Anarchism and Other Essays explained

Anarchism and Other Essays
Author:Emma Goldman
Country:United States
Language:English
Subject:Anarchism
Publisher:Mother Earth Publishing Association
Pub Date:1910
Pages:277 (first edition)
Oclc:559000182
Dewey:335.83
Congress:88114786
Wikisource:Anarchism and Other Essays

Anarchism and Other Essays (1910) is a collection of essays written by Emma Goldman, first published by Mother Earth Publishing Association. The essays outline Goldman's anarchist views on a number of subjects, most notably the oppression of women and perceived shortcomings of first wave feminism, but also prisons, political violence, sexuality, religion, nationalism and art theory. Hippolyte Havel contributed a short biography of Goldman to the anthology.[1] The essays were adapted from lectures Goldman had given on fundraising tours for her journal Mother Earth. Anarchism and Other Essays was Goldman's first published book. "The Traffic in Women" has received particular attention from feminist scholars since the book's publication.

Background

Emma Goldman, a noted anarchist agitator in the United States, published the first issue of Mother Earth in March 1906. Though she had written extensively for other periodicals, Mother Earth was her first experience with editing and publishing a political journal. Goldman funded the journal's publication through extensive lecture tours throughout the United States.[2]

Ben Reitman, Goldman's tour manager and romantic partner, suggested that she revise her lectures for publication.[3] Goldman herself was becoming frustrated with the limitations of lecturing to crowds. She believed the audiences were generally more interested in the spectacle of a controversial anarchist speaker than in the content of her lectures. "I am not sanguine enough to hope that my readers will be as numerous as those who have heard me," she wrote. "But I prefer to reach the few who really want to learn, rather than the many who come to be amused."[4]

Goldman completed the manuscript at a farm in Ossining, New York, while recovering from knee injuries. The process took two months. Alexander Berkman edited the final proofs. Upon its completion, publishers were uninterested in the collection. Reitman suggested self-publishing the book through Mother Earth's printers, who had agreed to print the book on credit.[5]

An earlier version of "The Traffic in Women", entitled "The White Slave Traffic", first appeared in Mother Earth's January 1910 edition.[6]

Contents

Reception and legacy

The collection received favorable reviews from critics upon its release. Commentators generally criticized Goldman's refusal to condemn political violence, but recommended the book to readers interested in social issues.[8] [9] Editors at the International Socialist Review criticized Goldman's title essay for its purported exaggerations. "The 'other essays' are much better than the first," they concluded, "and contain much that is worth reading.[10]

"The Traffic in Women" has been cited in feminist discussions of marriage, sexuality, and prostitution for a century following its publication.[11] [12] [13] Lori Jo Marso argues that Goldman's essays, in conjunction with her life and thought, make important contributions to ongoing debates in feminism, including around "the connections and tensions between sexuality, love and feminist politics".[14] Miriam Schneir included the essay in her anthology .[15]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Horowitz, Irving . The Anarchists . 2005 . Aldine Transaction . 0202307689 . New Brunswick . 58791188 . 266.
  2. Book: Watson, Martha . Emma Goldman . 1987 . Twayne Publishers . 978-0-8057-7494-8 . Boston . 22–23 . en.
  3. Book: Goldman, Emma . Living My Life, Vol. 1 . Dover Publications . 2012 . 978-0-486-12228-1 . Mineola, N.Y. . 470 . en . 898422772.
  4. Book: Goldman, Emma . Anarchism and Other Essays . 1910 . Mother Earth Publishing Association . 9780598839206 . New York . 48–49 . en.
  5. Goldman, Living, pp. 472-475
  6. Book: Glassgold, Peter . Anarchy! : An Anthology of Emma Goldman's Mother Earth. . Counterpoint . 2012 . 978-1-61902-140-2 . Berkeley . 113 . en . 818816870.
  7. Goldman, Anarchism, p. 4
  8. Gilman . C.P. . 1910 . Comment and Review . The Forerunner . 2 . 58.
  9. June 1910 . Books . The Pacific Unitarian . XVIII . 157.
  10. February 1911 . Literature . International Socialist Review.
  11. Book: Trafficking and Prostitution Reconsidered. Paradigm Publishers. 2012. Kempadoo. Kamala. Kamala Kempadoo . Boulder. viii. en.
  12. Pateman. Carole. 1999. What's Wrong with Prostitution?. Women's Studies Quarterly. 27. 1/2. 53–64. 40003398. 0732-1562.
  13. Book: Rubin, Gayle S.. Deviations: A Gayle Rubin Reader. Duke University Press. 2011. New York . 66–86. en.
  14. Marso . Lori Jo . A Feminist Search for Love: Emma Goldman on the Politics of Marriage, Love, Sexuality and the Feminine . Feminist Theory . 2003 . 4 . 3 . 305–320 . en . 10.1177/14647001030043004 . 143828012.
  15. Book: Schneir, Miriam . Feminism : The Essential Historical Writings . Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group . 1994 . 978-0-8041-5246-4 . New York . 305–317 . en . 881183696.