Sunday, 16 April 2017

On Anarchism

This book, an edited selection* of title-fitting work by esteemed intellectual (as well-known for his radical political activism as for his revolutionary work in the field of linguistics) Noam Chomsky, serves as an accessible, engaging, and surprisingly broad (for such a slim volume - Noam knows how to pack his sentences) introduction to its titular family of sociopolitical viewpoints - anarchism. Now, anarchism has an unfair baggage of connotations in the modern industrialised world, largely as a result of intensive efforts by established elites to discredit and marginalise those who align themselves with it to clip the wings of any movement of the masses that may take on board its core, which is truly dangerous to those established elites: underlying anarchism is a radical skepticism to all authority structures. If relationships entailing power inequalities** cannot be morally justified, which in most cases they cannot, they should be dismantled and replaced by structures in which all participants have equal stakes. Anarchy is the fullest and truest expression of democracy. This book is one I would recommend for any progressive leftist types - even if you don't identify yourself as an anarchist, there is definitely much in there you'll be sympathetic to, and engaging with a thinker as heavy-hitting yet accessible as Noam on the topic will leave you both with a revitalised spirit for activism and some new thought-provoking angles from which to consider yourself, your communities, your society, and the unjust power structures we struggle against.



* The selected bits include:
  • Some introductory notes discussing anarchism's place in modern politics
  • Excerpts from Understanding Power, discussing in more detail how anarchism challenges and demands participatory change in existing political structures
  • Part of a book called Objectivity and Liberal Scholarship, in which Noam reviews mainstream academic assessments of the Spanish civil war's revolutionary anarchist movement, cross-referencing the earwax out of it to demonstrate how mainstream accounts all-too-often airbrush over/out the positive popular role played by this movement, and what this implies about political-economic elite power over academia that anarchism should be sidelined so
  • Extracts from an interview with Harry Kreisler about how Noam came to develop his political consciousness
  • An incredibly juicy little essay on Language and Freedom


** Edit - April 28th: I've just watched Noam Chomsky's documentary Requiem for the American Dream. It's on Netflix and is definitely worth a watch - he walks us through how over the last century these elite forces have shifted the blame, indeed even the public attention, away from themselves, and following the onset of neoliberalism continue to ever-further secure their stranglehold on wealth and power, with ruinous consequences for the rest of society. It's like watching an enormous conspiracy theory play out, backed up by What Actually Happened In, Like, History.

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