Foreword Introduction Part 1: Spaces of the History of Anarchism 1. Anarchists and the city: governance, revolution and the imagination 2. Uncovering and understanding hidden bonds: applying social field theory to the financial records of anarchist newspapers 3. The other nation: the places of the Italian anarchist press in the USA 4. Humour, violence and cruelty in late nineteenth-century anarchist culture Part 2: Early Anarchist Geographies and their Places 5. The thought of Élisée Reclus as a source of inspiration for degrowth ethos 6. Revolutions and their places: the Anarchist Geographers and the problem of nationalities in the Age of Empire (1875-1914) 7. Historicising ‘anarchist geography’: six issues for debate from a historian's point of view Part 3: Anarchist Geographies, Places and Present Challenges 8. Lived spaces of anarchy: Colin Ward’s social anarchy in action 9. Moment, Flow, Language, Non-Plan: the unique architecture of insurrection in a Brazilian urban periphery 10. Future (pre-)histories of the state: on anarchy, archaeology, and the decolonial 11. On 'Other' geographies and anarchisms
Federico Ferretti is a Lecturer in Human Geography in the School of
Geography, University College Dublin (UCD), Ireland.
Gerónimo Barrera de la Torre is a graduate student at the
University of Texas at Austin, USA.
Anthony Ince is a Lecturer in Human Geography in the School of
Geography and Planning, Cardiff University, UK.
Francisco Toro is a Lecturer in Human Geography at the Department
of Regional Geographical Analysis and Physical Geography,
University of Granada, Spain.
"Historical Geographies of Anarchism looks at both the early part ofanarchism’s evolution and speculates on its potential future(s). The book provides an overviewof strains of anarchist thought that originated and were put into practice in various locationsacross the globe. The applied nature of anarchism is striking as many chapters provide examplesof how anarchist thought is inseparable from everyday actions. The book is divided into threesections. The first covers “Spaces of the History of Anarchism”, with the second and thirdcentring around “Early Anarchist Geographies and their Places” and “Anarchist Geographies,Places and Present Challenges”. - Nathan Poirier, Antipode - A Radical Journal of Geography
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