Citations:anarcho-Bolshevism

English citations of anarcho-Bolshevism and anarcho-bolshevism

1930 1961 1969 1978 1986 1992 1999 2004 2005 2009 2010 2014 2018
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Noun: anarchism with Bolshevist characteristics edit

1969, Situationist International, number 1, page 44:
Bookchinism, peculiar American variety of anarcho-bolshevism, is comprised of three main theoretical fetishes: ecology, technology and false historicism (as Bookchin’s Greek ecclesia of the future). Its effective practice is manipulative, in memory of Leninist humanism.
1978, Robert Kern, Red Years/black Years: A Political History of Spanish Anarchism, 1911-1937[1], Institute for the Study of Human Issues, →ISBN, page 3:
The FAI’s theory of anarcho-Bolshevism, its development of affinity group (party cells), and its use of workers’ councils and agricultural communes have captured the imagination of many students.
1986, Juan Gómez Casas, Anarchist Organisation: The History of the F.A.I.[2], volume 72, Black Rose Books, →ISBN, page 84:
Santillan saw clear evidence of anarcho-Bolshevism in the unions, due to the triumph of the Bolsheviks in Russia and their influence worldwide.
1999, Richard Porton, chapter 2, in Film and the Anarchist Imagination[3], Verso, →ISBN, page 81:
But when he and his comrades formed the CNT defense committee, a group composed of the anarchists’ leading military commanders, some of his admirers none the less fear that ‘anarcho-Bolshevism’ was imminent.
2004, Chris Ealham, chapter 4, in Class, Culture and Conflict in Barcelona, 1898–1937[4], Routledge, →ISBN, page 89:
Moreover, while the insurrectionary position adopted by Nosotros later became identified with the FAI, it is worth bearing in mind that, at the start of the Republic, Nosotros was not affiliated to the FAI and that many anarchists were critical of the vanguard role they ascribed to a small, dedicated minority, which they denounced as ‘anarcho-Bolshevism’.
2009, Peter Marshall, chapter 5, in Demanding the Impossible: A History of Anarchism[5], PM Press, →ISBN, page 458:
In their tactic of using their affinity groups to spearhead the revolution and direct the CNT, the FAI has also been accused of adopting a theory of ‘anarcho-Bolshevism’.
2010, Donald C. Hodges, chapter 2, in Mexican Anarchism after the Revolution[6], University of Texas Press, →ISBN, page 34:
For those whose anarcho-communism metamorphosed into anarcho-bolshevism, it was in the role of an informal vanguard that they continued as an underground of anarchist-oriented labor organizers in the postrevolutionary era.
2014, The Invisible Committee, translated by Robert Hurley, To Our Friends, page 15:
It’s noteworthy, moreover, that at the time of the insurrection of July 1936 the only ones capable of tying together all the components of the anarchist movement offensively was the group Nosotros: a marginal bunch whom the movement had suspected up to that point of “anarcho-Bolshevism,” and who a month earlier had undergone a public trial and a quasi-exclusion on the part of the FAI.

Noun: anarchism with Bolshevist sympathies edit

1930, Leon Trotsky, chapter 21, in Max Eastman, editor, The History of the Russian Revolution[7], volume 1, →ISBN, page 308:
The president of the soviet in Czaritsyn — that city was considered a nest of anarcho-Bolshevism — to a questionnaire from the centre as to the state of affairs, answered with a clean-cut phrase: “The more the garrison goes to the left, the more the everyday man goes to the right.”
1961, Robert Paul Browder, Aleksandr Fyodorovich Kerensky, editors, The Russian Provisional Government, 1917, volume 3, Stanford University Press, page 1761:
For us these limits had been marked out long ago: they start from the revolutionary-state socialists, through the yet unformed democratic groups, down to the representatives of industry and the K.D. Party—and not one step farther, either to the left to anarcho-bolshevism, or to the right to those whom Prof. Novgorodtsev so mildly defined with the words “more to the right than the K.D.”
1992, Donald Clark Hodges, Sandino’s Communism: Spiritual Politics for the Twenty-first Century, University of Texas Press, →ISBN, page 166:
We have seen how he arrived at anarcho-bolshevism and how his rupture with the Communist International led him to adopt Trincado’s rationalistic communism — a philosophy at odds with Marxism.
2005, Fiona Björling, Alexander Pereswetoff-Morath, editors, Words, Deeds and Values: The Intelligentsias in Russia and Poland During the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Department of East and Central European Studies, →ISBN, page 186:
Very soon the students organized the ‘Fighting students’ squad for the struggle against anarcho-Bolshevism’ (Boevaja studenčeskaja družina dlja bor’by s anarcho-bolševizmom), which consisted of two companies.
2018, Ángel J. Cappelletti, edited by Gabriel Palmer-Fernandez, Anarchism in Latin America[8], abridged edition, AK Press, →ISBN, section 4, page 9:
A phenomenon common in several Latin American countries between 1918 and 1923 was anarcho-Bolshevism. Following the Bolshevik revolution many anarchists in Argentina, Uruguay, Brazil, and especially Mexico supported Lenin and declared their unconditional support of the Soviet government, yet still considered themselves anarchists.