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Publié par
Date de parution
20 février 2016
Nombre de lectures
0
EAN13
9781783717385
Langue
English
Publié par
Date de parution
20 février 2016
Nombre de lectures
0
EAN13
9781783717385
Langue
English
Kropotkin and the Anarchist Intellectual Tradition
Kropotkin and the Anarchist Intellectual Tradition
Jim Mac Laughlin
First published 2016 by Pluto Press 345 Archway Road, London N6 5AA
www.plutobooks.com
Copyright © Jim Mac Laughlin 2016
The right of Jim Mac Laughlin to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN 978 0 7453 3513 1 Hardback ISBN 978 0 7453 3512 4 Paperback ISBN 978 1 7837 1737 8 PDF eBook ISBN 978 1 7837 1739 2 Kindle eBook ISBN 978 1 7837 1738 5 EPUB eBook
This book is printed on paper suitable for recycling and made from fully managed and sustained forest sources. Logging, pulping and manufacturing processes are expected to conform to the environmental standards of the country of origin.
Typeset by Stanford DTP Services, Northampton, England
Simultaneously printed in the European Union and United States of America
To the memory of my parents,
Patrick Jerome Mc Laughlin (1906–86)
and
Ellen Teresa Mc Callion (1913–2006)
Contents 1 Anarchism Before Kropotkin 2 Kropotkin: The Education of an Anarchist 3 Kropotkin and the Legitimization of Anarchism 4 ‘Scientific Anarchism’ and Evolutionary Theory: Towards an Ontology of Anarchist Ethics and Altruism 5 Kropotkin’s Anarchism and the Nineteenth-Century Geographical Imagination: Towards an Anarchist Political Geography
Epilogue
Notes
Index
1
Anarchism Before Kropotkin
The historical roots of anarchism
‘Anarchy’ is a composite word that derives from the Greek. The prefix ‘an’, meaning ‘the absence of’, when joined with ‘archos’, denoting ‘ruler’ or ‘authority’, gives us ‘anarchy’, a term which originally signified ‘contrary to authority’. 1 In classical Greece the term was also widely used to refer to those who lived ‘without rule’. As such it referred to people living in acephalous communities ‘without a leader’, especially those not ruled by, or under the control of, military leaders. While many of these early ‘anarchic’ societies were in fact stateless, they were rarely completely leaderless. Their leaders, however, did not have access to coercive agencies of authority and were often forced to rely upon a combination of skill, luck and persuasion to maintain their influence and exert authority. Acephalous communities such as these were also characterized by only the most rudimentary forms of role differentiation and could sustain only a minimum amount of economic specialization. 2 In areas outside Roman influence, village communities and freely sworn brotherhoods of free individuals were largely beyond state control. Kropotkin was to claim that the ‘barbarian’ spirit of societies such as these lingered on among Scandinavian, Saxon, Celtic and Slavic peoples. For seven or eight centuries after the collapse of Rome, it had incited men, and women, to seek satisfaction of their needs through individual initiative, and later in the Middle Ages through free agreement between the brotherhoods of workers and craft guilds. 3 With increased usage the term ‘anarchy’ was applied pejoratively by supporters of state authority to primordial communities, and later in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries to pre-colonial societies and disorderly elements within the ranks of otherwise ‘orderly’ state societies. All of these were deemed ‘anarchic’ precisely because they were beyond the reach of state authority, or were only tenuously linked to state societies governed by the rule of law. Gradually, however, the term was also used in a derogatory fashion to describe those who constituted a threat to the authority of church and state.
There was a widespread assumption in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries that the rural inhabitants of the pre-colonial world lived anarchic lives. This was because in large tracts of Africa, Latin America, India, and much of the Islamic world until comparatively recently, cities were considered cradles of luxury and refinement. ‘Disorderly’ elements were either excluded from, or granted only limited or temporary access to, these centres of ‘refined’ living. In the early colonial city, privileged citizens and those in authority would come together to construct their own versions of civic culture. They also took pains to contain any anarchic elements in their midst. Even as late as the eighteenth century, anarchy was said to lurk beyond the boundaries of city walls. The further one moved from the city, the more barbaric, disorderly and anarchic did life become. Indeed, for centuries the boundary between town and country was diligently policed in order to prevent cities growing so large that their inhabitants literally became uncontrollable. 4 Rulers in these cities were generally drawn from the demos , as was the case in classical Greece, or from educated privileged elites, as was the case in colonial India, Latin America and Africa. As recently as the nineteenth century, ‘encroachment laws’ in India defined those who had the right to live in the city. Here laws were designed to control such seemingly ‘anarchic’ manifestations of urban life as street trading, vagrancy and the development of shantytowns, all of which were considered blighted spots on the face of an ordered civility. Similarly in the early years of Maoist China, the gates of the country’s larger cities were only opened temporarily to accommodate the huge numbers of refugees, ex-soldiers and peasants who were displaced by war. They were subsequently closed in the 1950s to stem the flood of impoverished peasants who sought a new life in the urban centres of post-revolutionary China. In Maoist China, as in the military dictatorships of Latin America, peasants were kept on the land, both because they were required to work there, and because they were more easily controlled in the countryside than they would be in the cities. Thus for example in French West Africa up until the 1950s, colonial authorities regulated the movement of the rural poor to the city, and consigned refugees from the countryside to the grim peripheries of Algiers, Dakar, Brazzaville and Abidjan. 5 In all of these cases, as famously also in tsarist Russia in the nineteenth century and the Soviet Union in the twentieth, those living outside the city were regarded as second-class citizens. As ‘people without history’ they were also considered ‘disposable people’. 6 To those in authority they were simply trapped in an endless cycle of hardship. Their lives literally lacked direction, and their history, unlike that of their social superiors, did not appear to lead anywhere. As such they were deemed to have no place in the settled and orderly landscapes of ‘civilized’ peoples. Thus, in the colonial world of the nineteenth century, migration to the city was often discouraged because it was believed that untrammelled urban expansion might contribute to the physical, and even moral destruction of urban civilization.
While anarchists associate anarchism with a whole range of doctrines that condemn the institutions of government as unnecessary and detrimental to social and economic development, their enemies have equated anarchy with social chaos and violent disorder. This disparagement of anarchism, and the categorization of anarchists as mindless fomenters of social chaos, has had a long history in Western Europe. Long before Peter Kropotkin’s defence of ‘scientific anarchism’ in the latter half of the nineteenth century, opponents of authority were derogatorily described as ‘anarchists’. In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, figures of authority began applying the term to opponents of ecclesiastical authority. As the focus of political dissent shifted from church to the monarchy, and later to the institutions of the modern state, anarchists were indiscriminately lumped together with all those who sought to challenge abuses of ecclesiastical and state authority. These included those who, unlike ‘true anarchists’, sought to reform rather than abolish the institutions through which the authority of church and state was mediated. Whenever anarchists sought to distinguish themselves from other critics of authoritarian regimes they were required to take an intellectual stand quite distinct from their radical confrères. In doing so they set about rewriting history in order to challenge some of the most cherished beliefs of the social order from which they sought to liberate society. They challenged the ‘founding principles’ of political authority, and condemned the foundational belief systems of political regimes. The latter, they argued, extolled the virtues of government and social order, while mischievously associating statelessness with violent social turmoil and political chaos. While anarchist praxis can best be described as a principled opposition to government that rejects all forms of authority, anarchist theory has always implied a sustained intellectual challenge to the authority and the very territorial organization of the state. Thus anarchists sought to undermine state authority, attacked the foundational principles of authoritarian rule, and criticized the political and intellectual establishment for covering their state-centred objectives beneath the mantle of objective rationality. Their greatest achievement has been their intellectual defence of the state of statelessness. Throughout their long history of anti-authoritarian struggles, anarchists have always managed to articulate a ‘vocabulary of desire’. 7 This has sustained the possibility of a stateless society throughout centuries of state formation, nation-building and imperial expansion. From the seventeenth century onwards, anarchists were to argue that cooperation and individual initiative, rather than competitive struggle and the suppression of individualism, should be the guiding