
Anarchy and the Sex Question
Description
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For Emma Goldman, the "High Priestess of Anarchy," anarchism was "a living force in the affairs of our life, constantly creating new conditions," but "the most elemental force in human life" was something still more basic and vital: sex.
"The Sex Question" emerged for Goldman in multiple contexts, and we find her addressing it in writing on subjects as varied as women's suffrage, "free love," birth control, the "New Woman," homosexuality, marriage, love, and literature. It was at once a political question, an economic question, a question of morality, and a question of social relations.
But her analysis of that most elemental force remained fragmentary, scattered across numerous published (and unpublished) works and conditioned by numerous contexts. Anarchy and the Sex Question draws together the most important of those scattered sources, uniting both familiar essays and archival material, in an attempt to recreate the great work on sex that Emma Goldman might have given us. In the process, it sheds light on Goldman's place in the history of feminism.
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Persons
Emma Goldman (1869-1940) emigrated from Russia to the United States in 1885, just as the international anarchist movement was forming, and soon became among the best-known figures associated with anarchism. The remainder of her life was speaking, writing, publishing, and agitating, despite legal harassment, imprisonment, and deportation. Many years after her death, Goldman's ideas remain important influences among both anarchists and feminists. Her works include Anarchism and Other Essays (1910), My Disillusionment in Russia (1923), and Living My Life (1931).
Content
- Front Cover
- Title Page
- Half Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Introduction
- Anarchy and the Sex Question
- What Is There in Anarchy for Women?
- The New Woman
- The Tragedy of Woman's Emancipation
- The White Slave Traffic
- Woman Suffrage
- Marriage and Love
- The Hypocrisy of Puritanism
- Mary Wollstonecraft, Her Tragic Life and Her assionate Struggle for Freedom
- Jealousy: Causes and a Possible Cure
- Victims of Morality
- The Social Aspects of Birth Control
- Again the Birth Control Agitation
- The Woman Suffrage Chameleon
- Louise Michel
- Emma's Love Views
- Feminism's Fight Not Vain
- The Element of Sex in Life
- Sources
- About the Author and Editor
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