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Boleslaw
09-11-2006, 07:28 PM
http://www.holtzbrinckpublishers.com/stmartins/search/SearchBookDisplay.asp?BookKey=683367

Bakunin
The Creative Passion
Mark Leier



“The passion for destruction is a creative passion,” wrote the anarchist Mikhail Bakunin in 1842. Since then, the popular image of anarchism has been one of violence and terror. But this picture is wildly misleading, and the media has done more to obscure anarchism than to explain it. Focusing on the street fighting and confrontations with police, mainstream commentators are unable to understand what anarchism is or why a philosophy with roots in the nineteenth century has resurfaced with such power at the dawn of the new millennium. To understand anarchism, it is necessary to go beyond the caricature presented by the media. In this new biography of Mikhail Bakunin, Mark Leier traces the life and ideas of anarchism’s first major thinker, and in the process revealing the origins of the movement.

There was little in Bakunin’s background to suggest that he would grow up to be anything other than a loyal subject of the Russian Empire. Instead, he became one the most notorious radicals of the nineteenth century, devoting his life to the destruction of the tsar and feudalism, capitalism, the state, even God. In the process, he became a historical actor and political thinker whose ideas continue to influence world events.

Bakunin is of keen interest these days, though the attention paid to his image continues to obscure the man and his ideas. Using archival sources and the most recent scholarship, Leier corrects many of the popular misconceptions about Bakunin and his ideas, offering a fresh interpretation of Bakunin’s life and thoughts of use to those interested in understanding anarchism and social change. Arguing for the relevance and importance of anarchism to our present world, Leier sheds light on the nineteenth century, as well as on today’s headlines, as he examines a political philosophy that has inspired mass movements and contemporary social critics.

Mark Leier shows that the “passion for destruction” is a call to build a new world free of oppression, not a cult of violence. He argues that anarchism is a philosophy of morality and solidarity, based not on wishful thinking or naïve beliefs about the goodness of humanity but on a practical, radical critique of wealth and power. By studying Bakunin, we can learn a great deal about our own time and begin to recover a world of possibility and promise. It is often said that we are all anarchists at heart. This book explains why.



"The time for Bakunin--the real one, not the caricature--has come again, and Mark Leier has given us just the history that we need. Wonderfully written, scholarly but also packed with fascinating tales and fresh revelations, Bakunin: The Creative Passion is passion with purpose."
-- Paul Buhle, co-editor, Encyclopedia of the American Left and Wobblies! a Graphic History

“Mark Leier mounts a passionate defense of Bakunin and of his creed of anarchism. Even if you do not believe that anarchists, let alone Marxists, have the right answers, Leier’s radical tract will force you to face the question posed by the millions of the world’s poor who deserve a say in their fate, as they wait for the promised radiant future." – Andrew Mango, author of ATATURK: The Biography of the Founder of Modern Turkey



MARK LEIER teaches at Simon Fraser University, where he is the director of the Center for Labour Studies. He is the author or co-author of four books on labor history. He lives in North Vancouver, Canada.

Boleslaw
01-16-2007, 07:46 PM
Hey Worker&Parasite, have you read this?

Worker&Parasite
01-17-2007, 01:01 PM
I haven't but it sounds like an interesting read. I am trying to get hold of a collection of Bakunins Writings from a Philosophy teacher I know, to save me havign to pay for it off amazon, and am currently reading "The Struggle against the state and other essays" by Nestor Makhno. Which is a very good read.

http://ec1.images-amazon.com/images/P/0879757450.01._AA240_SCLZZZZZZZ_.jpg (http://www.amazon.co.uk/Basic-Bakunin-Writings-1869-71-Philosophy/dp/0879757450/sr=8-7/qid=1169042184/ref=sr_1_7/202-1857200-1558206?ie=UTF8&s=books)

I reccomend you get hold of God and the State by Bakunin, if you haven't read it already, as a religious individual you would probably find it quite interesting.

Vasily Zaitsev
01-17-2007, 01:26 PM
Funny, I have the pictured book on my shelf along with God and the State, Statism and Anarchy, and Marxism, Freedom, and the State.

The Makhno book you mentioned is also on the shelf and isn't nearly as good a read. Makhno was a better fighter than he was a thinker.

This thread has inspired me to take a trip down to the infoshop later today and give some hygenically challenged anarchopunks more of my money.

Worker&Parasite
01-17-2007, 01:40 PM
Funny, I have the pictured book on my shelf along with God and the State, Statism and Anarchy, and Marxism, Freedom, and the State.


You obviously didn't understand them or you'd be an anarchist.

Only joking.

The Makhno book you mentioned is also on the shelf and isn't nearly as good a read. Makhno was a better fighter than he was a thinker..

Well that's not saying much, Makhno was a magnificent fighter, the invention of the Tachanka (invented by the anarchists) and use of the Maxim machine gun was probably what one the Makhnovists so many victories.

Out if interest, which infoshop is this you go to?

Boleslaw
01-18-2007, 03:26 PM
I haven't but it sounds like an interesting read.
It is a rather interesting read, but sadly I have too little time to fully read it. Not to mention it's constantly being checked out of my local library; which makes it further harder for me to get my hands on it. :mad:

I particularly like the description given of Proudhon in this, which further enhanced my admiration for the man.



I am trying to get hold of a collection of Bakunins Writings from a Philosophy teacher I know, to save me havign to pay for it off amazon, and am currently reading "The Struggle against the state and other essays" by Nestor Makhno. Which is a very good read.

Have you read Peter Arshinov's History of the Makhnovist Movement? That was a rather interesting book. Especially the part where Arshinov describes the character of the Bolshevik movement.


I reccomend you get hold of God and the State by Bakunin, if you haven't read it already, as a religious individual you would probably find it quite interesting.

I have skimmed through it now and then. I just wonder what Bakunin would've had to say about this (http://www.thephora.net/forum/showthread.php?t=16050) ;)