen as youth prior to their careers.[9] Bakunin was also in the intellectual circle of Nikolai Stankevich. During this time, Bakunin published Russian translations of works by Fichte and Hegel.[9]

He enrolled in the University of Berlin and immigrated in 1840. He was drawn towards the Young Hegelians, an intellectual group with radical interpretations of Hegel's philosophy. In this tradition Bakunin pseudonymously wrote his first original publication in 1842, German: Die Reaktion in Deutschland ("The Reaction in Germany"), which proposes a continuation of the French Revolution to the rest of Europe and Russia.[9]

Revolutionary activity and imprisonment edit

 
Bakunin, 1843

In the 1840s, he moved from philosophical studies to revolutionary agitation.[9] Learning of Bakunin's radicalism, the Russian government told Bakunin to return to Russia. When he did not, Russia stripped him of his rights as a nobleman and sentenced him in absentia to penal labor in Siberia. Without steady financial support, Bakunin became an itinerant, traveling Europe meeting the people who had influenced him, such as proto-communist Wilhelm Weitling, philosopher Karl Marx, anarchist Pierre-Joseph Proudhon. He was deported at the Russian government's request.[9]

When the French King Louis Philippe I abdicated during the February 1848 Revolution, Bakunin returned to Paris and basked in the revolutionary milieu.[9] With the French government's support, he headed to Prussian Poland to agitate for revolt against Russia but never arrived.[10] He attended the 1848 Prague Slavic Congress to defend Slavic rights against German and Hungarian nationalism, and participated in its impromptu insurrection against the Austrian Habsburgs. Uncaptured, he wrote Aufruf an die Slaven ("Appeal to the Slavs") at the end of the year, advocating for a Slavic federation and revolt against the Austrian, Prussian, Turkish, and Russia governments. It was widely read and translated.[11]

After participating in the 1848 Prague uprising and the 1849 Dresden uprising, Bakunin was imprisoned, tried, sentenced to death, extradited multiple times, and ultimately placed in solitary confinement in the Peter and Paul Fortress of St. Petersberg, Russia, in 1851. Three years later, he transferred to Shlisselburg Fortress near St. Petersberg for another three years. Prison weathered but did not break Bakunin, who retained his revolutionary zeal through his release. He did, however, write an autobiographical, genuflecting Confession to the Russian emperor, which proved to be a controversial document upon its public discovery some 70 years later. The letter did not improve his prison conditions. In 1857, Bakunin was permitted to transfer to permanent exile in Siberia. He married Antonia Kwiatkowska there[11] before escaping in 1861, first to Japan, then to San Francisco, across the country to New York, and arrived in London by the end of the year.[12] Bakunin set foot in America just as the Civil War was breaking out. Speaking with supporters of both sides, Bakunin stated that his sympathies were with the North, although he claimed hypocrisy in their stated goal of slave liberation while also forcing the South to remain in the Union.[13]

Back in Europe edit

In London, Bakunin reunited with Herzen and Ogarev. Bakunin collaborated with them on their Russian-language newspaper but his revolutionary fervor exceeded their moderate reform agenda. Bakunin's 1862 pamphlet The People's Cause: Romanov, Pugachev, or Pestel? criticized the Russian tsar for not using his position to facilitate a bloodless revolution and forgo another Pugachev's Rebellion. In early August 1862, he briefly travelled to Paris.[14] In Paris at this time, famous photographer Nadar took three famous photographs of him on August 7, 1862. After being photographed, he also signed Nadar's Livre d'Or (autograph albume), wrote that (leaf 161): "Watch out that liberty doesn't come to you from the north."[15][16] In 1863, Bakunin joined in an unsuccessful effort to supply armed men for the Polish January Uprising against Russia. Bakunin, reunited with his wife, moved to Italy the next year, where they stayed for three years.[12]

Bakunin, in his early 50s, developed his core anarchist thoughts in Italy. He continued to refine these ideas in his remaining 12 years. Among this ideology was the first of many conspiratorial revolutionary societies, though none of these participated in revolutionary actions, chiefly the revolutionary toppling of the state, to be replaced by free federation between voluntarily associated economic producers.[12]

He moved to Switzerland in 1867, a more permissive environment for revolutionary literature. Bakunin's anarchist writings were fragmentary and prolific.[12] With France's collapse in the 1870 Franco-Prussian War, Bakunin traveled to Lyon and participated in the fruitless Lyon Commune in which the citizens briefly occupied the city hall. Bakunin retreated to Switzerland.[17]

In Switzerland, the Russian revolutionary Sergey Nechayev sought out Bakunin for a collaboration. Not knowing Nechayev's past betrayals, Bakunin warmed to Nechayev's revolutionary zeal and they together produced the 1869 Catechism of the Revolutionary, a tract that endorsed an ascetic life for revolutionaries without societal or moral bonds. Bakunin's connection with Nechayev hurt the former's reputation. More recent scholarship, however, challenges the catechism's authorship, crediting Nechayev as the primary or sole author. Bakunin ultimately disavowed their connection.[18]

First International edit

Video of Bakunin's grave

While Bakunin encountered Karl Marx in Paris (1844) and London (1864), he came to know him through the First International (International Working Men's Association), which Marx and Friedrich Engels formed in the 1860s. Bakunin's relationship with Marx became strained in the early 1870s for both interpersonal and ideological differences. Bakunin respected Marx's erudition and passion for socialism but found his personality to be authoritarian and arrogant. In turn, Marx was skeptical towards Russian reactionism and Bakunin's unruliness.[18] As Bakunin developed his anarchist ideas in this period, he came to see federative social organization, led by the peasantry and poorest workers, as the primary post-revolution goal, whereas Marx believed in a dictatorship of the proletariat, led by organized workers in industrially advanced countries, in which the workers use state infrastructure until the state withers away. Bakunists abhorred the political organization for which Marx advocated.[19]

Marx had Bakunin and Bakunist anarchists ejected from the First International's 1872 Hague Congress. This breaking point split the Marxist socialist movement from the anarchist movement and led to the undoing of the International. Bakunin's ideas continued to spread nevertheless to the labor movement in Spain and the watchmakers of the Swiss Jura Federation.[20]

Bakunin wrote his last major work, Statism and Anarchy (1873), anonymously in Russian to stir underground revolution in Russia. It restates his anarchist position, establishes the German Empire as the foremost centralized state in opposition to European anarchism, likens Marx to German authoritarianism, and warns of Marx's dictatorship of the proletariat being led by autocrats for their own gain in the name of the proletariat. This premonition furthered the gulf between the Marxists and Bakunist anarchists.[20]

In one final revolutionary act, Bakunin planned the unsuccessful 1874 Bologna insurrection with his Italian followers. Its failure was a major setback to the Italian anarchist movement. Bakunin retreated to Switzerland,[21] where he retired, dying in Bern on 1 July 1876.[22]

Thought edit

"The passion for destruction is also a creative passion."[9]

Much of Bakunin's writings on anarchism centres on antipathy for the state and "political organization itself as the source of oppression and exploitation". His revolutionary solutions focus on undoing the state and hierarchical religious, social, and economic institutions, to be replaced by a system of freely federated communes organized "from below upward" with voluntary associations of economic producers, starting locally but ostensibly organizing internationally. These thoughts were first published in his unfinished 1871 The Knouto-Germanic Empire and the Social Revolution, expanded by a second part published in his 1908 Oeuvres, and again elaborated a fragment found and published posthumously as God and the State (1882). The latter was his most famous work, translated widely. It appeals to cast off both the state and religion to realize man's inborn freedom.[12]

As a writer, Bakunin was prolific yet fragmented. He was prone to large digressions and rarely completed what he set out to address. As a result, much of his writings on anarchism do not cohere and were published only posthumously. He wrote mainly in French.[12]

Bakunin's political beliefs rejected statist and hierarchical systems of power in every name and shape, from the idea of God downwards, and every form of hierarchical authority, whether emanating from the will of a sovereign or even from a state that allowed universal suffrage. He wrote in God and the State that "[t]he liberty of man consists solely in this, that he obeys the laws of nature because he has himself recognized them as such, and not because they have been imposed upon him externally by any foreign will whatsoever, human or divine, collective or individual".[23]

Bakunin similarly rejected the notion of any privileged position or class, since the social and economic inequality implied by class systems were incompatible with individual freedom. Whereas liberalism insisted that free markets and constitutional governments enabled individual freedom, Bakunin insisted that both capitalism and the state in any form were incompatible with the individual freedom of the working class and peasantry, stating that "it is the peculiarity of privilege and of every privileged position to kill the intellect and heart of man. The privileged man, whether he be privileged politically or economically, is a man depraved in intellect and heart". Bakunin's political beliefs were based on several interrelated concepts: (1) liberty; (2) socialism; (3) federalism; (4) anti-theism; and (5) materialism. He also developed a critique of Marxism, predicting that if the Marxists were successful in seizing power, they would create a party dictatorship "all the more dangerous because it appears as a sham expression of the people's will", adding that "[w]hen the people are being beaten with a stick, they are not much happier if it is called 'the People's Stick'".[24]

Authority and freethought edit

In his 1870 essay What is Authority?, Bakunin wrote:

Does it follow that I reject all authority? Far from me such a thought. In the matter of boots, I refer to the authority of the bootmaker; concerning houses, canals, or railroads, I consult that of the architect or the engineer. For such or such special knowledge I apply to such or such a savant. But I allow neither the bootmaker nor the architect nor savant to impose his authority upon me. I listen to them freely and with all the respect merited by their intelligence, their character, their knowledge, reserving always my incontestable right of criticism and censure. I do not content myself with consulting a single authority in any special branch; I consult several; I compare their opinions, and choose that which seems to me the soundest. But I recognise no infallible authority, even in special questions; consequently, whatever respect I may have for the honesty and the sincerity of such or such individual, I have no absolute faith in any person.[25]

According to Bakunin:

Therefore there is no fixed and constant authority, but a continual exchange of mutual, temporary, and, above all, voluntary authority and subordination. This same reason forbids me, then, to recognise a fixed, constant and universal authority, because there is no universal man, no man capable of grasping in all that wealth of detail, without which the application of science to life is impossible, all the sciences, all the branches of social life".[25]

Anti-theologism edit

According to political philosopher Carl Schmitt, a prominent member of the Nazi Party, "in comparison with later anarchists, Proudhon was a moralistic petit bourgeois who continued to subscribe to the authority of the father and the principle of the monogamous family. Bakunin was the first to give the struggle against theology the complete consistency of an absolute naturalism. [...] For him, therefore, there was nothing negative and evil except the theological doctrine of God and sin, which stamps man as a villain in order to provide a pretext for domination and the hunger for power."[26]

Bakunin believed that religion originated from the human ability for abstract thought and fantasy.[27][28] According to Bakunin, religion is sustained by indoctrination and conformism. Other factors in the survival of religion are poverty, suffering and exploitation, from which religion promises salvation in the afterlife. Oppressors take advantage of religion because many religious people reconcile themselves with injustice on earth by the promise of happiness in heaven.[23]

Bakunin argued that oppressors receive authority from religion. Religious people are in many cases obedient to the priests, because they believe that the statements of priests are based on direct divine revelation or scripture. Obedience to divine revelation or scripture is considered the ethical criterion by many religious people because God is considered as the omniscient, omnipotent and omnibenevolent being. Therefore, each statement considered derived from an infallible God cannot be criticized by humans. According to this religious way of thinking, humans cannot know by themselves what is just, but that only God decides what is good or evil. People who disobey the "messengers of God" are threatened with punishment in hell.[23] According to Bakunin, the alternative for a religious power monopoly is the acknowledgement that all humans are equally inspired by God, but that means that multiple contradictory teachings are assigned to an infallible God which is logically impossible. Therefore, Bakunin considers religion as necessarily authoritarian.[23]

Bakunin argued in his book God and the State that "the idea of God implies the abdication of human reason and justice; it is the most decisive negation of human liberty, and necessarily ends in the enslavement of mankind, in theory and practice". Consequently, Bakunin reversed Voltaire's famous aphorism that if God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent Him, writing instead that "if God really existed, it would be necessary to abolish Him".[23] Political theology is a branch of both political philosophy and theology that investigates the ways in which theological concepts or ways of thinking underlie political, social, economic and cultural discourses. Bakunin was an early proponent of the term political theology in his 1871 text "The Political Theology of Mazzini and the International",[29] to which Schmitt's eponymous book responded.[30][31]

Class struggle strategy for social revolution edit

Bakunin's methods of realizing his revolutionary program were consistent with his principles. The working class and peasantry were to organize from below through local structures federated with each other, "creating not only the ideas, but also the facts of the future itself."[32] Their movements would prefigure the future in their ideas and practices, creating the building blocks of the new society. This approach was exemplified by syndicalism, an anarchist strategy championed by Bakunin, according to which trade unions would provide both the means to defend and improve workers' conditions, rights and incomes in the present, and the basis for a social revolution based upon workplace occupations. The syndicalist unions would organize the occupations as well as provide the radically democratic structures through which workplaces would be self-managed, and the larger economy coordinated. Thus, for Bakunin, the workers' unions would "take possession of all the tools of production as well as buildings and capital."[33]

Nevertheless, Bakunin did not reduce the revolution to syndicalist unions, stressing the need to organize working-class neighbourhoods as well as the unemployed. Meanwhile, the peasants were to "take the land and throw out those landlords who live by the labor of others".[34] Bakunin did not dismiss the skilled workers as is sometimes claimed[by whom?] and the watchmakers of the Jura region were central to the St. Imier International's creation and operations. However, at a time when unions largely ignored the unskilled, Bakunin placed great emphasis on the need to organize as well among "the rabble" and "the great masses of the poor and exploited, the so-called "lumpenproletariat" to "inaugurate and bring to triumph the Social Revolution."[35]

Collectivist anarchism edit

Bakunin's socialism was known as "collectivist anarchism", where "socially: it seeks the confirmation of political equality by economic equality. This is not the removal of natural individual differences, but equality in the social rights of every individual from birth; in particular, equal means of subsistence, support, education, and opportunity for every child, boy or girl, until maturity, and equal resources and facilities in adulthood to create his own well-being by his own labor."[36]

Collectivist anarchism advocates the abolition of both the state and private ownership of the means of production. Instead, it envisions the means of production being owned collectively and controlled and managed by the producers themselves. For the collectivization of the means of production, it was originally envisaged that workers would revolt and forcibly collectivize the means of production.[37] Once collectivization takes place, money would be abolished to be replaced with labour notes and workers' salaries would be determined in democratic organizations based on job difficulty and the amount of time they contributed to production. These salaries would be used to buy goods in a communal market.[38]

Critique of Marxism edit

The dispute between Bakunin and Karl Marx highlighted the differences between anarchism and Marxism. He strongly rejected Marx's concept of the "dictatorship of the proletariat" in which the new state would be unopposed and would, theoretically, represent the workers.[39] He argued that the state should be immediately abolished because all forms of government eventually lead to oppression.[39] He also vehemently opposed vanguardism, in which a political elite of revolutionaries guide the workers. Bakunin insisted that revolutions must be led by the people directly while any "enlightened elite" must exert influence only by remaining "invisible [...] not imposed on anyone [...] [and] deprived of all official rights and significance".[40] Bakunin claimed that Marxists "maintain that only a dictatorship—their dictatorship, of course—can create the will of the people, while our answer to this is: No dictatorship can have any other aim but that of self-perpetuation, and it can beget only slavery in the people tolerating it; freedom can be created only by freedom, that is, by a universal rebellion on the part of the people and free organization of the toiling masses from the bottom up".[41] Bakunin further stated that "we are convinced that liberty without socialism is privilege and injustice; and that socialism without liberty is slavery and brutality".[42]

While both anarchists and Marxists share the same final goal, the creation of a free, egalitarian society without social classes and repressive/bureaucratic government, they strongly disagree on how to achieve this goal. Anarchists believe that the classless, stateless society should be established by the direct action of the masses, culminating in social revolution and refuse any intermediate stage such as the dictatorship of the proletariat on the basis that such a dictatorship will become a self-perpetuating fundament. For Bakunin, the fundamental contradiction is that for the Marxists "anarchism or freedom is the aim, while the state and dictatorship is the means, and so, in order to free the masses, they have first to be enslaved."[40] However, Bakunin also wrote of meeting Marx in 1844: "As far as learning was concerned, Marx was, and still is, incomparably more advanced than I. I knew nothing at that time of political economy, I had not yet rid myself of my metaphysical observations. [...] He called me a sentimental idealist and he was right; I called him a vain man, perfidious and crafty, and I also was right".[43] Bakunin found Marx's economic analysis very useful and began the job of translating Das Kapital into Russian. In turn, Marx wrote of the rebels in the Dresden insurrection of 1848 that "they found a capable and cool headed leader" in the "Russian refugee Michael Bakunin."[44] Marx wrote to Engels of meeting Bakunin in 1864 after his escape to Siberia, stating: "On the whole he is one of the few people whom I find not to have retrogressed after 16 years, but to have developed further."[45]

Bakunin has sometimes been called the first theorist of the "new class", meaning a class of intellectuals and bureaucrats running the state in the name of the people or the proletariat, but in reality in their own interests alone. Bakunin argued that "[t]he State has always been the patrimony of some privileged class: a priestly class, an aristocratic class, a bourgeois class. And finally, when all the other classes have exhausted themselves, the State then becomes the patrimony of the bureaucratic class and then falls—or, if you will, rises—to the position of a machine."[35]

Federalism edit

By federalism, Bakunin meant the organization of society "from the base to the summit—from the circumference to the centre—according to the principles of free association and federation".[36] Consequently, society would be organized "on the basis of the absolute freedom of individuals, of the productive associations, and of the communes", with "every individual, every association, every commune, every region, every nation" having "the absolute right to self-determination, to associate or not to associate, to ally themselves with whomever they wish".[36]

Liberty edit

By liberty, Bakunin did not mean an abstract ideal but a concrete reality based on the equal liberty of others. In a positive sense, liberty consists of "the fullest development of all the faculties and powers of every human being, by education, by scientific training, and by material prosperity." Such a conception of liberty is "eminently social, because it can only be realized in society", not in isolation. In a negative sense, liberty is "the revolt of the individual against all divine, collective, and individual authority."[46]

Materialism edit

Bakunin denied religious concepts of a supernatural sphere and advocated a materialist explanation of natural phenomena, for "the manifestations of organic life, chemical properties and reactions, electricity, light, warmth and the natural attraction of physical bodies, constitute in our view so many different but no less closely interdependent variants of that totality of real beings which we call matter." For Bakunin, The "mission of science is, by observation of the general relations of passing and real facts, to establish the general laws inherent in the development of the phenomena of the physical and social world."[46]

Proletariat, lumpenproletariat and the peasantry edit

Bakunin differed from Marx's on the revolutionary potential of the lumpenproletariat and the proletariat, for "[b]oth agreed that the proletariat would play a key role, but for Marx the proletariat was the exclusive, leading revolutionary agent while Bakunin entertained the possibility that the peasants and even the lumpenproletariat (the unemployed, common criminals, etc.) could rise to the occasion."[47] According to Nicholas Thoburn, "Bakunin considers workers' integration in capital as destructive of more primary revolutionary forces. For Bakunin, the revolutionary archetype is found in a peasant milieu (which is presented as having longstanding insurrectionary traditions, as well as a communist archetype in its current social form—the peasant commune) and amongst educated unemployed youth, assorted marginals from all classes, brigands, robbers, the impoverished masses, and those on the margins of society who have escaped, been excluded from, or not yet subsumed in the discipline of emerging industrial work—in short, all those whom Marx sought to include in the category of the lumpenproletariat."[48]

Revolutionary societies edit

Beginning in Italy with the International Brotherhood, Bakunin attempted to create secret revolutionary societies towards the end of his life, a concept at odds with his professed caution against the autocratic tendencies of the revolutionary elite. These organizations did not participate in revolutionary action.[12]

The idea of the "invisible dictatorship" was central to Bakunin's politics. In combination with Bakunin's opposition to parliamentary politics, historian Peter Marshall wrote that such a secret party, its existence unknown and its policies beholden to none, had the potential for greater tyranny than a Blanquist or Marxist party and was hard to envision as presaging an open, democratic society.[49]

Personal life edit

 
Antonia and Mikhail Bakunin, c. 1861

Bakunin married Antonia Kwiatkowska, originally from Poland, during his exile in Siberia. Kwiatkowska was much younger than Bakunin (18 years old and 26 years younger) and had little interest in politics. Their differences and Bakunin's meagre attention to romance have left biographers to speculate psychosexual rationales for Bakunin's personal life and the extent of his dedication to revolutionary action. Though she remained married to Bakunin through his death in 1876, during his life, Kwiatkowska had three children with an Italian disciple of his. She married this man after Bakunin's death.[50]

Legacy edit

Bakunin was the leading anarchist revolutionary of the 19th century, active from the 1840s through the 1870s.[8] His foundational anarchist writings helped the movement stand in contrast to capitalism and Marxism and became more popular after his death, with some of his highest regarded works published posthumously and in new editions. His Statism and Anarchy influenced the growing Russian Narodnik movement of peasant socialism, and his anarchism influenced ideology in both the Russian Revolution and the Spanish Civil War. The 1960s New Left revived interest in his works and ideas of voluntary association and opposition to authoritarian socialism, with new editions and translations published.[22]

Bakunin's legacy reflects the paradox and ambivalence by which he lived. As historian Paul Avrich put it, Bakunin was "a nobleman who yearned for a peasant revolt, a libertarian with an urge to dominate others, an intellectual with a powerful anti-intellectual streak", who professed unfettered liberty while demanding unconditional obedience from his followers. Many of his beliefs put him closer to future authoritarian movements.[51]

In particular, Bakunin's antisemitic passages have been the subject of extended interest, such that Bakunin biographer Mark Leier has said the question is raised every time he speaks on Bakunin. Both Leier and scholar of antisemitism Eirik Eiglad have commented that antisemitism was not essential to Bakunin's thought, nor was his thought valued for his antisemitism.[52] Sociologist Marcel Stoetzler argued the opposite, saying that the antisemitic trope of Jewish world domination was at the centre of Bakunin's political thought.[53] Bakunin's anti-Jewish and anti-German resentment was most prominently in the context of attacking Marx, but his anti-Semitism predated these passages.[54][55] Scholar Marshall Shatz noted the gap between Bakunin's egalitarian principles and his ethnic prejudices, even if this anti-Semitism and stereotyping was common among French radicals of the era[54] and shared by Marx himself.[56]

Noam Chomsky called Bakunin's prediction that Marxist regimes would become dictatorships "one of the few predictions in the social sciences that actually came true".[57]

Bakunin's archives are held in the Pushkin House, State Archive of the Russian Federation, Russian State Library, Russian State Archive of Literature and Art, National Library of Russia, and International Institute of Social History.[22]

Works edit

Books edit

  • God and the State, ISBN 048622483X

Pamphlets edit

Articles edit

  • "Power Corrupts the Best" (1867)
  • "The Class War" (1870)
  • "What is Authority?" (1870)
  • "Recollections on Marx and Engels" (1869)
  • "The Red Association" (1870)
  • "Solidarity in Liberty" (1867)
  • "The German Crisis" (1870)
  • "God or Labor" (1947)
  • "Where I Stand" (1947)
  • "Appeal to my Russian Brothers" (1896)
  • "The Social Upheaval" (1947)
  • "Integral Education, Part I" (1869)
  • "Integral Education, Part II" (1869)
  • "The Organization of the International" (1869)
  • "Polish Declaration" (1896)
  • "Politics and the State" (1871)
  • "Workers and the Sphinx" (1867)
  • "The Policy of the Council" (1869)
  • "The Two Camps" (1869)

Collections edit

  • Bakunin on Anarchism (1971). Edited, translated and with an introduction by Sam Dolgoff. Preface by Paul Avrich. New York: Knopf Originally published as Bakunin on Anarchy, it includes James Guillaume's Bakunin: A Biographical Sketch. ISBN 0043210120.
  • Michael Bakunin: Selected Writings (1974). A. Lehning (ed.). New York: Grove Press. ISBN 0802100201.
  • Anarchism: A Documentary History of Libertarian Ideas, Volume 1: From Anarchy to Anarchism (300 CE – 1939) (2005). Robert Graham (ed.). Montreal and New York: Black Rose Books. ISBN 1551642514.
  • The Political Philosophy of Bakunin (1953). G. P. Maximoff (ed.). It includes Mikhail Bakunin: A Biographical Sketch by Max Nettlau.
  • The Basic Bakunin: Writings 1869–1871 (1992). Robert M. Cutler (ed.). New York: Prometheus Books, 1992. ISBN 0879757450.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Russian: Михаил Александрович Бакунин, IPA: [mʲɪxɐˈil ɐlʲɪkˈsandrəvʲɪdʑ bɐˈkunʲɪn].

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Petrov, Kristian (2019). "'Strike out, right and left!': a conceptual-historical analysis of 1860s Russian nihilism and its notion of negation". Stud East Eur Thought. 71 (2): 73–97. doi:10.1007/s11212-019-09319-4. S2CID 150893870.
  2. ^ Scanlan, James P. (1998). "Russian Materialism: 'the 1860s'". Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Taylor and Francis. doi:10.4324/9780415249126-E050-1. ISBN 978-0415250696.
  3. ^ Edie, James M.; Scanlan, James; Zeldin, Mary-Barbara (1994). Russian Philosophy Volume II: the Nihilists, The Populists, Critics of Religion and Culture. University of Tennessee Press. p. 3. Bakunin himself was a Westernizer
  4. ^ „In Brüssel macht er (Anm.: Bakunin) die folgenreiche Bekanntschaft des polnischen Historikers und Revolutionärs Ignacy Lelewel. Dessen slawophile Vision einer demokratischen Bauernrepublik beeindruckt ihn sehr, wobei er den engen Nationalismus der ganzen Sache in typisch Bakuninscher Begeisterung einfach ausblendet. Der Gedanke an eine generelle Erhebung der slawischen Völker, denen er die Kraft zutraut, als ungezähmter Motor einer generellen Revolution gegen jede Tyrannei zu wirken, nimmt Gestalt an und wird ihn für viele Jahre nicht mehr loslassen." aus: Horst Stowasser: Freiheit pur. Die Idee der Anarchie, Geschichte und Zukunft. Eichborn, Frankfurt am Main 1995, ISBN 3-8218-0448-3, S. 195.
  5. ^ "Bakunin". Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary. 2010.
  6. ^ Masters, Anthony (1974), Bakunin, the Father of Anarchism, Saturday Review Press, ISBN 0841502951
  7. ^ Sale, Kirkpatrick (2006-11-06) An Enemy of the State 4 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine, The American Conservative
  8. ^ a b c d Shatz 2003, p. 35.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g Shatz 2003, p. 36.
  10. ^ Shatz 2003, pp. 36–37.
  11. ^ a b Shatz 2003, p. 37.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g Shatz 2003, p. 38.
  13. ^ Avrich, Paul. "Bakunin in America" (PDF).
  14. ^ Kawelin, Konstantin (1894). Dragomanow, Michail (ed.). Konstantin Kawelins und Iwan Turgenjews sozial-politischer Briefwechsel mit Alexander Iw. Herzen: Mit Beilagen und Erläuterungen. Bibliothek russischer Denkwürdigkeiten ;4 Bd (in German). Stuttgart: Verlag der J. G. Cotta'schen Buchhandlung Nachfolger. pp. 64–66.
  15. ^ Begley, Adam (5 July 2017). "Nadar's Livre d'or". The Paris Review. Retrieved 23 November 2023.
  16. ^ "Nadar autograph album". Retrieved 23 November 2023.
  17. ^ Shatz 2003, pp. 38–39.
  18. ^ a b Shatz 2003, p. 39.
  19. ^ Shatz 2003, pp. 39–40.
  20. ^ a b Shatz 2003, p. 40.
  21. ^ Drake 2009, pp. 35–36.
  22. ^ a b c Shatz 2003, p. 41.
  23. ^ a b c d e God and the State, Michael Bakunin, 1882
  24. ^ Michael Bakunin: Selected Writings, ed. A. Lehning (New York: Grove Press, 1974), p. 268.
  25. ^ a b "What is Authority?". www.marxists.org.
  26. ^ Carl Schmitt (2005). Political Theology. University of Chicago Press. pg. 64
  27. ^ The Paris Commune and the Idea of the State, Mikhail Bakunin, 1871
  28. ^ "Michail Bakunin: Political Theology of Mazzinni; (1871); from the book: Michael Bakunin: Selected Writings published in 1973" (PDF).
  29. ^ Marshall 1992, pp. 300–301.
  30. ^ Maier, Henrich (1995). Carl Schmitt and Leo Strauss: The hidden dialogue. University of Chicago Press. pp. 75–76. ISBN 0226518884.
  31. ^ Schmitt, Carl (1922). Political theology. University of Chicago Press. pp. 64–66. ISBN 0226738892.
  32. ^ Mikhail Bakunin, Works of Mikhail Bakunin 1871, Marxists.org, retrieved 8 September 2009
  33. ^ Mikhail Bakunin, Works of Mikhail Bakunin 1870, Marxists.org, retrieved 8 September 2009
  34. ^ Letters to a Frenchman on the Present Crisis, Mikhail Bakunin, 1870
  35. ^ a b On the International Workingmen's Association and Karl Marx, Mikhail Bakunin, 1872
  36. ^ a b c Revolutionary Catechism, Mikhail Bakunin, 1866
  37. ^ Patsouras, Louis. 2005. Marx in Context. iUniverse. p. 54
  38. ^ Bakunin Mikail. Bakunin on Anarchism. Black Rose Books. 1980. p. 369
  39. ^ a b Woodcock, George (1962, 1975). Anarchism, 158. Harmondsworth, England: Penguin Books. ISBN 0140206221.
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  41. ^ Anarchist Theory FAQ Version 5.2, Gmu.edu, retrieved 8 September 2009
  42. ^ Mikhail Bakunin (1867). "Federalism, Socialism, Anti-Theologism". Marxists.org.
  43. ^ Quoted in Brian Morris, Bakunin: The Philosophy of Freedom, 1993, p14
  44. ^ New York Daily Tribune (2 October 1852) on 'Revolution and Counter Revolution in Germany'
  45. ^ Quoted in Brian Morris, Bakunin: The Philosophy of Freedom, 1993, p. 29.
  46. ^ a b Bakunin, Mikhail. Selected Writings. p. 219.
  47. ^ "Marxism and Anarchism: The Philosophical Roots of the Marx-Bakunin Conflict – Part Two" by Ann Robertson.
  48. ^ "3. The lumpenproletariat and the proletarian unnameable". libcom.org.
  49. ^ Marshall 1992, p. 287.
  50. ^ Shatz 2003, pp. 37–38.
  51. ^ Avrich 1988, p. 14.
  52. ^ Eiglad 2015, pp. 235–236.
  53. ^ Stoetzler 2014, pp. 139–140.
  54. ^ a b Shatz 1990, p. xxx.
  55. ^ Chanes, Jerome A. (2004). Antisemitism: A Reference Handbook. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 151. ISBN 9781576072097.
  56. ^ Leier 2009, p. 276.
  57. ^ Noam Chomsky - Lenin, the USSR, and the Predictions of Bakunin, retrieved 8 July 2023
  58. ^ Hodges, Donald Clark. "The Rise and Fall of Militant Trade Unionism." The American Journal of Economics and Sociology, vol. 20, no. 5, 1961, pp. 483–96. JSTOR, JSTOR 3484301. Accessed 9 Mar. 2023.

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mikhail, bakunin, bakunin, redirects, here, others, with, this, surname, bakunin, surname, 1937, book, carr, bakunin, biography, soviet, politician, nikolai, bukharin, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, conventions, patronymic, alexandrovich, . Bakunin redirects here For others with this surname see Bakunin surname For the 1937 book by E H Carr see Bakunin biography For the Soviet politician see Nikolai Bukharin In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming conventions the patronymic is Alexandrovich and the family name is Bakunin Mikhail Alexandrovich Bakunin a b e ˈ k uː n ɪ n be KOO nin 5 30 May 1814 1 July 1876 was a Russian revolutionary anarchist He is among the most influential figures of anarchism and a major figure in the revolutionary socialist social anarchist 6 and collectivist anarchist traditions Bakunin s prestige as a revolutionary also made him one of the most famous ideologues in Europe gaining substantial influence among radicals throughout Russia and Europe Mikhail BakuninBornMikhail Alexandrovich Bakunin 1814 05 30 30 May 1814 N S Pryamukhino Tver Governorate Russian Empire present day Kuvshinovsky District Tver Oblast Russia Died1 July 1876 1876 07 01 aged 62 Bern SwitzerlandFamilyBakuninEra19th century philosophyRegionRussian philosophyWestern philosophySchoolCollectivist anarchism late Left Hegelianism 1 early Left wing nationalism early Revolutionary socialism Russian materialism 2 Westernizers 3 SignatureBakunin grew up in Pryamukhino a family estate in Tver Governorate From 1840 he studied in Moscow then in Berlin hoping to enter academia Later in Paris he met Karl Marx and Pierre Joseph Proudhon who deeply influenced him Bakunin s increasing radicalism ended hopes of a professorial career He was expelled from France for opposing the Russian Empire s occupation of Poland After participating in the 1848 Prague and 1849 Dresden uprisings Bakunin was imprisoned tried sentenced to death and extradited multiple times Finally exiled to Siberia in 1857 he escaped via Japan to the United States and then to London where he worked with Alexander Herzen on the journal Kolokol The Bell In 1863 Bakunin left to join the insurrection in Poland but he failed to reach it and instead spent time in Switzerland and Italy In 1868 Bakunin joined the International Workingmen s Association leading the anarchist faction to rapidly grow in influence The 1872 Hague Congress was dominated by a struggle between Bakunin and Marx who was a key figure in the General Council of the International and argued for the use of the state to bring about socialism In contrast Bakunin and the anarchist faction argued for the replacement of the state by federations of self governing workplaces and communes Bakunin could not reach the Netherlands and the anarchist faction lost the debate in his absence Bakunin was expelled from the International for maintaining in Marx s view a secret organisation within the International and founded the Anti Authoritarian International in 1872 From 1870 until his death in 1876 Bakunin wrote his longer works such as Statism and Anarchy and God and the State but he continued to directly participate in European worker and peasant movements In 1870 he was involved in an insurrection in Lyon France Bakunin sought to take part in an anarchist insurrection in Bologna Italy but his declining health forced him to return to Switzerland in disguise Bakunin is remembered as a major figure in the history of anarchism an opponent of Marxism especially of the dictatorship of the proletariat and for his predictions that Marxist regimes would be one party dictatorships ruling over the proletariat not rule by the proletariat His book God and the State has been widely translated and remains in print Bakunin has had a significant influence on thinkers such as Peter Kropotkin Errico Malatesta Herbert Marcuse E P Thompson Neil Postman and A S Neill as well as syndicalist organizations such as the Wobblies the anarchists in the Spanish Civil War and contemporary anarchists involved in the modern day anti globalization movement 7 Contents 1 Life 1 1 Early life 1 2 Revolutionary activity and imprisonment 1 3 Back in Europe 1 4 First International 2 Thought 2 1 Authority and freethought 2 2 Anti theologism 2 3 Class struggle strategy for social revolution 2 4 Collectivist anarchism 2 5 Critique of Marxism 2 6 Federalism 2 7 Liberty 2 8 Materialism 2 9 Proletariat lumpenproletariat and the peasantry 2 10 Revolutionary societies 3 Personal life 4 Legacy 5 Works 5 1 Books 5 2 Pamphlets 5 3 Articles 5 4 Collections 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 Footnotes 8 2 Bibliography 9 Further reading 10 External linksLife editEarly life edit On 30 May O S 18 May 1814 Mikhail Aleksandrovich Bakunin was born into Russian nobility on his family s estate in Priamukhino Tver in the country s northwest His father Alexander Mikhailovich Bakunin was a Russian diplomat who had served in Italy Upon returning to Priamukhino and marrying the much younger Varvara Aleksandrovna Murav eva the elder Bakunin raised his ten children in the model of Rousseauan pedagogy Mikhail Bakunin their oldest son read the languages literature and philosophy of the period and described his youth as idyllic and sheltered from the realities of Russian life As an early teenager he began training for a military career at the St Petersburg Artillery School which he rejected He left the school despite his father s protests in 1835 to study philosophy 8 Bakunin lived a bohemian intellectual life in Moscow where German Romantic literature and idealist philosophy were influential in the 1830s 8 The metaphysics of Schelling Fichte and Hegel influenced Bakunin in particular 8 He befriended Russian intellectuals including the literary critic Vissarion Belinsky the poet Nikolay Ogarev the novelist Ivan Turgenev and the writer Alexander Herzen as youth prior to their careers 9 Bakunin was also in the intellectual circle of Nikolai Stankevich During this time Bakunin published Russian translations of works by Fichte and Hegel 9 He enrolled in the University of Berlin and immigrated in 1840 He was drawn towards the Young Hegelians an intellectual group with radical interpretations of Hegel s philosophy In this tradition Bakunin pseudonymously wrote his first original publication in 1842 German Die Reaktion in Deutschland The Reaction in Germany which proposes a continuation of the French Revolution to the rest of Europe and Russia 9 Revolutionary activity and imprisonment edit nbsp Bakunin 1843In the 1840s he moved from philosophical studies to revolutionary agitation 9 Learning of Bakunin s radicalism the Russian government told Bakunin to return to Russia When he did not Russia stripped him of his rights as a nobleman and sentenced him in absentia to penal labor in Siberia Without steady financial support Bakunin became an itinerant traveling Europe meeting the people who had influenced him such as proto communist Wilhelm Weitling philosopher Karl Marx anarchist Pierre Joseph Proudhon He was deported at the Russian government s request 9 When the French King Louis Philippe I abdicated during the February 1848 Revolution Bakunin returned to Paris and basked in the revolutionary milieu 9 With the French government s support he headed to Prussian Poland to agitate for revolt against Russia but never arrived 10 He attended the 1848 Prague Slavic Congress to defend Slavic rights against German and Hungarian nationalism and participated in its impromptu insurrection against the Austrian Habsburgs Uncaptured he wrote Aufruf an die Slaven Appeal to the Slavs at the end of the year advocating for a Slavic federation and revolt against the Austrian Prussian Turkish and Russia governments It was widely read and translated 11 After participating in the 1848 Prague uprising and the 1849 Dresden uprising Bakunin was imprisoned tried sentenced to death extradited multiple times and ultimately placed in solitary confinement in the Peter and Paul Fortress of St Petersberg Russia in 1851 Three years later he transferred to Shlisselburg Fortress near St Petersberg for another three years Prison weathered but did not break Bakunin who retained his revolutionary zeal through his release He did however write an autobiographical genuflecting Confession to the Russian emperor which proved to be a controversial document upon its public discovery some 70 years later The letter did not improve his prison conditions In 1857 Bakunin was permitted to transfer to permanent exile in Siberia He married Antonia Kwiatkowska there 11 before escaping in 1861 first to Japan then to San Francisco across the country to New York and arrived in London by the end of the year 12 Bakunin set foot in America just as the Civil War was breaking out Speaking with supporters of both sides Bakunin stated that his sympathies were with the North although he claimed hypocrisy in their stated goal of slave liberation while also forcing the South to remain in the Union 13 Back in Europe edit In London Bakunin reunited with Herzen and Ogarev Bakunin collaborated with them on their Russian language newspaper but his revolutionary fervor exceeded their moderate reform agenda Bakunin s 1862 pamphlet The People s Cause Romanov Pugachev or Pestel criticized the Russian tsar for not using his position to facilitate a bloodless revolution and forgo another Pugachev s Rebellion In early August 1862 he briefly travelled to Paris 14 In Paris at this time famous photographer Nadar took three famous photographs of him on August 7 1862 After being photographed he also signed Nadar s Livre d Or autograph albume wrote that leaf 161 Watch out that liberty doesn t come to you from the north 15 16 In 1863 Bakunin joined in an unsuccessful effort to supply armed men for the Polish January Uprising against Russia Bakunin reunited with his wife moved to Italy the next year where they stayed for three years 12 Bakunin in his early 50s developed his core anarchist thoughts in Italy He continued to refine these ideas in his remaining 12 years Among this ideology was the first of many conspiratorial revolutionary societies though none of these participated in revolutionary actions chiefly the revolutionary toppling of the state to be replaced by free federation between voluntarily associated economic producers 12 He moved to Switzerland in 1867 a more permissive environment for revolutionary literature Bakunin s anarchist writings were fragmentary and prolific 12 With France s collapse in the 1870 Franco Prussian War Bakunin traveled to Lyon and participated in the fruitless Lyon Commune in which the citizens briefly occupied the city hall Bakunin retreated to Switzerland 17 In Switzerland the Russian revolutionary Sergey Nechayev sought out Bakunin for a collaboration Not knowing Nechayev s past betrayals Bakunin warmed to Nechayev s revolutionary zeal and they together produced the 1869 Catechism of the Revolutionary a tract that endorsed an ascetic life for revolutionaries without societal or moral bonds Bakunin s connection with Nechayev hurt the former s reputation More recent scholarship however challenges the catechism s authorship crediting Nechayev as the primary or sole author Bakunin ultimately disavowed their connection 18 First International edit source source source source source source source source source source Video of Bakunin s graveWhile Bakunin encountered Karl Marx in Paris 1844 and London 1864 he came to know him through the First International International Working Men s Association which Marx and Friedrich Engels formed in the 1860s Bakunin s relationship with Marx became strained in the early 1870s for both interpersonal and ideological differences Bakunin respected Marx s erudition and passion for socialism but found his personality to be authoritarian and arrogant In turn Marx was skeptical towards Russian reactionism and Bakunin s unruliness 18 As Bakunin developed his anarchist ideas in this period he came to see federative social organization led by the peasantry and poorest workers as the primary post revolution goal whereas Marx believed in a dictatorship of the proletariat led by organized workers in industrially advanced countries in which the workers use state infrastructure until the state withers away Bakunists abhorred the political organization for which Marx advocated 19 Marx had Bakunin and Bakunist anarchists ejected from the First International s 1872 Hague Congress This breaking point split the Marxist socialist movement from the anarchist movement and led to the undoing of the International Bakunin s ideas continued to spread nevertheless to the labor movement in Spain and the watchmakers of the Swiss Jura Federation 20 Bakunin wrote his last major work Statism and Anarchy 1873 anonymously in Russian to stir underground revolution in Russia It restates his anarchist position establishes the German Empire as the foremost centralized state in opposition to European anarchism likens Marx to German authoritarianism and warns of Marx s dictatorship of the proletariat being led by autocrats for their own gain in the name of the proletariat This premonition furthered the gulf between the Marxists and Bakunist anarchists 20 In one final revolutionary act Bakunin planned the unsuccessful 1874 Bologna insurrection with his Italian followers Its failure was a major setback to the Italian anarchist movement Bakunin retreated to Switzerland 21 where he retired dying in Bern on 1 July 1876 22 Thought editThis section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this section by adding secondary or tertiary sources April 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section contains too many or overly lengthy quotations Please help summarize the quotations Consider transferring direct quotations to Wikiquote or excerpts to Wikisource April 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message The passion for destruction is also a creative passion 9 Much of Bakunin s writings on anarchism centres on antipathy for the state and political organization itself as the source of oppression and exploitation His revolutionary solutions focus on undoing the state and hierarchical religious social and economic institutions to be replaced by a system of freely federated communes organized from below upward with voluntary associations of economic producers starting locally but ostensibly organizing internationally These thoughts were first published in his unfinished 1871 The Knouto Germanic Empire and the Social Revolution expanded by a second part published in his 1908 Oeuvres and again elaborated a fragment found and published posthumously as God and the State 1882 The latter was his most famous work translated widely It appeals to cast off both the state and religion to realize man s inborn freedom 12 As a writer Bakunin was prolific yet fragmented He was prone to large digressions and rarely completed what he set out to address As a result much of his writings on anarchism do not cohere and were published only posthumously He wrote mainly in French 12 Bakunin s political beliefs rejected statist and hierarchical systems of power in every name and shape from the idea of God downwards and every form of hierarchical authority whether emanating from the will of a sovereign or even from a state that allowed universal suffrage He wrote in God and the State that t he liberty of man consists solely in this that he obeys the laws of nature because he has himself recognized them as such and not because they have been imposed upon him externally by any foreign will whatsoever human or divine collective or individual 23 Bakunin similarly rejected the notion of any privileged position or class since the social and economic inequality implied by class systems were incompatible with individual freedom Whereas liberalism insisted that free markets and constitutional governments enabled individual freedom Bakunin insisted that both capitalism and the state in any form were incompatible with the individual freedom of the working class and peasantry stating that it is the peculiarity of privilege and of every privileged position to kill the intellect and heart of man The privileged man whether he be privileged politically or economically is a man depraved in intellect and heart Bakunin s political beliefs were based on several interrelated concepts 1 liberty 2 socialism 3 federalism 4 anti theism and 5 materialism He also developed a critique of Marxism predicting that if the Marxists were successful in seizing power they would create a party dictatorship all the more dangerous because it appears as a sham expression of the people s will adding that w hen the people are being beaten with a stick they are not much happier if it is called the People s Stick 24 Authority and freethought editIn his 1870 essay What is Authority Bakunin wrote Does it follow that I reject all authority Far from me such a thought In the matter of boots I refer to the authority of the bootmaker concerning houses canals or railroads I consult that of the architect or the engineer For such or such special knowledge I apply to such or such a savant But I allow neither the bootmaker nor the architect nor savant to impose his authority upon me I listen to them freely and with all the respect merited by their intelligence their character their knowledge reserving always my incontestable right of criticism and censure I do not content myself with consulting a single authority in any special branch I consult several I compare their opinions and choose that which seems to me the soundest But I recognise no infallible authority even in special questions consequently whatever respect I may have for the honesty and the sincerity of such or such individual I have no absolute faith in any person 25 According to Bakunin Therefore there is no fixed and constant authority but a continual exchange of mutual temporary and above all voluntary authority and subordination This same reason forbids me then to recognise a fixed constant and universal authority because there is no universal man no man capable of grasping in all that wealth of detail without which the application of science to life is impossible all the sciences all the branches of social life 25 Anti theologism edit According to political philosopher Carl Schmitt a prominent member of the Nazi Party in comparison with later anarchists Proudhon was a moralistic petit bourgeois who continued to subscribe to the authority of the father and the principle of the monogamous family Bakunin was the first to give the struggle against theology the complete consistency of an absolute naturalism For him therefore there was nothing negative and evil except the theological doctrine of God and sin which stamps man as a villain in order to provide a pretext for domination and the hunger for power 26 Bakunin believed that religion originated from the human ability for abstract thought and fantasy 27 28 According to Bakunin religion is sustained by indoctrination and conformism Other factors in the survival of religion are poverty suffering and exploitation from which religion promises salvation in the afterlife Oppressors take advantage of religion because many religious people reconcile themselves with injustice on earth by the promise of happiness in heaven 23 Bakunin argued that oppressors receive authority from religion Religious people are in many cases obedient to the priests because they believe that the statements of priests are based on direct divine revelation or scripture Obedience to divine revelation or scripture is considered the ethical criterion by many religious people because God is considered as the omniscient omnipotent and omnibenevolent being Therefore each statement considered derived from an infallible God cannot be criticized by humans According to this religious way of thinking humans cannot know by themselves what is just but that only God decides what is good or evil People who disobey the messengers of God are threatened with punishment in hell 23 According to Bakunin the alternative for a religious power monopoly is the acknowledgement that all humans are equally inspired by God but that means that multiple contradictory teachings are assigned to an infallible God which is logically impossible Therefore Bakunin considers religion as necessarily authoritarian 23 Bakunin argued in his book God and the State that the idea of God implies the abdication of human reason and justice it is the most decisive negation of human liberty and necessarily ends in the enslavement of mankind in theory and practice Consequently Bakunin reversed Voltaire s famous aphorism that if God did not exist it would be necessary to invent Him writing instead that if God really existed it would be necessary to abolish Him 23 Political theology is a branch of both political philosophy and theology that investigates the ways in which theological concepts or ways of thinking underlie political social economic and cultural discourses Bakunin was an early proponent of the term political theology in his 1871 text The Political Theology of Mazzini and the International 29 to which Schmitt s eponymous book responded 30 31 Class struggle strategy for social revolution edit Bakunin s methods of realizing his revolutionary program were consistent with his principles The working class and peasantry were to organize from below through local structures federated with each other creating not only the ideas but also the facts of the future itself 32 Their movements would prefigure the future in their ideas and practices creating the building blocks of the new society This approach was exemplified by syndicalism an anarchist strategy championed by Bakunin according to which trade unions would provide both the means to defend and improve workers conditions rights and incomes in the present and the basis for a social revolution based upon workplace occupations The syndicalist unions would organize the occupations as well as provide the radically democratic structures through which workplaces would be self managed and the larger economy coordinated Thus for Bakunin the workers unions would take possession of all the tools of production as well as buildings and capital 33 Nevertheless Bakunin did not reduce the revolution to syndicalist unions stressing the need to organize working class neighbourhoods as well as the unemployed Meanwhile the peasants were to take the land and throw out those landlords who live by the labor of others 34 Bakunin did not dismiss the skilled workers as is sometimes claimed by whom and the watchmakers of the Jura region were central to the St Imier International s creation and operations However at a time when unions largely ignored the unskilled Bakunin placed great emphasis on the need to organize as well among the rabble and the great masses of the poor and exploited the so called lumpenproletariat to inaugurate and bring to triumph the Social Revolution 35 Collectivist anarchism edit Bakunin s socialism was known as collectivist anarchism where socially it seeks the confirmation of political equality by economic equality This is not the removal of natural individual differences but equality in the social rights of every individual from birth in particular equal means of subsistence support education and opportunity for every child boy or girl until maturity and equal resources and facilities in adulthood to create his own well being by his own labor 36 Collectivist anarchism advocates the abolition of both the state and private ownership of the means of production Instead it envisions the means of production being owned collectively and controlled and managed by the producers themselves For the collectivization of the means of production it was originally envisaged that workers would revolt and forcibly collectivize the means of production 37 Once collectivization takes place money would be abolished to be replaced with labour notes and workers salaries would be determined in democratic organizations based on job difficulty and the amount of time they contributed to production These salaries would be used to buy goods in a communal market 38 Critique of Marxism edit The dispute between Bakunin and Karl Marx highlighted the differences between anarchism and Marxism He strongly rejected Marx s concept of the dictatorship of the proletariat in which the new state would be unopposed and would theoretically represent the workers 39 He argued that the state should be immediately abolished because all forms of government eventually lead to oppression 39 He also vehemently opposed vanguardism in which a political elite of revolutionaries guide the workers Bakunin insisted that revolutions must be led by the people directly while any enlightened elite must exert influence only by remaining invisible not imposed on anyone and deprived of all official rights and significance 40 Bakunin claimed that Marxists maintain that only a dictatorship their dictatorship of course can create the will of the people while our answer to this is No dictatorship can have any other aim but that of self perpetuation and it can beget only slavery in the people tolerating it freedom can be created only by freedom that is by a universal rebellion on the part of the people and free organization of the toiling masses from the bottom up 41 Bakunin further stated that we are convinced that liberty without socialism is privilege and injustice and that socialism without liberty is slavery and brutality 42 While both anarchists and Marxists share the same final goal the creation of a free egalitarian society without social classes and repressive bureaucratic government they strongly disagree on how to achieve this goal Anarchists believe that the classless stateless society should be established by the direct action of the masses culminating in social revolution and refuse any intermediate stage such as the dictatorship of the proletariat on the basis that such a dictatorship will become a self perpetuating fundament For Bakunin the fundamental contradiction is that for the Marxists anarchism or freedom is the aim while the state and dictatorship is the means and so in order to free the masses they have first to be enslaved 40 However Bakunin also wrote of meeting Marx in 1844 As far as learning was concerned Marx was and still is incomparably more advanced than I I knew nothing at that time of political economy I had not yet rid myself of my metaphysical observations He called me a sentimental idealist and he was right I called him a vain man perfidious and crafty and I also was right 43 Bakunin found Marx s economic analysis very useful and began the job of translating Das Kapital into Russian In turn Marx wrote of the rebels in the Dresden insurrection of 1848 that they found a capable and cool headed leader in the Russian refugee Michael Bakunin 44 Marx wrote to Engels of meeting Bakunin in 1864 after his escape to Siberia stating On the whole he is one of the few people whom I find not to have retrogressed after 16 years but to have developed further 45 Bakunin has sometimes been called the first theorist of the new class meaning a class of intellectuals and bureaucrats running the state in the name of the people or the proletariat but in reality in their own interests alone Bakunin argued that t he State has always been the patrimony of some privileged class a priestly class an aristocratic class a bourgeois class And finally when all the other classes have exhausted themselves the State then becomes the patrimony of the bureaucratic class and then falls or if you will rises to the position of a machine 35 Federalism edit By federalism Bakunin meant the organization of society from the base to the summit from the circumference to the centre according to the principles of free association and federation 36 Consequently society would be organized on the basis of the absolute freedom of individuals of the productive associations and of the communes with every individual every association every commune every region every nation having the absolute right to self determination to associate or not to associate to ally themselves with whomever they wish 36 Liberty edit By liberty Bakunin did not mean an abstract ideal but a concrete reality based on the equal liberty of others In a positive sense liberty consists of the fullest development of all the faculties and powers of every human being by education by scientific training and by material prosperity Such a conception of liberty is eminently social because it can only be realized in society not in isolation In a negative sense liberty is the revolt of the individual against all divine collective and individual authority 46 Materialism edit Bakunin denied religious concepts of a supernatural sphere and advocated a materialist explanation of natural phenomena for the manifestations of organic life chemical properties and reactions electricity light warmth and the natural attraction of physical bodies constitute in our view so many different but no less closely interdependent variants of that totality of real beings which we call matter For Bakunin The mission of science is by observation of the general relations of passing and real facts to establish the general laws inherent in the development of the phenomena of the physical and social world 46 Proletariat lumpenproletariat and the peasantry edit Bakunin differed from Marx s on the revolutionary potential of the lumpenproletariat and the proletariat for b oth agreed that the proletariat would play a key role but for Marx the proletariat was the exclusive leading revolutionary agent while Bakunin entertained the possibility that the peasants and even the lumpenproletariat the unemployed common criminals etc could rise to the occasion 47 According to Nicholas Thoburn Bakunin considers workers integration in capital as destructive of more primary revolutionary forces For Bakunin the revolutionary archetype is found in a peasant milieu which is presented as having longstanding insurrectionary traditions as well as a communist archetype in its current social form the peasant commune and amongst educated unemployed youth assorted marginals from all classes brigands robbers the impoverished masses and those on the margins of society who have escaped been excluded from or not yet subsumed in the discipline of emerging industrial work in short all those whom Marx sought to include in the category of the lumpenproletariat 48 Revolutionary societies edit Beginning in Italy with the International Brotherhood Bakunin attempted to create secret revolutionary societies towards the end of his life a concept at odds with his professed caution against the autocratic tendencies of the revolutionary elite These organizations did not participate in revolutionary action 12 The idea of the invisible dictatorship was central to Bakunin s politics In combination with Bakunin s opposition to parliamentary politics historian Peter Marshall wrote that such a secret party its existence unknown and its policies beholden to none had the potential for greater tyranny than a Blanquist or Marxist party and was hard to envision as presaging an open democratic society 49 Personal life edit nbsp Antonia and Mikhail Bakunin c 1861Bakunin married Antonia Kwiatkowska originally from Poland during his exile in Siberia Kwiatkowska was much younger than Bakunin 18 years old and 26 years younger and had little interest in politics Their differences and Bakunin s meagre attention to romance have left biographers to speculate psychosexual rationales for Bakunin s personal life and the extent of his dedication to revolutionary action Though she remained married to Bakunin through his death in 1876 during his life Kwiatkowska had three children with an Italian disciple of his She married this man after Bakunin s death 50 Legacy editBakunin was the leading anarchist revolutionary of the 19th century active from the 1840s through the 1870s 8 His foundational anarchist writings helped the movement stand in contrast to capitalism and Marxism and became more popular after his death with some of his highest regarded works published posthumously and in new editions His Statism and Anarchy influenced the growing Russian Narodnik movement of peasant socialism and his anarchism influenced ideology in both the Russian Revolution and the Spanish Civil War The 1960s New Left revived interest in his works and ideas of voluntary association and opposition to authoritarian socialism with new editions and translations published 22 Bakunin s legacy reflects the paradox and ambivalence by which he lived As historian Paul Avrich put it Bakunin was a nobleman who yearned for a peasant revolt a libertarian with an urge to dominate others an intellectual with a powerful anti intellectual streak who professed unfettered liberty while demanding unconditional obedience from his followers Many of his beliefs put him closer to future authoritarian movements 51 In particular Bakunin s antisemitic passages have been the subject of extended interest such that Bakunin biographer Mark Leier has said the question is raised every time he speaks on Bakunin Both Leier and scholar of antisemitism Eirik Eiglad have commented that antisemitism was not essential to Bakunin s thought nor was his thought valued for his antisemitism 52 Sociologist Marcel Stoetzler argued the opposite saying that the antisemitic trope of Jewish world domination was at the centre of Bakunin s political thought 53 Bakunin s anti Jewish and anti German resentment was most prominently in the context of attacking Marx but his anti Semitism predated these passages 54 55 Scholar Marshall Shatz noted the gap between Bakunin s egalitarian principles and his ethnic prejudices even if this anti Semitism and stereotyping was common among French radicals of the era 54 and shared by Marx himself 56 Noam Chomsky called Bakunin s prediction that Marxist regimes would become dictatorships one of the few predictions in the social sciences that actually came true 57 Bakunin s archives are held in the Pushkin House State Archive of the Russian Federation Russian State Library Russian State Archive of Literature and Art National Library of Russia and International Institute of Social History 22 Works editBooks edit God and the State ISBN 048622483XPamphlets edit Stateless Socialism Anarchism 1953 Marxism Freedom and the State 58 translated by Kenneth Kenafick in 1950 The Paris Commune and the Idea of the State 1871 The Immorality of the State 1953 Statism and Anarchy 1990 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521361826 Revolutionary Catechism 1866 The Commune the Church and the State 1947 Founding of the First International 1953 On Rousseau 1972 No Gods No Masters 1998 by Daniel Guerin Edinburgh AK Press ISBN 1873176643Articles edit Power Corrupts the Best 1867 The Class War 1870 What is Authority 1870 Recollections on Marx and Engels 1869 The Red Association 1870 Solidarity in Liberty 1867 The German Crisis 1870 God or Labor 1947 Where I Stand 1947 Appeal to my Russian Brothers 1896 The Social Upheaval 1947 Integral Education Part I 1869 Integral Education Part II 1869 The Organization of the International 1869 Polish Declaration 1896 Politics and the State 1871 Workers and the Sphinx 1867 The Policy of the Council 1869 The Two Camps 1869 Collections edit Bakunin on Anarchism 1971 Edited translated and with an introduction by Sam Dolgoff Preface by Paul Avrich New York Knopf Originally published as Bakunin on Anarchy it includes James Guillaume s Bakunin A Biographical Sketch ISBN 0043210120 Michael Bakunin Selected Writings 1974 A Lehning ed New York Grove Press ISBN 0802100201 Anarchism A Documentary History of Libertarian Ideas Volume 1 From Anarchy to Anarchism 300 CE 1939 2005 Robert Graham ed Montreal and New York Black Rose Books ISBN 1551642514 The Political Philosophy of Bakunin 1953 G P Maximoff ed It includes Mikhail Bakunin A Biographical Sketch by Max Nettlau The Basic Bakunin Writings 1869 1871 1992 Robert M Cutler ed New York Prometheus Books 1992 ISBN 0879757450 See also editList of Russian anarchistsNotes edit Russian Mihail Aleksandrovich Bakunin IPA mʲɪxɐˈil ɐlʲɪkˈsandrevʲɪdʑ bɐˈkunʲɪn References editFootnotes edit Petrov Kristian 2019 Strike out right and left a conceptual historical analysis of 1860s Russian nihilism and its notion of negation Stud East Eur Thought 71 2 73 97 doi 10 1007 s11212 019 09319 4 S2CID 150893870 Scanlan James P 1998 Russian Materialism the 1860s Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy Taylor and Francis doi 10 4324 9780415249126 E050 1 ISBN 978 0415250696 Edie James M Scanlan James Zeldin Mary Barbara 1994 Russian Philosophy Volume II the Nihilists The Populists Critics of Religion and Culture University of Tennessee Press p 3 Bakunin himself was a Westernizer In Brussel macht er Anm Bakunin die folgenreiche Bekanntschaft des polnischen Historikers und Revolutionars Ignacy Lelewel Dessen slawophile Vision einer demokratischen Bauernrepublik beeindruckt ihn sehr wobei er den engen Nationalismus der ganzen Sache in typisch Bakuninscher Begeisterung einfach ausblendet Der Gedanke an eine generelle Erhebung der slawischen Volker denen er die Kraft zutraut als ungezahmter Motor einer generellen Revolution gegen jede Tyrannei zu wirken nimmt Gestalt an und wird ihn fur viele Jahre nicht mehr loslassen aus Horst Stowasser Freiheit pur Die Idee der Anarchie Geschichte und Zukunft Eichborn Frankfurt am Main 1995 ISBN 3 8218 0448 3 S 195 Bakunin Random House Kernerman Webster s College Dictionary 2010 Masters Anthony 1974 Bakunin the Father of Anarchism Saturday Review Press ISBN 0841502951 Sale Kirkpatrick 2006 11 06 An Enemy of the State Archived 4 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine The American Conservative a b c d Shatz 2003 p 35 a b c d e f g Shatz 2003 p 36 Shatz 2003 pp 36 37 a b Shatz 2003 p 37 a b c d e f g Shatz 2003 p 38 Avrich Paul Bakunin in America PDF Kawelin Konstantin 1894 Dragomanow Michail ed Konstantin Kawelins und Iwan Turgenjews sozial politischer Briefwechsel mit Alexander Iw Herzen Mit Beilagen und Erlauterungen Bibliothek russischer Denkwurdigkeiten 4 Bd in German Stuttgart Verlag der J G Cotta schen Buchhandlung Nachfolger pp 64 66 Begley Adam 5 July 2017 Nadar s Livre d or The Paris Review Retrieved 23 November 2023 Nadar autograph album Retrieved 23 November 2023 Shatz 2003 pp 38 39 a b Shatz 2003 p 39 Shatz 2003 pp 39 40 a b Shatz 2003 p 40 Drake 2009 pp 35 36 a b c Shatz 2003 p 41 a b c d e God and the State Michael Bakunin 1882 Michael Bakunin Selected Writings ed A Lehning New York Grove Press 1974 p 268 a b What is Authority www marxists org Carl Schmitt 2005 Political Theology University of Chicago Press pg 64 The Paris Commune and the Idea of the State Mikhail Bakunin 1871 Michail Bakunin Political Theology of Mazzinni 1871 from the book Michael Bakunin Selected Writings published in 1973 PDF Marshall 1992 pp 300 301 Maier Henrich 1995 Carl Schmitt and Leo Strauss The hidden dialogue University of Chicago Press pp 75 76 ISBN 0226518884 Schmitt Carl 1922 Political theology University of Chicago Press pp 64 66 ISBN 0226738892 Mikhail Bakunin Works of Mikhail Bakunin 1871 Marxists org retrieved 8 September 2009 Mikhail Bakunin Works of Mikhail Bakunin 1870 Marxists org retrieved 8 September 2009 Letters to a Frenchman on the Present Crisis Mikhail Bakunin 1870 a b On the International Workingmen s Association and Karl Marx Mikhail Bakunin 1872 a b c Revolutionary Catechism Mikhail Bakunin 1866 Patsouras Louis 2005 Marx in Context iUniverse p 54 Bakunin Mikail Bakunin on Anarchism Black Rose Books 1980 p 369 a b Woodcock George 1962 1975 Anarchism 158 Harmondsworth England Penguin Books ISBN 0140206221 a b Mikhail Bakunin Works of Mikhail Bakunin 1873 Marxists org retrieved 8 September 2009 Anarchist Theory FAQ Version 5 2 Gmu edu retrieved 8 September 2009 Mikhail Bakunin 1867 Federalism Socialism Anti Theologism Marxists org Quoted in Brian Morris Bakunin The Philosophy of Freedom 1993 p14 New York Daily Tribune 2 October 1852 on Revolution and Counter Revolution in Germany Quoted in Brian Morris Bakunin The Philosophy of Freedom 1993 p 29 a b Bakunin Mikhail Selected Writings p 219 Marxism and Anarchism The Philosophical Roots of the Marx Bakunin Conflict Part Two by Ann Robertson 3 The lumpenproletariat and the proletarian unnameable libcom org Marshall 1992 p 287 Shatz 2003 pp 37 38 Avrich 1988 p 14 Eiglad 2015 pp 235 236 Stoetzler 2014 pp 139 140 a b Shatz 1990 p xxx Chanes Jerome A 2004 Antisemitism A Reference Handbook Bloomsbury Academic p 151 ISBN 9781576072097 Leier 2009 p 276 Noam Chomsky Lenin the USSR and the Predictions of Bakunin retrieved 8 July 2023 Hodges Donald Clark The Rise and Fall of Militant Trade Unionism The American Journal of Economics and Sociology vol 20 no 5 1961 pp 483 96 JSTOR JSTOR 3484301 Accessed 9 Mar 2023 Bibliography edit Avrich Paul 1988 Anarchist Portraits Princeton Princeton University Press pp 5 52 doi 10 2307 j ctv173f13b ISBN 978 0691047539 JSTOR j ctv173f13b OCLC 17727270 S2CID 241705620 Drake Richard 2009 Carlo Cafiero Apostles and Agitators Italy s Marxist Revolutionary Tradition Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 03432 7 Eiglad Eirik 2015 Anti Zionism and the Anarchist Tradition In Rosenfeld Alvin H ed Deciphering the New Antisemitism Studies in Antisemitism Indiana University Press pp 206 241 ISBN 978 0 253 01869 4 Leier Mark 2009 2006 Bakunin The Creative Passion New York Seven Stories Press ISBN 978 1583228944 OCLC 1090891844 Marshall Peter 1992 Michael Bakunin The Fanatic of Freedom Demanding the Impossible A History of Anarchism London HarperCollins pp 263 308 ISBN 978 0 00 217855 6 Shatz Marshall 1990 Introduction Bakunin Statism and Anarchy Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 36973 2 Shatz Marshall S 2003 Mikhail Aleksandrovich Bakunin In Gillespie Alyssa Dinega ed Russian Literature in the Age of Realism Dictionary of Literary Biography Vol 277 Detroit MI Gale pp 34 41 ISBN 9780787660215 Gale OOJNKW999627593 Stoetzler Marcel 2014 Antisemitism and the Constitution of Sociology University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 4864 9 Woodcock George 1986 The Destructive Urge Anarchism A History of Libertarian Ideas and Movements 2nd ed Harmondsworth Penguin Books pp 121 152 ISBN 978 0 14 022697 3 OCLC 489971695 Further reading editAldred Guy 1940 Bakunin Glasgow The Strickland Press OCLC 915244740 Angaut Jean Christophe Revolution and the Slav question 1848 and Mikhail Bakunin in Douglas Moggach and Gareth Stedman Jones eds The 1848 revolutions and European political thought Cambridge University Press 2018 Bookchin Murray 1998 The Spanish Anarchists The Heroic Years 1868 1936 Canada AK Press ISBN 187317604X OCLC 1112575991 Carr E H 1975 1937 Michael Bakunin London Macmillan Press doi 10 1007 978 1 349 02632 6 ISBN 978 1349026326 OCLC 1004387682 SBN 333 18425 4 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Bakunin Mikhail Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 3 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 231 Cochrane Stephen 1977 The Collaboration of Necaev Ogarev and Bakunin in 1869 Osteuropastudien der Hochschulen des Landes Hessen Vol 18 Giessen W Schmitz ISSN 0474 8328 OCLC 462089331 David Zdenek V Fric Herzen and Bakunin the Clash of Two Political Cultures East European Politics and Societies 12 1 1997 1 30 Eckhardt Wolfgang 2016 The First Socialist Schism Bakunin vs Marx in the International Working Men s Association Oakland California PM Press ISBN 978 1629630427 LCCN 2014908069 OCLC 1242987176 Goodwin James 2007 Russian Anarchism and the Bolshevization of Bakunin in the Early Soviet Period Kritika 8 3 533 560 doi 10 1353 kri 2007 0035 ISSN 1538 5000 S2CID 154662742 Guerin Daniel Anarchism From Theory to Practice New York Monthly Review Press 1970 paperback ISBN 0853451753 Guillaume James 1972 1907 Michael Bakunin A Biographical Sketch In Dolgoff Sam ed Bakunin on Anarchy Vintage Books pp 22 52 ISBN 039471783X OCLC 5928655 Judaica 1950 Historia judaica Volumes 12 14 Verlag von Julius Kittls Nachfolger Kelly Aileen 1982 Mikhail Bakunin A Study in the Psychology and Politics of Utopianism Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 827244 8 LCCN 82 6287 Masters Anthony 1974 Bakunin the Father of Anarchism London Sidgwick amp Jackson ISBN 0283979569 OCLC 907511050 McLaughlin Paul 2002 Mikhail Bakunin The Philosophical Basis of his Anarchism New York Algora Publishing ISBN 1892941848 LCCN 2002 001934 OCLC 612054885 Mendel Arthur 1981 Michael Bakunin Roots of Apocalypse New York Praeger ISBN 0 03 059218 6 LCCN 81 5168 Morris Brian 1993 Mikhail Bakunin The Philosophy of Freedom New York Black Rose Books ISBN 1895431662 OCLC 678812569 Nettlau Max 1964 1953 Mikhail Bakunin a Biographical Sketch In Maximoff Gregori ed The Political Philosophy of Bakunin New York Free Press pp 29 48 OCLC 463186694 Nomad Max 1961 1939 The Heretic Mikhail Bakunin Apostle of Destruction Apostles of Revolution New York Collier Books pp 151 213 LCCN 61018566 OCLC 984463383 Ravindranathan T R 1988 Bakunin and the Italians Montreal and Kingston McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 0773506462 OCLC 848525194 Saltman Richard 1983 The Social and Political Thought of Michael Bakunin Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press ISBN 0313233780 OCLC 461887077 Stoppard Tom The Coast of Utopia New York Grove Press 2002 paperback ISBN 080214005X Wheen Francis 1999 Karl Marx Fourth Estate ISBN 1857026373 Yarmolinsky Avrahm 2014 1957 Road to Revolution A Century of Russian Radicalism Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691610412 OCLC 890439998 Young Marc 2017 Reflections on Prophecy A Critical Appreciation of Michael Bakunin s Thought Calesius Papers in Political Philosophy Calesius C B External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mihail Aleksandrovich Bakunin nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Mikhail Bakunin nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Mikhail Bakunin Bakunin Archive at RevoltLib Bakunin archive at Anarchy Archives Archive of Michail Aleksandrovic Bakunin Papers at the International Institute of Social History Writings of Bakunin at Marxist Internet Archive Works by Mikhail Aleksandrovic Bakunin at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Mikhail Bakunin at Internet Archive Works by Mikhail Bakunin at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Portals nbsp Anarchism nbsp Biography nbsp Communism nbsp Libertarianism nbsp Politics nbsp Religion nbsp Russia nbsp Socialism Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mikhail Bakunin amp oldid 1187159439, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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