Free Shipping For orders over $35
by Emma Goldman (Author)
Anarchism and Other Essays is Emma Goldman's fierce defence of individual liberty, free speech, women's autonomy, labour radicalism, and resistance to state and social control. First published in 1910, the collection presents Goldman at the height of her powers as a public lecturer and revolutionary essayist, arguing against government coercion, militarism, prisons, compulsory morality, religious authority, and the economic systems that reduce human life to obedience and labour. Project Gutenberg describes the book as Goldman's first collection of essays, adapted from her lecture work, covering anarchism, women's oppression, feminism, prisons, political violence, sexuality, religion, and nationalism.
Goldman's writing remains powerful because it is not abstract political theory alone. These essays are arguments made under pressure, written by a woman who understood that ideas about freedom, marriage, work, patriotism, prisons, and sexuality had immediate consequences in ordinary lives. Her positions were radical in her own time and remain challenging now: she rejected both state authority and passive respectability, insisting that political freedom meant little without personal, economic, intellectual, and sexual freedom. For readers of anarchist theory, feminist history, free speech debates, labour radicalism, political philosophy, and early twentieth-century social criticism, Anarchism and Other Essays is one of the essential documents of American radical thought.