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The volume documents, and makes an original contribution to, an
astonishing period in twentieth-century philosophy the progress of
Arne Naess's ecophilosophy from its inception to the present. It
includes Naess's most crucial polemics with leading thinkers, drawn
from sources as diverse as scholarly articles, correspondence, TV
interviews and unpublished exchanges. The book testifies to the
skeptical and self-correcting aspects of Naess's vision, which has
deepened and broadened to include third world and feminist
perspectives. Philosophical Dialogues is an essential addition to
the literature on environmental philosophy.
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Toward an Ecological Society
Murray Bookchin; Introduction by Dan Chodorkoff
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R533
R443
Discovery Miles 4 430
Save R90 (17%)
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Murray Bookchin has been a dynamic revolutionary propagandist since
the 1930s when, as a teenager, he orated before socialist crowds in
New York City and engaged in support work for those fighting Franco
in the Spanish Civil War.
Now, for the first time in book form, this volume presents a series
of exciting and engaged interviews with, and essays from, the
founder of social ecology.
This expansive collection ranges over, amongst others, Bookchin's
account of his teenage years as a young Communist during the Great
Depression, his experiences of the 1960s and reflections on that
decade's lessons, his vision of a libertarian communist society,
libertarian politics, the future of anarchism, and the unity of
theory and practice. He goes on to assess the crisis of radicalism
today and defends the need for a revolutionary Left. Finally, he
states what is to be valued in both anarchism and Marxism in
building such a Left and offers guidelines for forming a new
revolutionary social movement.
The seminal history of Spanish anarchism: from its earliest
inception to the organizations that claimed over two million
members on the eve of the 1936 Revolution. Hailed as a masterpiece,
it includes a new prefatory essay by the author.
"I've read "The Spanish Anarchists" with the excitement of learning
something new. It's solidly researched, lucidly written, and
admirably fair-minded... Murray Bookchin is that rare bird today, a
historian." --Dwight MacDonald
"I have learned a great deal from this book. It is a rich and
fascinating account... Most important, it has a wonderful spirit of
revolutionary optimism that connects the Spanish anarchists with
our own time." --Howard Zinn
Murray Bookchin has written widely on politics, history, and
ecology. His books "To Remember Spain: The Anarchist And
Syndicalist Revolution Of 1936," T"he Ecology of Freedom,"
"Post-Scarcity-Anarchism," "The Ecology of Freedom," and "Social
Anarchism or Lifestyle Anarchism: An Unbridgeable Chasm"--are all
published by AK Press.
In the essays that make up this book, Murray Bookchin places the
Spanish anarchist and anarcho-syndicalist movements of the 1930s in
the context of revolutionary worker's movements of the pre-World
War II era. These articles describe, analyze, and evaluate the last
great proletarian revolution of the past two centuries. They form
indispensable supplements to Bookchin's larger work, "The Spanish
Anarchists: The Heroic Years, 1868-1936." Read together, these
works constitute a highly informative and theoretically significant
assessment of the anarchist and anarcho-syndicalist movements in
Spain. They are invaluable for any reader concerned with the place
of the Spanish Revolution in history and with the accomplishments,
insights, and failings of the anarcho-syndicalist movements.
"The very notion of the domination of nature by man stems from
the very real domination of human by human." With this succinct
formulation, Murray Bookchin launches his most ambitious work, "The
Ecology of Freedom." An engaging and extremely readable book of
breathtaking scope, its inspired synthesis of ecology, anthropology
and political theory traces our conflicting legacies of hierarchy
and freedom from the first emergence of human culture to today's
globalized capitalism, constantly pointing the way to a sane,
sustainable ecological future.
Murray Bookchin, cofounder of the Institute for Social Ecology,
has been an active voice in the ecology and anarchist movements for
more than 40 years. The author of numerous books and articles, he
lives in Burlington, Vermont.
This book asks - and tries to answer - several basic questions that affect all Leftists today. Will anarchism remain a revolutionary social movement or become a chic boutique lifestyle subculture? Will its primary goals be the complete transformation of a hierarchical, class, and irrational society into a libertarian communist one? Or will it become an ideology focused on personal well-being, spiritual redemption, and self-realization within the existing society? In an era of privatism, kicks, introversion, and postmodernist nihilism, Murray Bookchin forcefully examines the growing nihilistic trends that threaten to undermine the revolutionary tradition of anarchism and co-opt its fragments into a harmless personalistic, yuppie ideology of social accommodation that presents no threat to the existing powers that be. This small book, tightly reasoned and documented, should be of interest to all radicals in the "postmodern age", socialists as well as anarchists, for whom the Left seems in hopeless disarray.
In this scholarly critique, Murray Bookchin sets out his ideas
about the nature of community.;Bookchin presents resounding
arguments suggesting that the tension between rural and urban
societies can be a vital source of human creativity, potentially
enabling the power of the individual and restoring the positive
values and quality of urban life.;Tracing the history of the city
from pre-history through the Ancient Greek "polis" to the medieval
city state, Bookchin reclaims the idea of the city as a major
creative force in our civilization. Advocating a new approach to
politics, this work offers a case for a new municipal agenda
revitalizing citizenship and city life.
From Athens to New York, recent mass movements around the world
have challenged austerity and authoritarianism with expressions of
real democracy. For more than forty years, Murray Bookchin
developed these democratic aspirations into a new left politics
based on popular assemblies, influencing a wide range of political
thinkers and social movements. With a foreword by the best-selling
author of The Dispossessed, Ursula K. Le Guin, The Next Revolution
brings together Bookchin's essays on freedom and direct democracy
for the first time, offering a bold political vision that can move
us from protest to social transformation. A pioneering voice in the
ecology and anarchist movements, he is the author of The Ecology of
Freedom and Post-Scarcity Anarchism among many other books.
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