Changes

From TheBookbag
Jump to navigationJump to search
no edit summary
Not for a general readership, but with a possible audience outside the strictest academia, ''Against All Authority'' is indeed as its author wished, a valuable opening in the exploration of the intersection between anarchist ideology and literary production. It made me want to re-read Le Guin's ''Dispossesed'' and led me to the fascinating offerings of the [http://www.akpress.org/ AK Press].
[[:Category:Noam Chomsky|Noam Chomsky]] is the poster-child of North American anarcho-syndicalism and a required reading for anybody interested in revolutionary thought. [[:Category:John Pilger|John Pilger]] made it his life's task to offer stories of the dispossessed and forgotten crushed by the global cogs of power. [[:Category:Ursula K Le Guin|Le Guin]] is worth reading regardless of political persuasions. One author that very openly explores political options – including a lot of anarchist but not particularly feminist versions - is the Scottish speculative fiction writer [[:Category:Ken MacLeod|Ken MacLeod]] although we don't have reviews of the ''Fall Revolution'' series in which the political speculation is at its most vigorous. Speaking of Scottish sci-fi, [[:Category:Ian Iain M Banks|Iain M. Banks']] Culture presents a world with a strong anarchist streak.
{{amazontext|amazon=1845402375}} {{waterstonestext|waterstones=7979366}}
 
{{commenthead}}
 
 
[[Category:Popular Science]]

Navigation menu