Anarchy 35

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Contents of No. 35

January 1964


House and home C.W. 1
Are council houses necessary? Peter Neville 2
Of course they are Caleb Williams 5
The multiple family housing unit Teddy Gold 8
In the urban jungle J.E. & A.B. 12
Self-help housing in South America   15
The Barriada: a case-history William Mangin 18
A revolutionary fable Gene Sharp 24
Cover Drawing by M. Lindsay (by courtesy of Allied Ironfounders Ltd.)


You can still get

ANARCHY 23
and ANARCHY 26


If you found this Housing number of ANARCHY interesting you may like to know that you can still get ANARCHY 23, on Housing and Helplessnes, which contained the story of the Squatters’ Movement of 1946, putting it into perspective among other historic examples of direct action for housing, as well as the experiences of a man who built his own house, Ian Nairn’s exposition of the do-it-yourself philosophy, an account of the possibilities and pitfalls of housing societies, Douglas Stuckey’s report on miners who run their own pit, a housing tour of Bethnal Green, Jack Robinson’s observations on writing on walls and Arthur Uloth’s reflections on John Rae and the Myths of War.

You would probably be interested too, in Brian Richardson’s article “What has it got to do with the bomb?” in ANARCHY 26, which discussed the relationship between housing struggles and the campaign against the bomb. This issue also contained Tom McAlpine’s explanation of the ideas behind the Factory for Peace, (which has since started production), Ian Sainsbury’s sardonic exposures of the mechanics and finances of salesmanship “How to sell your way to Slavery” and Richard Drinnon’s really remarkable study of “Thoreau’s Politics of the Upright Man”.

Send one-and-nine or thirty cents for each of these issues to Freedom Press, 17a Maxwell Road, London SW6.


Read it each week in FREEDOM
OUT OF THIS WORLD


FREEDOM PRESS PUBLICATIONS

SELECTIONS FROM ‘FREEDOM’

Vol 2 1952: Postscript to Posterity
Vol 3 1953: Colonialism on Trial
Vol 4 1954: Living on a Volcano
Vol 5 1955: The Immoral Moralists
Vol 6 1956: Oil and Troubled Waters
Vol 7 1957: Year One—Sputnik Era
Vol 8 1958: Socialism in a Wheelchair
Vol 9 1959: Print, Press & Public
Vol 10 1960: The Tragedy of Africa
Vol 11 1961: The People in the Street

Each volume: paper 7/6 cloth 10/6

The paper edition of the Selections is available to readers of FREEDOM at 5/6 post free.


HERBERT READ
Poetry & Anarchism paper 2/6


ALEX COMFORT
Delinquency 6d.


BAKUNIN
Marxism, Freedom and the State 5/-


PAUL ELTZBACHER
Anarchism (Seven Exponents of the Anarchist Philosophy) cloth 21/-


CHARLES MARTIN
Towards a Free Society 2/6


PETER KROPOTKIN
Revolutionary Government 3d.


RUDOLF ROCKER
Nationalism and culture cloth 21/-


JOHN HEWETSON
Sexual Freedom for the Young 6d.
Ill-Health, Poverty and the State cloth 2/6 paper 1/-


VOLINE
Nineteen-Seventeen (The Russian Revolution Betrayed) cloth 12/6
The Unknown Revolution (Kronstadt 1921, Ukraine 1918-21) clith 12/6


TONY GIBSON
Youth for Freedom 2/-
Who will do the Dirty Work? 2d.
Food Production & Population 6d.


E. A. GUTKIND
The Expanding Environment (illustrated) boards 8/6


Marie-Louise Berneri Memorial Committee publications:
Marie-Louise Berneri, 1918-1949: A tribute
cloth 5/-
Journey Through Utopia
cloth 16/- paper 7/6
Neither East Nor West
paper 7/6


Freedom Press 17a Maxwell Rd London

SW6

Printed by Express Printers, London, E.1.



Other issues of ANARCHY

  1. Sex-and-Violence; Galbraith.  (out of print)
  2. Workers’ Control
  3. What does anarchism mean today?
  4. De-institutionalisation; Conflicting strains in anarchism.
  5. 1936: the Spanish Revolution.  (out of print)
  6. Anarchy and the Cinema.  (out of print)
  7. Adventure Playgrounds.  (out of print)
  8. Anarchists and Fabians; Action Anthropology; Eroding Capitalism.
  9. Prison.
  10. Sillitoe’s Key to the Door; MacInnes on Crime; Augustus John’s Utopia; Committee of 100.
  11. Paul Goodman; Neill on Education.
  12. Who are the anarchists?
  13. Direct Action.  (out of print)
  14. Disobedience.
  15. The work of David Wills.
  16. Ethics of anarchism; Africa.
  17. Towards a lumpenproletariat.
  18. Comprehensive Schools.
  19. Theatre: anger and anarchy.
  20. Non-violence as a reading of history; Freud, anarchism and experiments in living.
  21. Secondary modern.
  22. Cranston’s Dialogue on anarchy.
  23. Housing; Squatters.
  24. The Community of Scholars.
  25. Technology, science, anarchism.
  26. CND; Salesmanship; Thoreau.
  27. Talking about youth.
  28. The future of anarchism.
  29. The Spies for Peace Story.
  30. The community workshop.
  31. Self-organising systems; beatniks.
  32. Crime.
  33. Alex Comfort’s anarchism.
  34. Science fiction.


Universities and Colleges

ANARCHY can be obtained in term-time from:—

Oxford: John Whitfielld, New College.
Cambridge: Nicholas Bohm, St. John’s College.
Birmingham: Anarchist Group.
Sussex: Paul Littlewood, Students’ Union.
London: University College Socialist Society Bookstall.
London School of Economics: Watch out for seller
Hull: University Bookshop.


American University Agents

ANARCHY can be obtained in term-time from:—

Columbia University, New York: W. L. Goring, 928 Livingston Hall.
Roosevelt University, Chicago: Bernard Marzalek 5838 South Claremont, Chicago 36.


Subscribe to ANARCHY

Single copies 2s. (30c.). Annual subscription (12 issues) 25s. ($3.50). By airmail 47s. ($7.00).

Joint annual subscription with freedom, the anarchist weekly (which readers of anarchy will find inispensable 40s. ($6.00).

Cheques, POs and Money Orders should be made out to

FREEDOM PRESS
17a Maxwell Road London SW6 England
Tel. RENown 3736