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Peter KropotkinFrom Prince to RebelGeorge Woodcock, Ivan AvakumovicSpecial addition to The Collected Works of Peter Kropotkin |
| Anarchism- the concept of a society without
authority, of a civil order without any form of
constitution or government- has fascinated people almost
as long as we have possessed the power of speculative
thought. In the general history of anarchism, the name of
Peter Kropotkin dominates. Born in 1842 into an ancient military family of Russian princes, Kropotkin was selected as a child for the elite Corps of Pages by Tsar Nicholas I himself. Shortly before his death in 1921, he had moved so far from his aristocratic beginnings and attained such stature as a libertarian leader that he could write with impunity to Lenin, Vladimir Ilyich, your concrete actions are completely unworthy of the ideas you pretend to hold. Woodcock and Avakumovics biography, From Prince to Rebel, details the life that flowed between these two points in time. It surveys and analyses the most significant aspects of Kropotkins life and thought: his formative years in Russia, 1842-1876, and the origins of his anarchist thinking (military service in eastern Siberia, the influence of the works of Proudhon and Bakunin, his role in the Chaikovsky Circle); his years as an émigré in western Europe, 1876-1917, and the ripening of his political though (editor of Le Revolte, his views on marxist socialism); and his last years in the Soviet Union, 1917-1921, the revolution and civil war, and his meeting and correspondence with Lenin. Among the recent works of George Woodcock, a well-known Canadian author, are biographies of Godwin and Proudhon (Black Rose Books). Ivan Avakumovic is Professor of History at the University of British Columbia and the author of History of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia. Table of Contents
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490 pages, index, illustrated
Paperback ISBN: 0-921689-60-8 $24.99
Hardcover ISBN: 0-921689-61-6 $53.99
