And what about this 'brief history?' Has it been too celebratory? Probably. A journal which features the word 'anarchist' in its name has been in continuous publication for the past fifteen years, and shows no signs of stopping. In my book, that is cause for celebration. Are there aspects of the journal's history which should be approached with a more critical eye? Perhaps, but I leave that for the next history, and the next historian. Diversity of engagement means, among other things, that there are as many versions of "Anarchist Studies" as there are readers of "Anarchist Studies". So come on, all you cyborgs and Situationists, you ecologists and egoists, you punks and perverts. Who will narrate the next version?
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Für höhere Schule und Studium
ISBN-13
978-1-905007-71-4 (9781905007714)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
A brief history of Anarchist Studies (so far)Lewis CallAnarchist Studies: what should be done?Brian MartinFacilitating diversity: some thoughts on being a book reviews editorJon PurkisSuch, such were the joys: confessions of an anarcho-editorialistSharif GemieEpilogueRuth KinnaFEATURESWhat is Anarchist Literary Theory?Jesse Cohn'Deleuze, Derrida and Anarchism'N. J. JunLysander Spooner's critique of the social contractSteve J. ShoneREVIEWSRob Knowles, Political Economy from Below - Economic Thought in Communitarian Anarchism, 1840 - 1914Reviewed by John QuailMichael Brocken, The British Folk Revival (1944-2002)Reviewed by James 'Bar' BowenWayne Burns, Resisting Our Culture of Conformity: In the Hills of Southern Ohio and in the Groves of AcademeReviewed by David GoodwayMark Leier, Bakunin: The Creative PassionReviewed by Brian Morris