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Peter Kropotkin

Pyotr Alexeyevich Kropotkin[a] (9 December 1842[b] – 8 February 1921) was a Russian anarchist and geographer known as a proponent of anarchist communism.

Peter Kropotkin
Пётр Кропоткин
Kropotkin c. 1900
Born
Pyotr Alexeyevich Kropotkin

(1842-12-09)9 December 1842
Died8 February 1921(1921-02-08) (aged 78)
Resting placeNovodevichy Cemetery, Moscow
Education
Notable work
SpouseSofia Ananyeva-Rabinovich
ChildrenAlexandra
FamilyKropotkin
Era
Region
School
Main interests
Notable ideas
Military career
Allegiance Russian Empire
UnitCorps of Pages
Commands held
Signature

Born into an aristocratic land-owning family, Kropotkin attended Page Corps and later served as an officer in Siberia, where he participated in several geological expeditions. He was imprisoned for his activism in 1874 and managed to escape two years later. He spent the next 41 years in exile in Switzerland, France (where he was imprisoned for almost four years) and England. While in exile, he gave lectures and published widely on anarchism and geography.[3] Kropotkin returned to Russia after the Russian Revolution in 1917, but he was disappointed by the Bolshevik state.

Kropotkin was a proponent of a decentralized communist society free from central government and based on voluntary associations of self-governing communities and worker-run enterprises. He wrote many books, pamphlets and articles, the most prominent being The Conquest of Bread and Fields, Factories, and Workshops, with Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution being his principal scientific offering. He contributed the article on anarchism to the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition[4] and left an unfinished work on anarchist ethical philosophy.

Life edit

Early life edit

Kropotkin was born in Moscow on 9 December 1842, in the Konyushennaya ("Equerries") district.[5][c] His father, Alexander, was a typical royal officer who owned serfs in three provinces and whose family descended from the Grand Princes of Smolensk.[7] His mother, Ekatarina Sulima, was the daughter of General Nikolai Sulima and a descendant of a Zaporozhian Cossacks leader. Peter, the youngest of her four children, was three years old when she died of tuberculosis.[8] Kropotkin's father remarried two years later. This stepmother was indifferent towards the Kropotkin children and had a streak of jealous vindictiveness, going through great lengths to remove the memory of Kropotkin's mother.[9]

With his father mostly absent, Kropotkin and his older brother, Alexander, were raised by their German nurse. Kropotkin developed an enduring compassion for the estate's servants and serfs who cared for him and relayed stories of his mother's kindness.[8] He was raised in the family's Moscow mansion and an estate in Nikolskoye, Kaluga Oblast, outside Moscow.[9]

At the age of eight, Kropotkin attended Tsar Nicholas I's Royal Ball. Commending the child's costume, the tsar chose Kropotkin for his Page Corps, an elite school in St. Petersburg that combined military and court education and produced the tsar's imperial attendants.[10] Kropotkin joined the Page Corps as a teenager and began a 14-year epistolary relationship with his brother that charts his intellectual and emotional development.[11] By the time of his arrival, Kropotkin had already shown a populist position towards the emancipation of serfs and a nature of revolt against his father and the school's hazing.[12] Kropotkin began his first underground revolutionary writings at the school, where he advocated for a Russian constitution.[13] He developed an interest in science, reading, and opera. As a top student, Kropotkin became a sergeant-major in 1861[12] and was thrust into court life, serving as the emperor's personal Page de Chambre.[14] His views of the tsar and court life soured as imperial policy changed over the next year.[15] Privately he was preoccupied with the need to live a societally useful life.[16]

Siberia edit

For his tour of service, in 1862 he chose the Amur Cossacks in east Siberia, an undesirable post that would let him study the technical mathematics of artillery, travel, live in nature, and become financially independent from his father.[17] He developed a firm worldview of compassion for the poor, and contrasted the pride and dignity of the yeoman peasant farmers against the indignities of serfdom.[18] He wrote approvingly of the cultivated Transbaikalia governor-general Boleslav Kukel, to whom Kropotkin reported.[19] Kukel engaged Kropotkin in prison reform and city self-governance projects that the central government ultimately denied. The exiled poet and political prisoner Mikhail Larionovitch Mikhailov introduced Kropotkin to anarchism by suggesting an essay by Pierre-Joseph Proudhon.[20] Kropotkin's brother came to live with him in Irkutsk.[21]

After Kukel's ouster in early 1863, Kropotkin found solace in geographical work.[22] He led a disguised reconnaissance expedition to find a direct route through Manchuria from Chita to Vladivostok the next year. He explored the East Siberian Mountains in the north the year after. The mountain measurements from his 1866 Olekminsk-Vitimsk expedition confirmed his Manchurian hypothesis that the Siberian area from the Ural Mountains to the Pacific Ocean was a plateau and not a plain. This discovery of the Patom and Vitim Plateaus won him a gold medal from the Russian Geographical Society and led to the commercialization of the Lena gold fields. A range of mountains in this region was later named for him.[23]

Kropotkin covered Siberia for St. Petersburg newspapers since his arrival, including the condition of the Polish political exiles who participated in the unsuccessful 1866 Baikal Insurrection.[24] Kropotkin secured a promise from the governor-general to suspend the prisoners' death sentences, which was reneged. Disillusioned, Kropotkin and his brother resolved to leave the military. His time in Siberia taught him to appreciate peasant social organization and convinced him that administrative reform was an ineffectual means to improve social conditions.[21]

 
 
Vitim
 
Chita
 
Vladivostok
 
St. Petersburg
 
Moscow
class=notpageimage|
Russian locales of Kropotkin's early career

After five years in Siberia, Kropotkin and his brother moved to St. Petersburg, where they continued their schooling and academic work. Kropotkin took a position with the Russian interior ministry with no duties. He studied physics, math, and geography at the university.[25] After presenting his Vitim expedition findings, Kropotkin accepted the Russian Geographical Society's part-time offer of its Physical Geography section Secretaryship. Kropotkin translated Herbert Spencer for additional income. He continued to develop a theory, which he considered his best scientific contribution, that the East Siberian mountains were part of a large plateau and not independent ridges. Kropotkin participated in an 1870 polar expedition plan that postulated the existence of what was later discovered as the Franz Josef Land Arctic archipelago.[26]

In early 1871, he was commissioned to study the Ice Age in Scandinavian geography, in which Kropotkin developed theories of the glaciation of Europe and the glacial lakes of its northeast.[27] His father died later that year and Kropotkin inherited a wealthy estate in Tambov. Kropotkin turned down the Geographical Society's offer of its general secretary position, instead choosing work on his Ice Age data and interest in bettering the lives of peasants.[28]

Anarchism edit

 
Kropotkin in 1876

While Kropotkin became increasingly revolutionary in his writings, he was not known for activism.[29] He was spurred by the 1871 Paris Commune and trial of Sergey Nechayev. He and his brother attended meetings on the Franco-Prussian War and revolutionism.[26] Likely at the encouragement of a Swiss extended family member and his own desire to see the socialist worker's movement, Kropotkin set out to see Switzerland and Western Europe in February 1872. Over three months, he met Mikhail Sazhin in Zurich, worked and fell out with Nikolai Utin's Marxist group in Geneva, and was introduced to the Jura Federation's James Guillaume and Adhémar Schwitzguébel. The Jura were the main internal opposition to the Marxist-controlled First International, as followers of Mikhail Bakunin.[28] Kropotkin was quickly impressed and was instantly converted to anarchism by the group's egalitarianism and independence of expression,[30] but narrowly missed meeting the leading anarchist, Bakunin, while there.[31][d] Kropotkin visited Belgium's movement before returning to Russia in May with contraband literature.[32]

Back in St. Petersburg, Kropotkin joined the Chaikovsky Circle, a group of revolutionaries that Kropotkin considered more educational than revolutionary in their activities.[32] Kropotkin believed in the inevitability of social revolution and the need for stateless social organization. His populist revolutionary program for the group focused on urban workers and peasants whereas the group's moderates focused on students. Partially for this reason, he declined to contribute his personal wealth to the group. He viewed professionals as unlikely to forgo their privileges and judged them to not live societally useful lives. His program emphasized federated agrarian communes and a revolutionary party. While he could speak powerfully, Kropotkin was not a successful organizer.[33]

Kropotkin's first political memo in November 1873 covered his basic plan for stateless social reconstruction including common property, worker control of factories, shared physical labor towards societal need, and labor vouchers in lieu of money. He emphasized living among commoners and using propaganda to focus mass dissatisfaction. He rejected the Nechayev conspiracy model.[34] Members of the circle began to be arrested in late 1873 and the Third Section secret police came for Kropotkin in March 1874.[35]

His arrest for agitation, as a former page de chambre and officer, was scandalous.[36] Kropotkin had just filed his Ice Age report and had been recently elected president of the Geographical Society's Physical and Mathematical Department. At the society's request the tsar granted Kropotkin books to finish his glaciation report. Kropotkin was held in the Peter and Paul Fortress.[35] His brother, who had also radicalized as a follower of Lavrov,[32] was also arrested and exiled in Siberia, where he committed suicide about a decade later.[37]

Kropotkin was moved to the House of Detention prison military hospital in St. Petersburg for poor health, with the help of his sister. With assistance from friends, he escaped from the minimal-security prison in June 1876. By way of Scandinavia and England, Kropotkin arrived in Switzerland by the end of the year, where he met Italian anarchists Carlo Cafiero and Errico Malatesta. He visited Belgium and Zurich, where he met French geographer Élisée Reclus, who became a close friend.[37]

Exile edit

Kropotkin associated with the Jura Federation and began editing its publication.[38] He met and married his wife, a Russian Jewish student, in 1878.[39] In 1879, he started Le Révolté, a revolutionary fortnightly, in Geneva that published his personal articulation of anarchist communism, the idea of distributing work product communally based on need rather than by work.[40] He became the philosophy's most prominent proponent, despite not creating it. The philosophy became part of the Jura program in 1880 at Kropotkin's advocacy. Le Révolté also published Kropotkin's best known pamphlet, "An Appeal to the Young", in 1880.[39]

Switzerland expelled Kropotkin at Russia's behest after the assassination of Alexander II in early 1881. He moved to Thonon-les-Bains, France, near Geneva, so that his wife could finish her Swiss education. Upon learning that the Holy League, a tsarist group, intended to kill him for his alleged association with the assassination, he moved to London, but could only bear to live there for a year.[39] Upon his return in late 1882, the French arrested him for agitation, partly to appease Russia. He was sentenced to five years in Lyons. In early 1883, he was transferred to the Clairvaux Prison, where he continued his academic work. A public campaign of intellectuals and French legislators called for his release. Reclus published Words of a Rebel, a compilation of Kropotkin's Révolté writings while he was in prison, which became a main source of Kropotkin's thoughts on revolution. As Kropotkin's health worsened from scurvy and malaria, France released him in early 1886.[41] He would stay in England through 1917, settling in Harrow, London, apart from brief trips to other European countries.[42]

In London in late 1886, he co-founded Freedom, an anarchist monthly and the first English anarchist periodical, which he continued to support for almost three decades.[43] His first and only child was born the next year. He published multiple books over the next coming years including In Russian and French Prisons and The Conquest of Bread.[44] His intellectual circle in London included William Morris and W. B. Yeats as well as old Russian friends Sergey Stepnyak-Kravchinsky and Nikolai Tchaikovsky. Kropotkin contributed to the Geographical Journal and Nature.[45]

After 1890, according to biographers George Woodcock and Ivan Avakumović, Kropotkin became more of a scholarly recluse and less of a propagandist. His works' revolutionary zeal subsided as he turned to social, ethical, and scientific questions. He joined the British Association for the Advancement of Science. He continued to contribute to Freedom but was no longer an editor.[46]

Several of Kropotkin's books began as journal articles. His writings on anarchist communist social life were printed in the French successor to Le Révolté and later revised into The Conquest of Bread in 1892. Kropotkin's writings on decentralizing production and industry against the countervailing trend of centralized industrialization were compiled into his Fields, Factories, and Workshops in 1899.[47] His research throughout the 1890s on the animal instinct for cooperation as a counterpoint to Darwinism became a series of articles in Nineteenth Century and, later, the book Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution, which was widely translated.[48]

Following a scientific congress in Toronto in 1897, Kropotkin toured Canada. His experience there led him to advise the Russian Doukhobors who sought to immigrate there. He helped facilitate their emigration in 1899.[46] Kropotkin entered the United States and met John Most, Emma Goldman, and Benjamin Tucker. American publishers published his Memoirs of a Revolutionist and Fields, Factories, and Workshops by the end of the decade.[44] He visited the United States again in 1901 at the invitation of the Lowell Institute to give lectures on Russian literature that were later published.[49] He published The Great French Revolution (1909), The Terror in Russia (1909), and Modern Science and Anarchism (1913). His 70th birthday in 1912 had celebratory gatherings in London and Paris.[49]

Kropotkin's support for Western entry into World War I, siding with England and France, divided the anarchist movement, which had been anti-war, and damaged his esteem as a luminary of socialism. He exacerbated this by insisting, with returning to Russia, that Russians support the war as well.[50]

Return to Russia edit

 
Emma Goldman delivering a eulogy at Kropotkin's funeral

With the outbreak of the Russian Revolution, Kropotkin returned to Russia in June 1917. He refused the Petrograd Provisional Government's offer of a cabinet seat. In August, he advocated for defending Russia and the revolution at the National State Conference. Kropotkin applied for a residence in Moscow in 1918, which was personally approved by Vladimir Lenin, head of the Soviet government. Months later, finding life in Moscow difficult in his old age, Kropotkin moved with his family to a friend's home in the nearby town of Dmitrov.[51] In 1919, Emma Goldman visited his family there. Kropotkin met with Lenin in Moscow and corresponded by mail to discuss political questions of the day. He advocated for workers' cooperatives and argued against the Bolsheviks' hostage policy and centralization of authority while simultaneously encouraging Western comrades to stop their governments' military interventions in Russia.[49] Kropotkin ultimately had little impact on the Russian revolution, but his advocacy work for political and anarchist prisoners in Russia and for the Russian revolution, during the last four years of his life replenished some of the goodwill he had lost from his support for Western powers in World War I.[29]

Kropotkin died of pneumonia on 8 February 1921.[49] His family refused an offer of a state funeral.[52] With his Moscow funeral, the Bolsheviks permitted the diminished Russian anarchist movement an official, restrained occasion to memorialize their figurehead.[29] It was the last major anarchist demonstration of the period in Russia, as the movement and Kropotkin's writings would be fully suppressed later that year.[52]

Philosophy edit

Critique of capitalism edit

Kropotkin critiqued what he considered to be the fallacies of the economic systems of feudalism and capitalism. He believed they create poverty and artificial scarcity and promote privilege. Alternatively, he proposed a more decentralized economic system based on mutual aid and voluntary cooperation. He argued that the tendencies for this kind of organization already exist, both in evolution and in human society.[53]

Kropotkin disagreed in part with the Marxist critique of capitalism, including the labor theory of value, believing there was no necessary link between work performed and the values of commodities. His attack on the institution of wage labor was based more on the power employers exerted over employees, and not only on the extraction of surplus value from their labor. Kropotkin claimed this power was made possible by the state's protection of private ownership of productive resources.[54][55] However, Kropotkin believed the possibility of surplus value was itself the problem, holding that a society would still be unjust if the workers of a particular industry kept their surplus to themselves, rather than redistributing it for the common good.[55]

Critique of state socialism edit

Kropotkin believed that a communist society could be established only by a social revolution, which he described as, "... the taking possession by the people of all social wealth. It is the abolition of all the forces which have so long hampered the development of Humanity".[56] However, he criticized forms of revolutionary methods (like those proposed by Marxism and Blanquism) that retained the use of state power, arguing that any central authority was incompatible with the dramatic changes needed by a social revolution. Kropotkin believed that the mechanisms of the state were deeply rooted in maintaining the power of one class over another, and thus could not be used to emancipate the working class.[57] Instead, Kropotkin insisted that both private property and the state needed to be abolished together.

The economic change which will result from the Social Revolution will be so immense and so profound, it must so change all the relations based today on property and exchange, that it is impossible for one or any individual to elaborate the different social forms, which must spring up in the society of the future. [...] Any authority external to it will only be an obstacle, only a trammel on the organic labor which must be accomplished, and beside that a source of discord and hatred.[56]

Kropotkin believed that any post-revolutionary government would lack the local knowledge to organize a diverse population. Their vision of society would be limited by their own vindictive, self-serving, or narrow ideals.[58] To ensure order, preserve authority, and organize production the state would need to use violence and coercion to suppress further revolution, and control workers. The workers would be reliant on the state bureaucracy to organize them, so they would never develop the initiative to self-organize as they needed.[56] This would lead to the re-creation of classes, an oppressed workforce, and eventually another revolution.[59] Thus, Kropotkin wrote that maintaining the state would paralyze any true social revolution, making the idea of a "revolutionary government" a contradiction in terms:

We know that Revolution and Government are incompatible; one must destroy the other, no matter what name is given to government, whether dictator, royalty, or parliament. We know that what makes the strength and the truth of our party is contained in this fundamental formula — "Nothing good or durable can be done except by the free initiative of the people, and every government tends to destroy it;" and so the very best among us, if their ideas had not to pass through the crucible of the popular mind, before being put into execution, and if they should become masters of that formidable machine — the government — and could thus act as they chose, would become in a week fit only for the gallows. We know whither every dictator leads, even the best intentioned, — namely to the death of all revolutionary movement.[56]

Rather than a centralized approach, Kropotkin stressed the need for decentralized organization. He believed that dissolving the state would cripple counter-revolution without reverting to authoritarian methods of control, writing, "In order to conquer, something more than guillotines are required. It is the revolutionary idea, the truly wide revolutionary conception, which reduces its enemies to impotence by paralyzing all the instruments by which they have governed hitherto."[58] He believed this was possible only through a widespread "Boldness of thought, a distinct and wide conception of all that is desired, constructive force arising from the people in proportion as the negation of authority dawns; and finally -- the initiative of all in the work of reconstruction -- this will give to the revolution the Power required to conquer."[58]

Kropotkin applied this criticism to the Bolsheviks' rule following the October Revolution. Kropotkin summarized his thoughts in a 1919 letter to the workers of Western Europe, promoting the possibility of revolution, but also warning against the centralized control in Russia, which he believed had condemned them to failure.[60] Kropotkin wrote to Lenin in 1920, describing the desperate conditions that he believed to be the result of bureaucratic organization, and urging Lenin to allow for local and decentralized institutions.[61] Following an announcement of executions later that year, Kropotkin sent Lenin another furious letter, admonishing the terror which Kropotkin saw as needlessly destructive.[62]

Cooperation and competition edit

In 1902, Kropotkin published his book Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution, which gave an alternative view of animal and human survival. At the time, some proponents of "Social Darwinism" such as Francis Galton proffered a theory of interpersonal competition and natural hierarchy. Instead, Kropotkin argued that "it was an evolutionary emphasis on cooperation instead of competition in the Darwinian sense that made for the success of species, including the human".[63] In the last chapter, he wrote:

In the animal world we have seen that the vast majority of species live in societies, and that they find in association the best arms for the struggle for life: understood, of course, in its wide Darwinian sense – not as a struggle for the sheer means of existence, but as a struggle against all natural conditions unfavourable to the species. The animal species [...] in which individual struggle has been reduced to its narrowest limits [...] and the practice of mutual aid has attained the greatest development [...] are invariably the most numerous, the most prosperous, and the most open to further progress. The mutual protection which is obtained in this case, the possibility of attaining old age and of accumulating experience, the higher intellectual development, and the further growth of sociable habits, secure the maintenance of the species, its extension, and its further progressive evolution. The unsociable species, on the contrary, are doomed to decay.[64]

Kropotkin did not deny the presence of competitive urges in humans, but did not consider them the driving force of human history.[65] He believed that seeking out conflict proved to be socially beneficial only in attempts to destroy injustice, as well as authoritarian institutions such as the state or the Russian Orthodox Church, which he saw as stifling human creativity and impeding human instinctual drive towards cooperation.[66]

Kropotkin claimed that the benefits arising from mutual organization incentivizes humans more than mutual strife. His hope was that in the long run, mutual organization would drive individuals to produce. Anarcho-primitivists and anarcho-communists believe that a gift economy can break the cycle of poverty. They rely on Kropotkin, who believed that the hunter-gatherers he had visited implemented mutual aid. [67]

Mutual aid edit

In his 1892 book The Conquest of Bread, Kropotkin proposed a system of economics based on mutual exchanges made in a system of voluntary cooperation. He believed that in a society that is socially, culturally, and industrially developed enough to produce all the goods and services it needs, there would be no obstacle, such as preferential distribution, pricing or monetary exchange, to prevent everyone to take what they need from the social product. He supported the eventual abolition of money or tokens of exchange for goods and services.[68]

Kropotkin believed that Mikhail Bakunin's collectivist economic model was just a wage system by a different name[69] and that such a system would breed the same type of centralization and inequality as a capitalist wage system. He stated that it is impossible to determine the value of an individual's contributions to the products of labor and thought that anyone who was placed in a position of trying to make such determinations would wield authority over those whose wages they determined.[70]

According to Kirkpatrick Sale, "[w]ith Mutual Aid especially, and later with Fields, Factories, and Workshops, Kropotkin was able to move away from the absurdist limitations of individual anarchism and no-laws anarchism that had flourished during this period and provide instead a vision of communal anarchism, following the models of independent cooperative communities he discovered while developing his theory of mutual aid. It was an anarchism that opposed centralized government and state-level laws as traditional anarchism did, but understood that at a certain small scale, communities and communes and co-ops could flourish and provide humans with a rich material life and wide areas of liberty without centralized control."[63]

Self-sufficiency edit

Kropotkin's focus on local production led to his view that a country should strive for self-sufficiency by manufacturing its own goods and growing its own food, thus lessening the need to rely on imports. To these ends, he advocated irrigation and greenhouses to boost local food production.[71]

Personal life edit

There was no cleavage between the man and his world. He spoke and acted in all things as he felt and believed and wrote. Kropotkin was a whole man.

Rudolf Rocker[72]

Kropotkin married Sofia, a Russian Jewish student, in Switzerland in October 1878. She was over a decade younger than Kropotkin.[39] Kropotkin references her as a primary source of criticism and feedback. Her published story, "The Wife of Number 4,237", was based on her own experience with her husband at Clairvaux prison. She created of an archive in Moscow dedicated to his works before her death in 1941[73].Their only child, Alexandra, was born in London in 1887.[40] Kropotkin was reserved about his private life.[74]

As an individual, Kropotkin was known for having exceptional integrity and moral character that matched his beliefs. Henry Hyndman, an ideological adversary, recalled Kropotkin's charm and sincerity. These traits, wrote Stepnyak-Kravchinsky, contributed to Kropotkin's power as a public speaker. As a thinker, Kropotkin focused more acutely on issues of morality than of economics or politics and carried himself by his own principles without imposition on others. In practice, this made him more of a "revolutionary humanitarian" than a revolutionist by deed.[75] He was also known for being exceptionally kind[76] and for forgoing material comforts to live a revolutionary, principled life by example.[74] Wrote one philosopher, Kropotkin's "scholarly and saintly ways ... almost brought respectability to the movement."[77]

Legacy edit

 
The Kropotkinskaya metro station

As the anarchists' leading theorist in his lifetime,[78] Kropotkin wrote their most systematic doctrine and in an accessible way;[79] and led the development of anarchist-communist social doctrine. His works, inventive and pragmatic, were the most read anarchist books and pamphlets, with translations into major European and Eastern languages that influenced revolutionaries (e.g., Nestor Makhno and Emiliano Zapata) and non-anarchist reformers alike (e.g., Patrick Geddes, Ebenezer Howard), as well as a wide range of intellectuals (including the writers Ba Jin and James Joyce).[77] Much of Kropotkin's impact was in his intellectual writings prior to 1914. He had little influence on the Russian revolution, despite returning for it.[29]

Emma Goldman regarded Kropotkin as her "great teacher" and as among the greatest minds and personalities of the 19th century.[80]

After Kropotkin's 1921 death, the Bolsheviks permitted Kropotkin's Moscow house to become a Kropotkin Museum. This closed in 1938[49] with his wife's death.[52]

Kropotkin is the namesake for multiple regional entities.[52] The Konyushennaya district in Moscow, where Kropotkin was born, is now known by his name, as the Kropotkinsky district, including the Kropotkinskaya metro station.[81] He is the namesake for a large town in the North Caucasus (southwest Russia)[52][82] and a small town in Siberia.[52] The Kropotkin Range he was first to cross in the Siberian Patom Highlands was named for him,[23] as was a peak in East Antarctica.[83]

Kropotkin is played by Alexei Evstratov in Cyril Schäublin's 2022 movie Unrest, about Kropotkin's time in Switzerland.[84]

Works edit

Books edit

  • In Russian and French Prisons, London: Ward and Downey; 1887.
  • The Conquest of Bread (Paris, 1892) Project Gutenberg e-text, Project LibriVox audiobook
  • The Great French Revolution, 1789–1793 (French original: Paris, 1893; English translation: London, 1909). e-text (in French), Anarchist Library e-text (in English)
  • The Terror in Russia, 1909, RevoltLib e-text
  • Words of a Rebel, 1885,
  • Fields, Factories, and Workshops (London and New York, 1898).
  • Memoirs of a Revolutionist, London: Smith, Elder; 1899. Anarchist Library e-text, Anarchy Archives e-text
  • Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution (London, 1902) Project Gutenberg e-text, Project LibriVox audiobook
  • Modern Science and Anarchism, 1903, *
  • Russian Literature: Ideals and Realities (New York: A. A. Knopf, 1905). Anarchy Archives e-text
  • The State: Its Historic Role, published 1946,
  • Ethics: Origin and Development (unfinished). Included as first part of Origen y evolución de la moral (Spanish e-text)

Pamphlets edit

Articles edit

  • "The Constitutional Agitation in Russia," 4 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1905.
  • "Brain Work and Manual Work," 4 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1890.
  • "Manifesto of the Sixteen," 4 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1916.
  • "Organized Vengeance Called 'Justice.'" 4 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine
  • "A Proposed Communist Settlement: A New Colony for Tyneside or Wearside." 4 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine
  • "What Geography Ought to Be," 4 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1885.
  • "On Order" 5 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine
  • "Maxím Górky," 5 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1904
  • "Research on the Ice age", Notices of the Imperial Russian Geographical Society, 1876.
  • "Baron Toll", The Geographical Journal, Vol. 23, No. 6. (Jun. 1904), pp. 770–772, JSTOR
  • "The population of Russia", The Geographical Journal, Vol. 10, No. 2. (Aug. 1897), pp. 196–202, JSTOR 8 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  • "The old beds of the Amu-Daria", The Geographical Journal, Vol. 12, No. 3. (Sep. 1898), pp. 306–310, JSTOR
  • "Russian Schools and the Holy Synod," 4 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1902
  • Mr. Mackinder; Mr. Ravenstein; Dr. Herbertson; Prince Kropotkin; Mr. Andrews; Cobden Sanderson; Elisée Reclus, "On Spherical Maps and Reliefs: Discussion", The Geographical Journal, Vol. 22, No. 3. (Sep. 1903), pp. 294–299, JSTOR
  • "The desiccation of Eur-Asia", Geographical Journal, 23 (1904), 722–41.
  • "Finland" in Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.), 1911 (in part; with Joseph R. Fisher and John Scott Keltie)
  • "Finland: A Rising Nationality," 4 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine Nineteenth Century, 1885
  • "Anarchism" 25 April 2020 at the Wayback Machine in Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.), 1911
  • "Anti-militarism. Was it properly understood?" 29 November 2016 at the Wayback Machine, Freedom, vol.XXVIII, no. 307 (November 1914), pp. 82–83.
  • "An open letter of Peter Kropotkin to the Western workingmen" 29 November 2016 at the Wayback Machine, The Railway Review (29 June 1917), p. 4.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ /krˈpɒtkɪn/;[2] Russian: Пётр Алексе́евич Кропо́ткин Russian pronunciation: [ˈpʲɵtr ɐlʲɪkˈsʲejɪvʲɪt͡ɕ krɐˈpotkʲɪn]
  2. ^ According to the new style calendar (modern Gregorian), Kropotkin was born on 9 December 1842. According to the old style (Old Julian) calendar used in the Russian Empire at the time, it was 27 November 1842. Russia converted from the old to the new style calendar in 1918.
  3. ^ His birth date was 27 November in the Russian Old Style calendar.[6]
  4. ^ Kropotkin previously had some passing familiarity with Bakunin.[26] Historians wrote that Bakunin likely did not wish to meet Kropotkin based on the latter's familial connection to the socialist Peter Lavrov.[32]

References edit

  1. ^ Slatter, John. "Kropotkin, Pyotr Alexeyevich." 16 September 2016 at the Wayback Machine Encyclopedia of Russian History. 2004. Retrieved 1 March 2016 from Encyclopedia.com.
  2. ^ "Kropotkin" 25 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine. Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary.
  3. ^ Caves, R. W. (2004). Encyclopedia of the City. Routledge. p. 414. ISBN 978-0-415-25225-6.
  4. ^ Peter Kropotkin entry on 'anarchism' from the Encyclopædia Britannica (eleventh ed.), Internet Archive. Public Domain text.
  5. ^ Osofsky 1979, p. 13.
  6. ^ Kropotkin & Walter 1971, p. 504.
  7. ^ Osofsky 1979, pp. 22–23.
  8. ^ a b Osofsky 1979, p. 23.
  9. ^ a b Osofsky 1979, p. 24.
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  11. ^ Osofsky 1979, pp. 13, 18, 25.
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  14. ^ Osofsky 1979, pp. 13, 28.
  15. ^ Osofsky 1979, p. 28.
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  17. ^ Osofsky 1979, pp. 28–29.
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  20. ^ Osofsky 1979, p. 30.
  21. ^ a b Osofsky 1979, pp. 13, 32.
  22. ^ Osofsky 1979, pp. 30–31.
  23. ^ a b Osofsky 1979, p. 31.
  24. ^ Osofsky 1979, pp. 31–32.
  25. ^ Osofsky 1979, pp. 13, 32–33.
  26. ^ a b c Osofsky 1979, p. 33.
  27. ^ Osofsky 1979, pp. 33–34.
  28. ^ a b Osofsky 1979, p. 34.
  29. ^ a b c d Osofsky 1979, p. 18.
  30. ^ Osofsky 1979, pp. 14, 34.
  31. ^ Shatz, Marshall S. (1995). "Introduction". The Conquest of Bread and Other Anarchist Writings. Cambridge University Press. p. xi. ISBN 978-0-521-45990-7. OCLC 832639138.
  32. ^ a b c d Osofsky 1979, p. 35.
  33. ^ Osofsky 1979, p. 36.
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  35. ^ a b Osofsky 1979, p. 37.
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  37. ^ a b Osofsky 1979, p. 38.
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  39. ^ a b c d Osofsky 1979, p. 39.
  40. ^ a b Osofsky 1979, pp. 14, 39.
  41. ^ Osofsky 1979, p. 40.
  42. ^ Osofsky 1979, pp. 40–41.
  43. ^ Osofsky 1979, pp. 14, 41.
  44. ^ a b Osofsky 1979, p. 14.
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  46. ^ a b Osofsky 1979, p. 44.
  47. ^ Osofsky 1979, p. 42.
  48. ^ Osofsky 1979, pp. 42–43.
  49. ^ a b c d e Osofsky 1979, p. 15.
  50. ^ Osofsky 1979, pp. 15, 18.
  51. ^ "A meeting between V.I. Lenin and P. A. Kropotkin". www.marxists.org. from the original on 25 May 2023. Retrieved 17 May 2023.
  52. ^ a b c d e f Kropotkin & Walter 1971, p. xvii.
  53. ^ Kropotkin, Peter (1902). Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution. McClure, Philips & Company. pp. 223.
  54. ^ Bekken, John (2009). "Peter Kropotkin's anarchist economics for a new society". Radical Economics and Labour. London & New York: Routledge. p. 223. ISBN 978-0-415-77723-0.
  55. ^ a b Kropotkin, Peter (2011). The Conquest of Bread. Dover Publications, Inc. pp. 50, 101–102.
  56. ^ a b c d "Revolutionary Government". The Anarchist Library. from the original on 9 March 2017. Retrieved 13 December 2022.
  57. ^ The Modern State. from the original on 13 December 2022. Retrieved 13 December 2022.
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  59. ^ "XI. CAN THE STATE BE USED FOR THE EMANCIPATION OF THE WORKERS?". The Modern State. from the original on 13 December 2022. Retrieved 13 December 2022.
  60. ^ "The Russian Revolution and the Soviet Government: Letter to the Workers of Western Europe". The Anarchist Library. from the original on 13 December 2022. Retrieved 13 December 2022.
  61. ^ "Letter to Lenin (4 March 1920)". The Anarchist Library. from the original on 13 December 2022. Retrieved 13 December 2022.
  62. ^ "Letter To Lenin (21 December 1920)". The Anarchist Library. from the original on 13 December 2022. Retrieved 13 December 2022.
  63. ^ a b Sale, Kirkpatrick (1 July 2010) Are Anarchists Revolting? 12 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine, The American Conservative
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  65. ^ Gallaher, Carolyn; Dahlman, Carl T.; Gilmartin, Mary; Mountz, Alison; Shirlow, Peter (2009). Key Concepts in Political Geography. London: SAGE. p. 392. ISBN 9781412946728.
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  68. ^ Kropotkin, Peter (1892). The Conquest of Bread. Putnam. pp. 201.
  69. ^ Kropotkin wrote: "After the Collectivist Revolution instead of saying 'twopence' worth of soap, we shall say 'five minutes' worth of soap." (quoted in Brauer, Fae (2009). "Wild Beasts and Tame Primates: 'Le Douanier' Rosseau's Dream of Darwin's Evolution". In Larsen, Barbara Jean (ed.). The Art of Evolution: Darwin, Darwinisms, and Visual Culture. UPNE. p. 211. ISBN 9781584657750.)
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  78. ^ * Osofsky 1979, p. 19: "Paul Avrich sees Kropotkin as the foremost libertarian theorist and most venerated figure of the anarchist movement" ... "Alexander Gray ... 'probably the most representative, as he is certainly the most attractive and engaging, of the modern anarchist'"
  79. ^ Drinnon, Richard (1982) [1961]. "The Dream". Rebel in Paradise: A Biography of Emma Goldman. Paul Avrich Collection (Library of Congress). Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 38. ISBN 978-0-226-16364-2. OCLC 1319580316 – via Internet Archive.
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Bibliography edit

Further reading edit

Books on Kropotkin edit

  • Butterworth, Alex (9 August 2011). The World That Never Was: A True Story of Dreamers, Schemers, Anarchists, and Secret Agents. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-307-38675-5. OCLC 676726867.
  • Cahm, Caroline (1989). Kropotkin and the Rise of Revolutionary Anarchism 1872–1886. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-36445-0. OCLC 19553164.
  • Davis, Mike (2018). "The Coming Desert: Kropotkin, Mars and the Pulse of Asia". Old Gods, New Enigmas: Marx's Lost Theory. London: Verso Books. ISBN 978-1-78873-217-8. OCLC 1014051592.
  • Engelbert, Arthur (2012). Help! Gegenseitig behindern oder helfen. Eine politische Skizze zur Wahrnehmung heute. Würzburg: Königshausen & Neumann. ISBN 978-3-8260-5017-6. OCLC 822991908.
  • Joll, James (1980). The Anarchists. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-03641-3. OCLC 6016024.
  • Mac Laughlin, Jim (4 November 2023). Kropotkin and the Anarchist Intellectual Tradition. London: Pluto Press. doi:10.2307/j.ctt19qgdvc. ISBN 9780745335131. JSTOR j.ctt19qgdvc. OCLC 937451696.
  • Maíz, Jordi, ed. (2021). Kropotkin. Cien años después. Madrid: Fundación de Estudios Libertarios Anselmo Lorenzo. ISBN 978-84-123507-1-5. OCLC 1264877365.
  • Miller, Martin A. (1976). Kropotkin. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-52594-5. OCLC 1035901653.
  • Morris, Brian (2004). Kropotkin: The Politics of Community. Oakland, California: PM Press. ISBN 9781629635057. OCLC 1030892242.
  • Walter, Nicolas (2004). "Kropotkin, Peter". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/42326. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Woodcock, George; Avakumović, Ivan (1950). The Anarchist Prince: A Biographical Study of Peter Kropotkin. Kraus Reprint. ISBN 9780805203059. OCLC 242229.

Periodical articles edit

  • Afinogenov, Greg (4 May 2023). "What should the action be?". London Review of Books. Vol. 45, no. 9. ISSN 0260-9592.
  • Alan, Barnard (March 2004). "Mutual Aid and the Foraging Mode of Thought: Re-reading Kropotkin on the Khoisan". Social Evolution & History. 3 (1): 3–21. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.515.4372.
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Kropotkin, Peter Alexeivich" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 15 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 928.
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1922). "Kropotkin, Peter Alexeivich, Prince" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 31 (12th ed.). London & New York: The Encyclopædia Britannica Company. p. 688.
  • Efremenko, Dmitry; Evseeva, Yaroslava (2012). "Studies of Social Solidarity in Russia: Tradition and Modern Trends". The American Sociologist. 43 (4): 349–365. doi:10.1007/s12108-012-9165-2. ISSN 0003-1232. JSTOR 23319618. S2CID 255519594.
  • Gould, S. J. (June 1997). "Kropotkin Was No Crackpot". Natural History. 106: 12–21.
  • "Prince P. A. Kropotkin". Nature. 106 (2675): 735–736. February 1921. Bibcode:1921Natur.106..735.. doi:10.1038/106735a0. ISSN 1476-4687. S2CID 4292571.

External links edit

  • Works by Peter Kropotkin in eBook form at Standard Ebooks
  • Works by or about Peter Kropotkin at Internet Archive
  • Works by Peter Kropotkin at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Kropotkin Museum
  • peterkropotkin.org

peter, kropotkin, kropotkin, redirects, here, other, uses, kropotkin, disambiguation, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, customs, patronymic, alexeyevich, family, name, kropotkin, pyotr, alexeyevich, kropotkin, december, 1842, february, 1921, . Kropotkin redirects here For other uses see Kropotkin disambiguation In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming customs the patronymic is Alexeyevich and the family name is Kropotkin Pyotr Alexeyevich Kropotkin a 9 December 1842 b 8 February 1921 was a Russian anarchist and geographer known as a proponent of anarchist communism Peter KropotkinPyotr KropotkinKropotkin c 1900BornPyotr Alexeyevich Kropotkin 1842 12 09 9 December 1842Moscow Russian EmpireDied8 February 1921 1921 02 08 aged 78 Dmitrov Russian SFSRResting placeNovodevichy Cemetery MoscowEducationCorps of Pages 1857 1862 Saint Petersburg Imperial University 1867 no degree 1 Notable workThe Conquest of Bread 1892 Fields Factories and Workshops 1899 Memoirs of a Revolutionist 1899 Mutual Aid A Factor of Evolution 1902 SpouseSofia Ananyeva RabinovichChildrenAlexandraFamilyKropotkinEra19th century philosophy 20th century philosophyRegionRussian philosophy Western philosophySchoolAnarchism Communism SocialismMain interestsPolitical philosophy Political history Economics Ethics Darwinian theory GeographyNotable ideasPolitical ethical and economic theory of anarcho communism Mutual aid Criticism of wage labor Five hour workday Communal kitchens Voluntary communesMilitary careerAllegiance Russian EmpireUnitCorps of PagesCommands heldAide de camp to the Governor of Transbaikal Attache for Cossack affairs to the Governor General of East SiberiaSignatureBorn into an aristocratic land owning family Kropotkin attended Page Corps and later served as an officer in Siberia where he participated in several geological expeditions He was imprisoned for his activism in 1874 and managed to escape two years later He spent the next 41 years in exile in Switzerland France where he was imprisoned for almost four years and England While in exile he gave lectures and published widely on anarchism and geography 3 Kropotkin returned to Russia after the Russian Revolution in 1917 but he was disappointed by the Bolshevik state Kropotkin was a proponent of a decentralized communist society free from central government and based on voluntary associations of self governing communities and worker run enterprises He wrote many books pamphlets and articles the most prominent being The Conquest of Bread and Fields Factories and Workshops with Mutual Aid A Factor of Evolution being his principal scientific offering He contributed the article on anarchism to the Encyclopaedia Britannica Eleventh Edition 4 and left an unfinished work on anarchist ethical philosophy Contents 1 Life 1 1 Early life 1 2 Siberia 1 3 Anarchism 1 4 Exile 1 5 Return to Russia 2 Philosophy 2 1 Critique of capitalism 2 2 Critique of state socialism 2 3 Cooperation and competition 2 4 Mutual aid 2 5 Self sufficiency 3 Personal life 4 Legacy 5 Works 5 1 Books 5 2 Pamphlets 5 3 Articles 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 Further reading 10 1 Books on Kropotkin 10 2 Periodical articles 11 External linksLife editEarly life edit Kropotkin was born in Moscow on 9 December 1842 in the Konyushennaya Equerries district 5 c His father Alexander was a typical royal officer who owned serfs in three provinces and whose family descended from the Grand Princes of Smolensk 7 His mother Ekatarina Sulima was the daughter of General Nikolai Sulima and a descendant of a Zaporozhian Cossacks leader Peter the youngest of her four children was three years old when she died of tuberculosis 8 Kropotkin s father remarried two years later This stepmother was indifferent towards the Kropotkin children and had a streak of jealous vindictiveness going through great lengths to remove the memory of Kropotkin s mother 9 With his father mostly absent Kropotkin and his older brother Alexander were raised by their German nurse Kropotkin developed an enduring compassion for the estate s servants and serfs who cared for him and relayed stories of his mother s kindness 8 He was raised in the family s Moscow mansion and an estate in Nikolskoye Kaluga Oblast outside Moscow 9 At the age of eight Kropotkin attended Tsar Nicholas I s Royal Ball Commending the child s costume the tsar chose Kropotkin for his Page Corps an elite school in St Petersburg that combined military and court education and produced the tsar s imperial attendants 10 Kropotkin joined the Page Corps as a teenager and began a 14 year epistolary relationship with his brother that charts his intellectual and emotional development 11 By the time of his arrival Kropotkin had already shown a populist position towards the emancipation of serfs and a nature of revolt against his father and the school s hazing 12 Kropotkin began his first underground revolutionary writings at the school where he advocated for a Russian constitution 13 He developed an interest in science reading and opera As a top student Kropotkin became a sergeant major in 1861 12 and was thrust into court life serving as the emperor s personal Page de Chambre 14 His views of the tsar and court life soured as imperial policy changed over the next year 15 Privately he was preoccupied with the need to live a societally useful life 16 Siberia edit For his tour of service in 1862 he chose the Amur Cossacks in east Siberia an undesirable post that would let him study the technical mathematics of artillery travel live in nature and become financially independent from his father 17 He developed a firm worldview of compassion for the poor and contrasted the pride and dignity of the yeoman peasant farmers against the indignities of serfdom 18 He wrote approvingly of the cultivated Transbaikalia governor general Boleslav Kukel to whom Kropotkin reported 19 Kukel engaged Kropotkin in prison reform and city self governance projects that the central government ultimately denied The exiled poet and political prisoner Mikhail Larionovitch Mikhailov introduced Kropotkin to anarchism by suggesting an essay by Pierre Joseph Proudhon 20 Kropotkin s brother came to live with him in Irkutsk 21 After Kukel s ouster in early 1863 Kropotkin found solace in geographical work 22 He led a disguised reconnaissance expedition to find a direct route through Manchuria from Chita to Vladivostok the next year He explored the East Siberian Mountains in the north the year after The mountain measurements from his 1866 Olekminsk Vitimsk expedition confirmed his Manchurian hypothesis that the Siberian area from the Ural Mountains to the Pacific Ocean was a plateau and not a plain This discovery of the Patom and Vitim Plateaus won him a gold medal from the Russian Geographical Society and led to the commercialization of the Lena gold fields A range of mountains in this region was later named for him 23 Kropotkin covered Siberia for St Petersburg newspapers since his arrival including the condition of the Polish political exiles who participated in the unsuccessful 1866 Baikal Insurrection 24 Kropotkin secured a promise from the governor general to suspend the prisoners death sentences which was reneged Disillusioned Kropotkin and his brother resolved to leave the military His time in Siberia taught him to appreciate peasant social organization and convinced him that administrative reform was an ineffectual means to improve social conditions 21 nbsp nbsp Vitim nbsp Chita nbsp Vladivostok nbsp St Petersburg nbsp Moscowclass notpageimage Russian locales of Kropotkin s early career After five years in Siberia Kropotkin and his brother moved to St Petersburg where they continued their schooling and academic work Kropotkin took a position with the Russian interior ministry with no duties He studied physics math and geography at the university 25 After presenting his Vitim expedition findings Kropotkin accepted the Russian Geographical Society s part time offer of its Physical Geography section Secretaryship Kropotkin translated Herbert Spencer for additional income He continued to develop a theory which he considered his best scientific contribution that the East Siberian mountains were part of a large plateau and not independent ridges Kropotkin participated in an 1870 polar expedition plan that postulated the existence of what was later discovered as the Franz Josef Land Arctic archipelago 26 In early 1871 he was commissioned to study the Ice Age in Scandinavian geography in which Kropotkin developed theories of the glaciation of Europe and the glacial lakes of its northeast 27 His father died later that year and Kropotkin inherited a wealthy estate in Tambov Kropotkin turned down the Geographical Society s offer of its general secretary position instead choosing work on his Ice Age data and interest in bettering the lives of peasants 28 Anarchism edit nbsp Kropotkin in 1876While Kropotkin became increasingly revolutionary in his writings he was not known for activism 29 He was spurred by the 1871 Paris Commune and trial of Sergey Nechayev He and his brother attended meetings on the Franco Prussian War and revolutionism 26 Likely at the encouragement of a Swiss extended family member and his own desire to see the socialist worker s movement Kropotkin set out to see Switzerland and Western Europe in February 1872 Over three months he met Mikhail Sazhin in Zurich worked and fell out with Nikolai Utin s Marxist group in Geneva and was introduced to the Jura Federation s James Guillaume and Adhemar Schwitzguebel The Jura were the main internal opposition to the Marxist controlled First International as followers of Mikhail Bakunin 28 Kropotkin was quickly impressed and was instantly converted to anarchism by the group s egalitarianism and independence of expression 30 but narrowly missed meeting the leading anarchist Bakunin while there 31 d Kropotkin visited Belgium s movement before returning to Russia in May with contraband literature 32 Back in St Petersburg Kropotkin joined the Chaikovsky Circle a group of revolutionaries that Kropotkin considered more educational than revolutionary in their activities 32 Kropotkin believed in the inevitability of social revolution and the need for stateless social organization His populist revolutionary program for the group focused on urban workers and peasants whereas the group s moderates focused on students Partially for this reason he declined to contribute his personal wealth to the group He viewed professionals as unlikely to forgo their privileges and judged them to not live societally useful lives His program emphasized federated agrarian communes and a revolutionary party While he could speak powerfully Kropotkin was not a successful organizer 33 Kropotkin s first political memo in November 1873 covered his basic plan for stateless social reconstruction including common property worker control of factories shared physical labor towards societal need and labor vouchers in lieu of money He emphasized living among commoners and using propaganda to focus mass dissatisfaction He rejected the Nechayev conspiracy model 34 Members of the circle began to be arrested in late 1873 and the Third Section secret police came for Kropotkin in March 1874 35 His arrest for agitation as a former page de chambre and officer was scandalous 36 Kropotkin had just filed his Ice Age report and had been recently elected president of the Geographical Society s Physical and Mathematical Department At the society s request the tsar granted Kropotkin books to finish his glaciation report Kropotkin was held in the Peter and Paul Fortress 35 His brother who had also radicalized as a follower of Lavrov 32 was also arrested and exiled in Siberia where he committed suicide about a decade later 37 Kropotkin was moved to the House of Detention prison military hospital in St Petersburg for poor health with the help of his sister With assistance from friends he escaped from the minimal security prison in June 1876 By way of Scandinavia and England Kropotkin arrived in Switzerland by the end of the year where he met Italian anarchists Carlo Cafiero and Errico Malatesta He visited Belgium and Zurich where he met French geographer Elisee Reclus who became a close friend 37 Exile edit Kropotkin associated with the Jura Federation and began editing its publication 38 He met and married his wife a Russian Jewish student in 1878 39 In 1879 he started Le Revolte a revolutionary fortnightly in Geneva that published his personal articulation of anarchist communism the idea of distributing work product communally based on need rather than by work 40 He became the philosophy s most prominent proponent despite not creating it The philosophy became part of the Jura program in 1880 at Kropotkin s advocacy Le Revolte also published Kropotkin s best known pamphlet An Appeal to the Young in 1880 39 Switzerland expelled Kropotkin at Russia s behest after the assassination of Alexander II in early 1881 He moved to Thonon les Bains France near Geneva so that his wife could finish her Swiss education Upon learning that the Holy League a tsarist group intended to kill him for his alleged association with the assassination he moved to London but could only bear to live there for a year 39 Upon his return in late 1882 the French arrested him for agitation partly to appease Russia He was sentenced to five years in Lyons In early 1883 he was transferred to the Clairvaux Prison where he continued his academic work A public campaign of intellectuals and French legislators called for his release Reclus published Words of a Rebel a compilation of Kropotkin s Revolte writings while he was in prison which became a main source of Kropotkin s thoughts on revolution As Kropotkin s health worsened from scurvy and malaria France released him in early 1886 41 He would stay in England through 1917 settling in Harrow London apart from brief trips to other European countries 42 In London in late 1886 he co founded Freedom an anarchist monthly and the first English anarchist periodical which he continued to support for almost three decades 43 His first and only child was born the next year He published multiple books over the next coming years including In Russian and French Prisons and The Conquest of Bread 44 His intellectual circle in London included William Morris and W B Yeats as well as old Russian friends Sergey Stepnyak Kravchinsky and Nikolai Tchaikovsky Kropotkin contributed to the Geographical Journal and Nature 45 After 1890 according to biographers George Woodcock and Ivan Avakumovic Kropotkin became more of a scholarly recluse and less of a propagandist His works revolutionary zeal subsided as he turned to social ethical and scientific questions He joined the British Association for the Advancement of Science He continued to contribute to Freedom but was no longer an editor 46 Several of Kropotkin s books began as journal articles His writings on anarchist communist social life were printed in the French successor to Le Revolte and later revised into The Conquest of Bread in 1892 Kropotkin s writings on decentralizing production and industry against the countervailing trend of centralized industrialization were compiled into his Fields Factories and Workshops in 1899 47 His research throughout the 1890s on the animal instinct for cooperation as a counterpoint to Darwinism became a series of articles in Nineteenth Century and later the book Mutual Aid A Factor of Evolution which was widely translated 48 Following a scientific congress in Toronto in 1897 Kropotkin toured Canada His experience there led him to advise the Russian Doukhobors who sought to immigrate there He helped facilitate their emigration in 1899 46 Kropotkin entered the United States and met John Most Emma Goldman and Benjamin Tucker American publishers published his Memoirs of a Revolutionist and Fields Factories and Workshops by the end of the decade 44 He visited the United States again in 1901 at the invitation of the Lowell Institute to give lectures on Russian literature that were later published 49 He published The Great French Revolution 1909 The Terror in Russia 1909 and Modern Science and Anarchism 1913 His 70th birthday in 1912 had celebratory gatherings in London and Paris 49 Kropotkin s support for Western entry into World War I siding with England and France divided the anarchist movement which had been anti war and damaged his esteem as a luminary of socialism He exacerbated this by insisting with returning to Russia that Russians support the war as well 50 Return to Russia edit nbsp Emma Goldman delivering a eulogy at Kropotkin s funeralWith the outbreak of the Russian Revolution Kropotkin returned to Russia in June 1917 He refused the Petrograd Provisional Government s offer of a cabinet seat In August he advocated for defending Russia and the revolution at the National State Conference Kropotkin applied for a residence in Moscow in 1918 which was personally approved by Vladimir Lenin head of the Soviet government Months later finding life in Moscow difficult in his old age Kropotkin moved with his family to a friend s home in the nearby town of Dmitrov 51 In 1919 Emma Goldman visited his family there Kropotkin met with Lenin in Moscow and corresponded by mail to discuss political questions of the day He advocated for workers cooperatives and argued against the Bolsheviks hostage policy and centralization of authority while simultaneously encouraging Western comrades to stop their governments military interventions in Russia 49 Kropotkin ultimately had little impact on the Russian revolution but his advocacy work for political and anarchist prisoners in Russia and for the Russian revolution during the last four years of his life replenished some of the goodwill he had lost from his support for Western powers in World War I 29 Kropotkin died of pneumonia on 8 February 1921 49 His family refused an offer of a state funeral 52 With his Moscow funeral the Bolsheviks permitted the diminished Russian anarchist movement an official restrained occasion to memorialize their figurehead 29 It was the last major anarchist demonstration of the period in Russia as the movement and Kropotkin s writings would be fully suppressed later that year 52 Philosophy editCritique of capitalism edit Kropotkin critiqued what he considered to be the fallacies of the economic systems of feudalism and capitalism He believed they create poverty and artificial scarcity and promote privilege Alternatively he proposed a more decentralized economic system based on mutual aid and voluntary cooperation He argued that the tendencies for this kind of organization already exist both in evolution and in human society 53 Kropotkin disagreed in part with the Marxist critique of capitalism including the labor theory of value believing there was no necessary link between work performed and the values of commodities His attack on the institution of wage labor was based more on the power employers exerted over employees and not only on the extraction of surplus value from their labor Kropotkin claimed this power was made possible by the state s protection of private ownership of productive resources 54 55 However Kropotkin believed the possibility of surplus value was itself the problem holding that a society would still be unjust if the workers of a particular industry kept their surplus to themselves rather than redistributing it for the common good 55 Critique of state socialism editKropotkin believed that a communist society could be established only by a social revolution which he described as the taking possession by the people of all social wealth It is the abolition of all the forces which have so long hampered the development of Humanity 56 However he criticized forms of revolutionary methods like those proposed by Marxism and Blanquism that retained the use of state power arguing that any central authority was incompatible with the dramatic changes needed by a social revolution Kropotkin believed that the mechanisms of the state were deeply rooted in maintaining the power of one class over another and thus could not be used to emancipate the working class 57 Instead Kropotkin insisted that both private property and the state needed to be abolished together The economic change which will result from the Social Revolution will be so immense and so profound it must so change all the relations based today on property and exchange that it is impossible for one or any individual to elaborate the different social forms which must spring up in the society of the future Any authority external to it will only be an obstacle only a trammel on the organic labor which must be accomplished and beside that a source of discord and hatred 56 Kropotkin believed that any post revolutionary government would lack the local knowledge to organize a diverse population Their vision of society would be limited by their own vindictive self serving or narrow ideals 58 To ensure order preserve authority and organize production the state would need to use violence and coercion to suppress further revolution and control workers The workers would be reliant on the state bureaucracy to organize them so they would never develop the initiative to self organize as they needed 56 This would lead to the re creation of classes an oppressed workforce and eventually another revolution 59 Thus Kropotkin wrote that maintaining the state would paralyze any true social revolution making the idea of a revolutionary government a contradiction in terms We know that Revolution and Government are incompatible one must destroy the other no matter what name is given to government whether dictator royalty or parliament We know that what makes the strength and the truth of our party is contained in this fundamental formula Nothing good or durable can be done except by the free initiative of the people and every government tends to destroy it and so the very best among us if their ideas had not to pass through the crucible of the popular mind before being put into execution and if they should become masters of that formidable machine the government and could thus act as they chose would become in a week fit only for the gallows We know whither every dictator leads even the best intentioned namely to the death of all revolutionary movement 56 Rather than a centralized approach Kropotkin stressed the need for decentralized organization He believed that dissolving the state would cripple counter revolution without reverting to authoritarian methods of control writing In order to conquer something more than guillotines are required It is the revolutionary idea the truly wide revolutionary conception which reduces its enemies to impotence by paralyzing all the instruments by which they have governed hitherto 58 He believed this was possible only through a widespread Boldness of thought a distinct and wide conception of all that is desired constructive force arising from the people in proportion as the negation of authority dawns and finally the initiative of all in the work of reconstruction this will give to the revolution the Power required to conquer 58 Kropotkin applied this criticism to the Bolsheviks rule following the October Revolution Kropotkin summarized his thoughts in a 1919 letter to the workers of Western Europe promoting the possibility of revolution but also warning against the centralized control in Russia which he believed had condemned them to failure 60 Kropotkin wrote to Lenin in 1920 describing the desperate conditions that he believed to be the result of bureaucratic organization and urging Lenin to allow for local and decentralized institutions 61 Following an announcement of executions later that year Kropotkin sent Lenin another furious letter admonishing the terror which Kropotkin saw as needlessly destructive 62 Cooperation and competition edit In 1902 Kropotkin published his book Mutual Aid A Factor of Evolution which gave an alternative view of animal and human survival At the time some proponents of Social Darwinism such as Francis Galton proffered a theory of interpersonal competition and natural hierarchy Instead Kropotkin argued that it was an evolutionary emphasis on cooperation instead of competition in the Darwinian sense that made for the success of species including the human 63 In the last chapter he wrote In the animal world we have seen that the vast majority of species live in societies and that they find in association the best arms for the struggle for life understood of course in its wide Darwinian sense not as a struggle for the sheer means of existence but as a struggle against all natural conditions unfavourable to the species The animal species in which individual struggle has been reduced to its narrowest limits and the practice of mutual aid has attained the greatest development are invariably the most numerous the most prosperous and the most open to further progress The mutual protection which is obtained in this case the possibility of attaining old age and of accumulating experience the higher intellectual development and the further growth of sociable habits secure the maintenance of the species its extension and its further progressive evolution The unsociable species on the contrary are doomed to decay 64 Kropotkin did not deny the presence of competitive urges in humans but did not consider them the driving force of human history 65 He believed that seeking out conflict proved to be socially beneficial only in attempts to destroy injustice as well as authoritarian institutions such as the state or the Russian Orthodox Church which he saw as stifling human creativity and impeding human instinctual drive towards cooperation 66 Kropotkin claimed that the benefits arising from mutual organization incentivizes humans more than mutual strife His hope was that in the long run mutual organization would drive individuals to produce Anarcho primitivists and anarcho communists believe that a gift economy can break the cycle of poverty They rely on Kropotkin who believed that the hunter gatherers he had visited implemented mutual aid 67 Mutual aid edit In his 1892 book The Conquest of Bread Kropotkin proposed a system of economics based on mutual exchanges made in a system of voluntary cooperation He believed that in a society that is socially culturally and industrially developed enough to produce all the goods and services it needs there would be no obstacle such as preferential distribution pricing or monetary exchange to prevent everyone to take what they need from the social product He supported the eventual abolition of money or tokens of exchange for goods and services 68 Kropotkin believed that Mikhail Bakunin s collectivist economic model was just a wage system by a different name 69 and that such a system would breed the same type of centralization and inequality as a capitalist wage system He stated that it is impossible to determine the value of an individual s contributions to the products of labor and thought that anyone who was placed in a position of trying to make such determinations would wield authority over those whose wages they determined 70 According to Kirkpatrick Sale w ith Mutual Aid especially and later with Fields Factories and Workshops Kropotkin was able to move away from the absurdist limitations of individual anarchism and no laws anarchism that had flourished during this period and provide instead a vision of communal anarchism following the models of independent cooperative communities he discovered while developing his theory of mutual aid It was an anarchism that opposed centralized government and state level laws as traditional anarchism did but understood that at a certain small scale communities and communes and co ops could flourish and provide humans with a rich material life and wide areas of liberty without centralized control 63 Self sufficiency edit Kropotkin s focus on local production led to his view that a country should strive for self sufficiency by manufacturing its own goods and growing its own food thus lessening the need to rely on imports To these ends he advocated irrigation and greenhouses to boost local food production 71 Personal life editThere was no cleavage between the man and his world He spoke and acted in all things as he felt and believed and wrote Kropotkin was a whole man Rudolf Rocker 72 Kropotkin married Sofia a Russian Jewish student in Switzerland in October 1878 She was over a decade younger than Kropotkin 39 Kropotkin references her as a primary source of criticism and feedback Her published story The Wife of Number 4 237 was based on her own experience with her husband at Clairvaux prison She created of an archive in Moscow dedicated to his works before her death in 1941 73 Their only child Alexandra was born in London in 1887 40 Kropotkin was reserved about his private life 74 As an individual Kropotkin was known for having exceptional integrity and moral character that matched his beliefs Henry Hyndman an ideological adversary recalled Kropotkin s charm and sincerity These traits wrote Stepnyak Kravchinsky contributed to Kropotkin s power as a public speaker As a thinker Kropotkin focused more acutely on issues of morality than of economics or politics and carried himself by his own principles without imposition on others In practice this made him more of a revolutionary humanitarian than a revolutionist by deed 75 He was also known for being exceptionally kind 76 and for forgoing material comforts to live a revolutionary principled life by example 74 Wrote one philosopher Kropotkin s scholarly and saintly ways almost brought respectability to the movement 77 Legacy edit nbsp The Kropotkinskaya metro stationAs the anarchists leading theorist in his lifetime 78 Kropotkin wrote their most systematic doctrine and in an accessible way 79 and led the development of anarchist communist social doctrine His works inventive and pragmatic were the most read anarchist books and pamphlets with translations into major European and Eastern languages that influenced revolutionaries e g Nestor Makhno and Emiliano Zapata and non anarchist reformers alike e g Patrick Geddes Ebenezer Howard as well as a wide range of intellectuals including the writers Ba Jin and James Joyce 77 Much of Kropotkin s impact was in his intellectual writings prior to 1914 He had little influence on the Russian revolution despite returning for it 29 Emma Goldman regarded Kropotkin as her great teacher and as among the greatest minds and personalities of the 19th century 80 After Kropotkin s 1921 death the Bolsheviks permitted Kropotkin s Moscow house to become a Kropotkin Museum This closed in 1938 49 with his wife s death 52 Kropotkin is the namesake for multiple regional entities 52 The Konyushennaya district in Moscow where Kropotkin was born is now known by his name as the Kropotkinsky district including the Kropotkinskaya metro station 81 He is the namesake for a large town in the North Caucasus southwest Russia 52 82 and a small town in Siberia 52 The Kropotkin Range he was first to cross in the Siberian Patom Highlands was named for him 23 as was a peak in East Antarctica 83 Kropotkin is played by Alexei Evstratov in Cyril Schaublin s 2022 movie Unrest about Kropotkin s time in Switzerland 84 Works editBooks edit In Russian and French Prisons London Ward and Downey 1887 The Conquest of Bread Paris 1892 Project Gutenberg e text Project LibriVox audiobook The Great French Revolution 1789 1793 French original Paris 1893 English translation London 1909 e text in French Anarchist Library e text in English The Terror in Russia 1909 RevoltLib e text Words of a Rebel 1885 Fields Factories and Workshops London and New York 1898 Memoirs of a Revolutionist London Smith Elder 1899 Anarchist Library e text Anarchy Archives e text Mutual Aid A Factor of Evolution London 1902 Project Gutenberg e text Project LibriVox audiobook Modern Science and Anarchism 1903 Russian Literature Ideals and Realities New York A A Knopf 1905 Anarchy Archives e text The State Its Historic Role published 1946 Ethics Origin and Development unfinished Included as first part of Origen y evolucion de la moral Spanish e text Pamphlets edit An Appeal to the Young 1880 Communism and Anarchy Archived 28 January 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1901 Anarchist Communism Its Basis and Principles Archived 11 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine 1887 The Industrial Village of the Future Archived 28 January 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1884 Law and Authority Archived 9 March 2017 at the Wayback Machine 1886 The Coming Anarchy Archived 8 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1887 The Place of Anarchy in Socialist Evolution Archived 10 November 2016 at the Wayback Machine 1886 The Wage System Archived 8 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1920 The Commune of Paris Archived 8 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1880 Anarchist Morality Archived 8 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1898 Expropriation Archived 8 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine The Great French Revolution and Its Lesson Archived 5 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1909 Process Under Socialism Archived 8 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1887 Are Prisons Necessary Archived 15 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Chapter X from In Russian and French Prisons 1887 The Coming War Archived 8 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1913 Wars and Capitalism Archived 8 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1914 Revolutionary Government Archived 9 March 2017 at the Wayback Machine 1892 The Scientific Basis of Anarchy Archived 8 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1887 The Fortress Prison of St Petersburg Archived 8 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1883 Advice to Those About to Emigrate Archived 3 January 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1893 Some of the Resources of Canada Archived 8 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1898 Anarchism Its Philosophy and Ideal Archived 8 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine 1896 Revolutionary Studies Archived 8 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1892 Direct Action of Environment and Evolution Archived 8 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1920 The Present Crisis in Russia Archived 8 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1901 The Spirit of Revolt Archived 29 January 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1880 The State Its Historic Role Archived 7 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine 1897 On Economics Archived 16 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine Selected Passages from his Writings 1898 1913 On the Teaching of Physiography Archived 8 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1893 War Archived 9 March 2017 at the Wayback Machine 1914 Articles edit The Constitutional Agitation in Russia Archived 4 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1905 Brain Work and Manual Work Archived 4 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1890 Manifesto of the Sixteen Archived 4 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1916 Organized Vengeance Called Justice Archived 4 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine A Proposed Communist Settlement A New Colony for Tyneside or Wearside Archived 4 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine What Geography Ought to Be Archived 4 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1885 On Order Archived 5 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine Maxim Gorky Archived 5 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1904 Research on the Ice age Notices of the Imperial Russian Geographical Society 1876 Baron Toll The Geographical Journal Vol 23 No 6 Jun 1904 pp 770 772 JSTOR The population of Russia The Geographical Journal Vol 10 No 2 Aug 1897 pp 196 202 JSTOR Archived 8 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine The old beds of the Amu Daria The Geographical Journal Vol 12 No 3 Sep 1898 pp 306 310 JSTOR Russian Schools and the Holy Synod Archived 4 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 1902 Mr Mackinder Mr Ravenstein Dr Herbertson Prince Kropotkin Mr Andrews Cobden Sanderson Elisee Reclus On Spherical Maps and Reliefs Discussion The Geographical Journal Vol 22 No 3 Sep 1903 pp 294 299 JSTOR The desiccation of Eur Asia Geographical Journal 23 1904 722 41 Finland in Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed 1911 in part with Joseph R Fisher and John Scott Keltie Finland A Rising Nationality Archived 4 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine Nineteenth Century 1885 Anarchism Archived 25 April 2020 at the Wayback Machine in Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed 1911 Anti militarism Was it properly understood Archived 29 November 2016 at the Wayback Machine Freedom vol XXVIII no 307 November 1914 pp 82 83 An open letter of Peter Kropotkin to the Western workingmen Archived 29 November 2016 at the Wayback Machine The Railway Review 29 June 1917 p 4 See also editMaria Leshern von Herzfeld Golets Kropotkin Kropotkino Ukraine Kropotkin Museum List of Russian anarchistsNotes edit k r oʊ ˈ p ɒ t k ɪ n 2 Russian Pyotr Alekse evich Kropo tkin Russian pronunciation ˈpʲɵtr ɐlʲɪkˈsʲejɪvʲɪt ɕ krɐˈpotkʲɪn According to the new style calendar modern Gregorian Kropotkin was born on 9 December 1842 According to the old style Old Julian calendar used in the Russian Empire at the time it was 27 November 1842 Russia converted from the old to the new style calendar in 1918 His birth date was 27 November in the Russian Old Style calendar 6 Kropotkin previously had some passing familiarity with Bakunin 26 Historians wrote that Bakunin likely did not wish to meet Kropotkin based on the latter s familial connection to the socialist Peter Lavrov 32 References edit Slatter John Kropotkin Pyotr Alexeyevich Archived 16 September 2016 at the Wayback Machine Encyclopedia of Russian History 2004 Retrieved 1 March 2016 from Encyclopedia com Kropotkin Archived 25 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine Random House Webster s Unabridged Dictionary Caves R W 2004 Encyclopedia of the City Routledge p 414 ISBN 978 0 415 25225 6 Peter Kropotkin entry on anarchism from the Encyclopaedia Britannica eleventh ed Internet Archive Public Domain text Osofsky 1979 p 13 Kropotkin amp Walter 1971 p 504 Osofsky 1979 pp 22 23 a b Osofsky 1979 p 23 a b Osofsky 1979 p 24 Osofsky 1979 p 13 24 25 Osofsky 1979 pp 13 18 25 a b Osofsky 1979 p 25 Osofsky 1979 p 13 26 Osofsky 1979 pp 13 28 Osofsky 1979 p 28 Osofsky 1979 p 27 Osofsky 1979 pp 28 29 Osofsky 1979 p 29 Osofsky 1979 pp 29 30 Osofsky 1979 p 30 a b Osofsky 1979 pp 13 32 Osofsky 1979 pp 30 31 a b Osofsky 1979 p 31 Osofsky 1979 pp 31 32 Osofsky 1979 pp 13 32 33 a b c Osofsky 1979 p 33 Osofsky 1979 pp 33 34 a b Osofsky 1979 p 34 a b c d Osofsky 1979 p 18 Osofsky 1979 pp 14 34 Shatz Marshall S 1995 Introduction The Conquest of Bread and Other Anarchist Writings Cambridge University Press p xi ISBN 978 0 521 45990 7 OCLC 832639138 a b c d Osofsky 1979 p 35 Osofsky 1979 p 36 Osofsky 1979 pp 36 37 a b Osofsky 1979 p 37 Osofsky 1979 pp 14 37 a b Osofsky 1979 p 38 Osofsky 1979 pp 38 39 a b c d Osofsky 1979 p 39 a b Osofsky 1979 pp 14 39 Osofsky 1979 p 40 Osofsky 1979 pp 40 41 Osofsky 1979 pp 14 41 a b Osofsky 1979 p 14 Osofsky 1979 p 41 a b Osofsky 1979 p 44 Osofsky 1979 p 42 Osofsky 1979 pp 42 43 a b c d e Osofsky 1979 p 15 Osofsky 1979 pp 15 18 A meeting between V I Lenin and P A Kropotkin www marxists org Archived from the original on 25 May 2023 Retrieved 17 May 2023 a b c d e f Kropotkin amp Walter 1971 p xvii Kropotkin Peter 1902 Mutual Aid A Factor of Evolution McClure Philips amp Company pp 223 Bekken John 2009 Peter Kropotkin s anarchist economics for a new society Radical Economics and Labour London amp New York Routledge p 223 ISBN 978 0 415 77723 0 a b Kropotkin Peter 2011 The Conquest of Bread Dover Publications Inc pp 50 101 102 a b c d Revolutionary Government The Anarchist Library Archived from the original on 9 March 2017 Retrieved 13 December 2022 The Modern State Archived from the original on 13 December 2022 Retrieved 13 December 2022 a b c Revolutionary Studies The Anarchist Library Archived from the original on 13 December 2022 Retrieved 13 December 2022 XI CAN THE STATE BE USED FOR THE EMANCIPATION OF THE WORKERS The Modern State Archived from the original on 13 December 2022 Retrieved 13 December 2022 The Russian Revolution and the Soviet Government Letter to the Workers of Western Europe The Anarchist Library Archived from the original on 13 December 2022 Retrieved 13 December 2022 Letter to Lenin 4 March 1920 The Anarchist Library Archived from the original on 13 December 2022 Retrieved 13 December 2022 Letter To Lenin 21 December 1920 The Anarchist Library Archived from the original on 13 December 2022 Retrieved 13 December 2022 a b Sale Kirkpatrick 1 July 2010 Are Anarchists Revolting Archived 12 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine The American Conservative Kropotkin Peter 1902 quotation fromMutual Aid A Factor of Evolution Archived from the original on 16 March 2019 Retrieved 31 May 2012 Gallaher Carolyn Dahlman Carl T Gilmartin Mary Mountz Alison Shirlow Peter 2009 Key Concepts in Political Geography London SAGE p 392 ISBN 9781412946728 Vucinich Alexander 1988 Darwin in Russian Thought University of California Press p 349 ISBN 9780520062832 Roy Debarati 2012 The Power of Money Vij Books India Private Limited p 201 ISBN 9789382573173 Kropotkin Peter 1892 The Conquest of Bread Putnam pp 201 Kropotkin wrote After the Collectivist Revolution instead of saying twopence worth of soap we shall say five minutes worth of soap quoted in Brauer Fae 2009 Wild Beasts and Tame Primates Le Douanier Rosseau s Dream of Darwin s Evolution In Larsen Barbara Jean ed The Art of Evolution Darwin Darwinisms and Visual Culture UPNE p 211 ISBN 9781584657750 Avrich Paul 2005 The Russian Anarchists AK Press pp 28 29 ISBN 9781904859482 Adams Matthew S 4 June 2015 Kropotkin Read and the Intellectual History of British Anarchism Between Reason and Romanticism Springer ISBN 9781137392626 Osofsky 1979 pp 20 21 Eds 18 September 2021 Sophia Kropotkin and a trip to Hartlepool Freedom News Retrieved 24 January 2024 a b Osofsky 1979 p 22 Osofsky 1979 p 20 Osofsky 1979 p 21 a b Osofsky 1979 p 19 Osofsky 1979 p 19 Paul Avrich sees Kropotkin as the foremost libertarian theorist and most venerated figure of the anarchist movement Alexander Gray probably the most representative as he is certainly the most attractive and engaging of the modern anarchist Drinnon Richard 1982 1961 The Dream Rebel in Paradise A Biography of Emma Goldman Paul Avrich Collection Library of Congress Chicago University of Chicago Press p 38 ISBN 978 0 226 16364 2 OCLC 1319580316 via Internet Archive Osofsky 1979 pp 21 22 Jabado Salwa 2008 Fodor s Moscow and St Petersburg Fodor s ISBN 9781400007172 Everett Heath John 7 December 2017 The Concise Dictionary of World Place Names Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 255646 2 Alberts Fred G 1995 Geographic Names of the Antarctic Unrueh 17 November 2022 via IMDb Bibliography editAvrich Paul 1988 Anarchist Portraits Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press pp 53 106 ISBN 0 691 04753 7 OCLC 17727270 Crowder George 2003 Petr Alekseevich Kropotkin In Dinega Alyssa W ed Russian Literature in the Age of Realism Vol 277 Detroit MI Gale pp 191 198 Gale OOSVCP062651800 Green Lara 2022 The Transnational Life and Death of Peter Kropotkin 1881 1921 Terrorism the Anarchist Body and the Russian Revolution Anarchist Studies 30 1 83 ISSN 0967 3393 Gale A708386012 Marshall Peter 1992 Peter Kropotkin The Revolutionary Evolutionist Demanding the Impossible A History of Anarchism London HarperCollins pp 309 338 ISBN 978 0 00 217855 6 Osofsky Stephen 1979 Peter Kropotkin Boston Twayne Publishers ISBN 978 0 8057 7724 6 OCLC 4497420 Kropotkin Peter Walter Nicolas 1971 Memoirs of a Revolutionist New York Dover ISBN 978 0 486 22485 5 Woodcock George 1986 The Explorer Anarchism A History of Libertarian Ideas and Movements 2nd ed Harmondsworth Penguin Books pp 153 182 ISBN 978 0 14 022697 3 OCLC 489971695 Further reading editBooks on Kropotkin edit Butterworth Alex 9 August 2011 The World That Never Was A True Story of Dreamers Schemers Anarchists and Secret Agents Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 307 38675 5 OCLC 676726867 Cahm Caroline 1989 Kropotkin and the Rise of Revolutionary Anarchism 1872 1886 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 36445 0 OCLC 19553164 Davis Mike 2018 The Coming Desert Kropotkin Mars and the Pulse of Asia Old Gods New Enigmas Marx s Lost Theory London Verso Books ISBN 978 1 78873 217 8 OCLC 1014051592 Engelbert Arthur 2012 Help Gegenseitig behindern oder helfen Eine politische Skizze zur Wahrnehmung heute Wurzburg Konigshausen amp Neumann ISBN 978 3 8260 5017 6 OCLC 822991908 Joll James 1980 The Anarchists Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 03641 3 OCLC 6016024 Mac Laughlin Jim 4 November 2023 Kropotkin and the Anarchist Intellectual Tradition London Pluto Press doi 10 2307 j ctt19qgdvc ISBN 9780745335131 JSTOR j ctt19qgdvc OCLC 937451696 Maiz Jordi ed 2021 Kropotkin Cien anos despues Madrid Fundacion de Estudios Libertarios Anselmo Lorenzo ISBN 978 84 123507 1 5 OCLC 1264877365 Miller Martin A 1976 Kropotkin University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 52594 5 OCLC 1035901653 Morris Brian 2004 Kropotkin The Politics of Community Oakland California PM Press ISBN 9781629635057 OCLC 1030892242 Walter Nicolas 2004 Kropotkin Peter Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 42326 Subscription or UK public library membership required Woodcock George Avakumovic Ivan 1950 The Anarchist Prince A Biographical Study of Peter Kropotkin Kraus Reprint ISBN 9780805203059 OCLC 242229 Periodical articles edit Afinogenov Greg 4 May 2023 What should the action be London Review of Books Vol 45 no 9 ISSN 0260 9592 Alan Barnard March 2004 Mutual Aid and the Foraging Mode of Thought Re reading Kropotkin on the Khoisan Social Evolution amp History 3 1 3 21 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 515 4372 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Kropotkin Peter Alexeivich Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 15 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 928 Chisholm Hugh ed 1922 Kropotkin Peter Alexeivich Prince Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 31 12th ed London amp New York The Encyclopaedia Britannica Company p 688 Efremenko Dmitry Evseeva Yaroslava 2012 Studies of Social Solidarity in Russia Tradition and Modern Trends The American Sociologist 43 4 349 365 doi 10 1007 s12108 012 9165 2 ISSN 0003 1232 JSTOR 23319618 S2CID 255519594 Gould S J June 1997 Kropotkin Was No Crackpot Natural History 106 12 21 Prince P A Kropotkin Nature 106 2675 735 736 February 1921 Bibcode 1921Natur 106 735 doi 10 1038 106735a0 ISSN 1476 4687 S2CID 4292571 External links editPeter Kropotkin at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Data from Wikidata Works by Peter Kropotkin in eBook form at Standard Ebooks Works by or about Peter Kropotkin at Internet Archive Works by Peter Kropotkin at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Kropotkin Museum peterkropotkin org Portals nbsp Anarchism nbsp Biography nbsp Communism nbsp Libertarianism nbsp Politics nbsp Russia nbsp Science nbsp Socialism Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Peter Kropotkin amp oldid 1212074291, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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