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Why are you an anarchist?
(piefed.zip)
Discuss anarchist praxis and philosophy. Don't take yourselves too seriously.
Other anarchist comms
Join the matrix room for some real-time discussion.
books
but i was young before internets contaminated every corner of every skull
do people ever anarchise in older ages? Can a 40 year old start thinking that maybe we can be better off living in societies without archs?
Of course you can. Age doesn't matter. Anyone can get into anti authoritarian ideas at any age
I'm 30-something and I'm just now figuring it out lol
In my younger years I was a "libertarian" before figuring out capitalism was also a huge part of the problem.
Same :3
Check out That Dang Dad on YouTube. Not sure his exact age or ideology, but he was a cop and proud of it until a few years ago and then came to his senses in a big way. He has some great videos discussing that transition.
What books do you recommend
The Conquest of Bread is a great layman explainer where a smart economist introduces to you many examples of how mutual aid and anarchist organization are not only practical but often essential, natural, and superior. It's examples are outdated (And some of it's predictions were prophetic!) but it's points are all preserved to this day.
Bullshit Jobs is a pop economism / sociology book where an anthropologist walks you through the absurdity of our modern economy, specifically our systems of employment and work, to build a case that our system is designed around backward incentives.
God and the State is a fiery call to action by one of if not the most successful anarchist political organizers in history. It is a brief but powerful calling out and condemnation of hierarchy and nation states, written before the author's falling out with Marx and organized communism (Disclaimer: The author was slightly racist, even for his time).
The Mars Triology is a sprawling three-novel scifi epic about the multigenerational colonization of Mars, featuring a rotating but interrelated ensemble cast who basically act as avatars for the various political tendencies they each represent. The author develops a "future history" of humanity, the complexity of which could go toe-to-toe with Tolkien, developing a wild pallette of libertarian, socialist, future-economist tendencies that fans out over several centuries and really gets the gears of your imagination clanking.
These are all selected as introductions to ideas. I have many more recommends but they're less "dip your toes in".
Wow thank you for the list! I will get reading.
i started reading about anarchism at a very early age (14, 15?) after encountering a 2 page description of Nietzsche, Nihilism and Anarchism in an encyclopedia. I wasn't in uni yet and back then only universities had internet connection, so i had to find books.
From Proudhon to Anarcho-Communists to Stirner to even Anarcho-Capitalists(!) i've read all. Add some Dadaism and later Situationists (and after more time their inheritors Tiqqun). I thought I've met Bookchin's ideas late but apparently I've met him early through Ursula K. Le Guin (who wrote a wonderful fiction about an anarchist diaspora settling on the moon of a planet).
Not to forget thinkers/philosophers/poets (like Guattari for example, among many others) who wrote the most liberating lines without any anarchist consideration in mind.
I can't recommend books but a method: Find books that interest you and follow the citations upstream towards other books (or downstream towards their spawns or inheritors).
Now that we have Wikipedia, we're lucky to click/touch through articles and get books downloaded or delivered to our doors (if we're lucky to have doors).
Good luck to you.
I found Bakunin, Kropotkin, Goldman, and Bookchin all around my 30th year. We can always change and advance.