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The ABC of Anarchism
by Emma Goldman,Alexander Berkman,Paul Avrich

ISBN: 0486433692
Dover Publications Price: $24.95
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A gifted writer for the anarchist movement, Alexander Berkman left Russia for the United States in 1888 when he was eighteen. Thirty-one years later, after serving a prison term for an attempted assassination, he was expelled to the Soviet Union, a country which he eventually renounced. But before his repudiation of the Soviet system, Berkman attempted to answer some of the charges made against anarchism and to present its case clearly and intelligently. This book, first published in 1929, is the result of those efforts.
Thorough and well stated, The ABC of Anarchism is today widely regarded as a classic declaration of the movement's goals and methods. For those who have questions about anarchism, Berkman provides lucid answers. In conversational tones, he discusses society as it existed in the early twentieth century; why in his opinion, anarchy was necessary; the myths surrounding it; and necessary preparations for its successful implementation.
Of the book, Emma Goldman said: "People need a primer of Anarchism—an ABC, as it were, that would teach them the rudimentary principles of Anarchism and whet their appetites for something more profound. [The book] was intended to serve this purpose. That it has fulfilled its purpose no one who has read [it] will deny."
Reprint of Now and After: The ABC of Communist Anarchism, the Vanguard Press, New York, 1929.

Table of Contents for The ABC of Anarchism
Part One Now
Chapter I What Do You Want Out of Life?
Chapter II The Wage System
Chapter III Law and Government
Chapter IV How the System Works
Chapter V Unemployment
Chapter VI War
Chapter VII Church and School
Chapter VIII Justice
Chapter IX Can the Church Help You?
Chapter X Reformer and Politician
Chapter XI The Trade Union
Chapter XII Whose Is the Power?
Chapter XIII Socialism
Chapter XIV The February Revolution
Chapter XV Between February and October
Chapter XVI The Bolsheviki
Chapter XVII Revolution and Dictatorship
Chapter XVIII The Dictatorship at Work
Part Two Anarchism
Chapter XIX Is Anarchism Violence?
Chapter XX What Is Anarchism?
Chapter XXI Is Anarchy Possible?
Chapter XXII Will Communist Anarchism Work?
Chapter XXIII Non-Communist Anarchism
Part Three The Social Revolution
Chapter XXIV Why Revolution
Chapter XXV The Idea Is the Thing
Chapter XXVI Preparation
Chapter XXVII Organization of Labor for the Social Revolution
Chapter XXVIII Principles and Practice
Chapter XXIX Consumption and Exchange
Chapter XXX Production
Chapter XXXI Defense of the Revolution