Anarchy 89

From Anarchy
Revision as of 17:30, 10 April 2018 by 172.103.242.148 (talk)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Contents of No. 89

July 1968


Reflections on the revolution in France John Vane 193
Overtaken by events: a Paris journal Roy Prior 200
I am a megaphone Daniel Cohn-Bendit 214
Whitsun in the streets P.B. 221
Cover by Rufus Segar  


Paris: May 1968

This pamphlet describes the events in the streets of Paris, at the Renault works, the Sorbonne “soviet”, the propaganda section at the Centre Censier, the march to Billancourt on May 16th, and it documents the changing line of the French CP and the CGT, and draws conclusions for the future.

1s. 3d. post free from Solidarity, c/o Heather Russell, 53a Westmoreland Road, Bromley, Kent.


  The black flag that flew last week above the tumultuous student disorders of Paris stood for a philosophy that the modern world has all but forgotten: anarchy. Few of the students who riot in France, Germany or Italy—or in many another country—would profess outright allegiance to anarchy, but its basic tenets inspire many of their leaders. Germany’s “Red Rudi” Dutschke and France’s “Red Danny” Cohn-Bendit openly espouse anarchy. “In theory,” says West German Political Scientist Wolfgang Abendroth, “the students are a species of Marxists, but in practice they are anarchists.” Not since the anarchist surge in the Spanish Civil War has the Western world seen a movement so enthusiastically devoted to the destruction of law, order and society in the name of unlimited individual freedom.
time magazine, 24.5.68.

Anarchy next month:

Student Anarchy


Other issues of “Anarchy”:

Please note: Issues 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 12, 13, 20, 26, 28, 37, 38, 66 are out of print.


Vol. 1. 1961: 1. Sex-and-Violence; 2. Work­ers’ con­trol; 3. What does anarch­ism mean today?; 4. De­in­sti­tu­tion­isa­tion; 5. Spain; 6. Cinema; 7. Ad­venture play­ground; 8. An­thropo­logy; 9. Prison; 10. Indus­trial de­central­isa­tion.


Vol. 2. 1962: 11. Paul Goodman, A. S. Neill; 12. Who are the anarch­ists?; 13. Di­rect ac­tion; 14. Dis­obedi­ence; 15. David Wills; 16. Ethics of anarch­ism; 17. Lumpen­pro­letar­iat; 18. Com­pre­hens­ive schools; 19. Theatre; 20. Non-violence; 21. Second­ary modern; 22. Marx and Bakunin.


Vol. 3. 1963: 23. Squat­ters; 24. Com­mun­ity of scholars; 25. Cyber­net­ics; 26. Thoreau; 27. Youth; 28. Future of anarch­ism; 29. Spies for peace; 30. Com­mun­ity work­shop; 31. Self-organ­ising sys­tems; 32. Crime; 33. Alex Comfort; 34. Science fic­tion.


Vol. 4. 1964: 35. Housing; 36. Police; 37. I won’t vote; 38. Notting­ham; 39. Homer Lane; 40. Unions; 41. Land; 42. India; 43. Parents and teach­ers; 44. Trans­port; 45. The Greeks; 46. Anarch­ism and his­tori­ans.


Vol. 5. 1965: 47. Free­dom in work; 48. Lord of the flies; 49. Auto­ma­tion; 50. Anarch­ist out­look; 51. Blues, pop, folk; 52. Limits of paci­fism; 53. After school; 54. Buber, Landauer, Muhsam; 55. Mutual aid; 56. Women; 57. Law; 58. State­less so­ci­eties.


Vol. 6. 1966: 59. White problem; 60. Drugs; 61. Cre­at­ive vandal­ism; 62. Organ­isa­tion; 63. Volun­tary serv­itude; 64. Mis­spent youth; 65. De­re­volu­tion­isa­tion; 66. Provo; 67. USA; 68. Class and anarch­ism; 69. Ecology; 70. Liber­tarian psy­chi­atry.


Vol. 7. 1967: 71. So­cio­logy of school; 72. Strike City, USA; 73. Street School; 74. Anarch­ism and real­ity; 75. Im­pro­vised drama; 76. 1984; 77. Anarch­ist group hand­book; 78. Liber­at­ory tech­no­logy; 79. Latin Amer­ica; 80. Work­ers’ con­trol; 81. Russian anarch­ists; 82. Braehead School.


Vol. 8. 1968: 83. Tenants take over; 84. Poverty; 85. Anarch­ist con­vers­a­tions; 86. Fisher­men; 87. Penal Sys­tem; 88. Waste­land culture; 89. France; 90. Stu­dent re­volt.


Subscribe to “Anarchy”:

Single copies 2s. (30c.). Annual sub­scrip­tion (12 issues) 26s. ($3.50). By air­mail 47s. ($7.00). Joint an­nual sub­scrip­tion with freedom, the anarch­ist weekly (which read­ers of anarchy will find in­dis­pens­able) 50s. ($7.50). Cheques, P.O.s and Money Orders should be made out to FREEDOM PRESS, 84a White­chapel High Street, London, E.1, England.


Printed by Express Printers, London, E.1