The term anarchism derives from the Greek word ἀναρχία meaning ‘without ruler or leader, and without law’. Although the roots of the word can be traced back to Ancient Greece, anarchism as a political ideology is relatively new. Anarchism developed as a political ideology at the end of the eighteenth century at the time of the emergence of the modern State. And, as is well known, anarchism developed both a politics and a way of life that did not include the State as its compass, support and structure.
In contrast to the extensive contemporary literature about anarchist politics and ideas, this book focuses on the practices and attitudes that constitute what the author refers to as an anarchist ‘art of life’. The book draws on archival material that records the life and actions of the anarchist Emma Goldman and her associates, legal documents and writings by classical (Pierre Joseph Proudhon, Peter Krotopkin) and contemporary anarchists (David Graeber, Saul Newman, Ciarra Bottici), as well as contemporary groups such as the Clandestine Insurgent Rebel Clown Army and Occupy Wall Street. By studying the idiosyncrasies of this art of life, it argues, we are better able to appreciate how anarchism is not some future utopian oriented project, waiting to come into existence after a revolution, but rather exists in parallel to the life and politics offered by the State.
Anarchism: An Art of Living Without Law will be of interest to graduate students and academics working on critical legal theory, political theory, sociology and cultural studies.
Author(s): Elena Loizidou
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2023
Language: English
Pages: 200
Tags: Anarchism, Politics, Law, Jurisprudence, Anarchismus, Anarchie, Anarchy, Sozialism, Art, Living, Literatur, Mutual aid, Ideology, Obedience, Humanities
Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
1. Introduction
The violence of foundations and the creative force of anarchism
Art of living
2. Without law?
Introduction
Law as an aid to anarchism
Without law: hurtful, useless, wooden law
Why law? Contemporary anarchist thinkers and law
3. Disentangling the psyche: from disobedience to parrhesia
Obedience, embodied habits and psychic entanglements
Disobedience and its limits
Parrhesia as a way of life
Parrhesia, an anarchist techne of living
4. Anarchism and love
Figure One: love in a fragment
Figure Two: law and love
Figure Three: love and anarchism
Conclusion
5. Humour and the uncommon of laughter
Humour, wit, comedy, laughter
Exodus and jokes
The wit not to will
6. Mutual aid instead of conclusion
Why doesn’t mutual aid work?
Mutual aid revisited
Bibliography
Index