Anarchist Bibliography, please? (was Re: Deconstructing an Institutional Slander...)

juan juan.g71 at gmail.com
Thu Aug 4 17:34:33 PDT 2016


On Thu, 4 Aug 2016 04:00:47 -0300
Cecilia Tanaka <cecilia.tanaka at gmail.com> wrote:


> I was thinking about asking you some suggestions of good anarchist
> readings, because I made some searches and  - wow! -  the
> bibliography is really huge.  

	Yes, and I only know a small fraction of it...

> I need some help to separate the wheat
> from the shaft, please.  

	I can recommend stuff I like and I know is good, but there may
	be other good stuff I don't know and am missing. Anyway, having
	done the limited-liability, standard disclaimer...


	Bakunin is pretty good. He goes to the heart of anti
	authoritarian philosophy mocking the authority of the state,
	religion, 'science' and society.

	https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/michail-bakunin-man-society-and-freedom.html
	
-------

	Lysander Spooner (a natural rights lawyer)

	http://www.lysanderspooner.org/works/

	http://www.lysanderspooner.org/s/NO-TREASONn6.pdf
	http://www.lysanderspooner.org/s/NATURAL-LAW.pdf

------
	
	Gustave de Molinari - An economist/liberal who proposed
	to get rid of the state in 1849. 

	http://panarchy.org/molinari/molinari.html

	(1849) De la production de la sécurité [Français]
	http://panarchy.org/molinari/securite.html 
	(1849) On the Production of Security [English]
	http://panarchy.org/molinari/security.html

	(1849) The Evenings of the rue Saint-Lazare - Eleventh Evening

	[English] http://panarchy.org/molinari/eleven.html

	Whole book in french : 
	Les Soirées de la rue Saint-Lazare Entretiens sur les lois
	économiques et défense de la propriété

	http://herve.dequengo.free.fr/Molinari/Molinari.htm
	http://herve.dequengo.free.fr/Molinari/SRSL/SRSL_0.htm

------

	Voluntary socialism; a sketch Tandy, Francis Dashwood
	https://archive.org/details/voluntarysociali00tandrich

	That one is interesting because what Tandy calls 'voluntary
	socialism' is rather close to what today is called 'market
	anarchism'.

	In Tandy's 'socialism' there are private firms whose job is to
	defend person and property...which is pure blasphemy for
	ordinary commies. 

------

	Another interesting economist/liberal, 

	Thomas Hodgskin -  The Natural and Artificial Right of Property
	Contrasted [1832] 

	http://oll.libertyfund.org/titles/hodgskin-the-natural-and-artificial-right-of-property-contrasted/simple
	
	(I'm not sure if Hodgskin strictly belongs to the anarchist
	category. I had some quotes that suggested so, but I can't find
	them now. Anyway he's pretty radical and was plagiarized
	by marx)


------


	If more authors come to mind, I'll add them.



> Or a guide "Advanced Anarchism for
> Dummies".  I know only the baby steps, sorry.  :(
> 
> I asked Steve some suggestions in private, but it's better to ask
> publicly, so more people can profit the clues.  Oh, you know, he
> loves books, uses cute emoticons and makes oink oink.  He's a good
> reference for me, hahaha!!  ;)
> 
> Tender kisses for all of you!  <3
> 
> Ceci





More information about the cypherpunks mailing list