Knowledge (XXG)

The General Idea of the Revolution in the Nineteenth Century

Source đź“ť

85:
The central theme of the book is the historical necessity of revolution, and the impossibility of preventing it. Even the forces of reaction produce revolution by making the revolution more conscious of itself, as the reactionaries resort to ever more brutal methods to suppress the inevitable.
101:. Railways and large industry should be given to the workers themselves. His vision of a future is a society made up of self-governing, democratic organizations, with no central authority controlling them. 90:
that creates the need for government, and that revolutionaries must change society by changing its economic basis. Then the authoritarian form of government will become superfluous.
78:
of 3,000 copies soon selling out, with a second edition following in August. At the time, Proudhon was still serving the last year of a prison sentence begun in 1849, for criticizing
170: 141: 160: 165: 110: 114: 56: 48: 97:
be turned into a 'Bank of Exchange', an autonomous democratic institution rather than a state-controlled
63:, and local associations, governed by contractual law. The ideas of the book later became the basis of 60: 136: 17: 118: 36: 122: 94: 64: 154: 75: 79: 52: 51:. The book portrays a vision of an ideal society where frontiers are taken down, 87: 68: 44: 71:
theory, and the work is now considered a classic of anarchist philosophy.
98: 32:
The General Idea of the Revolution in the Nineteenth Century
137:
General Idea of the Revolution in the Nineteenth Century
86:
Proudhon stresses that it is the exploitative nature of
145: 43:) is an influential manifesto written in 1851 by the 59:or law of government, except for power residing in 27:
Manifesto written in 1851 by Pierre-Joseph Proudhon
41:Idée générale de la révolution au XIXe siècle 8: 115:"The General Idea of Proudhon's Revolution" 7: 74:It was published in July 1851, its 25: 18:The General Idea of the Revolution 55:abolished, and where there is no 171:Works by Pierre-Joseph Proudhon 1: 140:1923 English translation by 187: 80:Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte 161:1851 non-fiction books 49:Pierre-Joseph Proudhon 40: 166:Books about anarchism 142:John Beverly Robinson 93:He proposes that the 146:Fair Use Repository 82:as a reactionary. 57:central authority 16:(Redirected from 178: 119:Anarchy Archives 21: 186: 185: 181: 180: 179: 177: 176: 175: 151: 150: 132: 107: 28: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 184: 182: 174: 173: 168: 163: 153: 152: 149: 148: 131: 130:External links 128: 127: 126: 123:Pitzer College 111:Graham, Robert 106: 103: 95:Bank of France 26: 24: 14: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 183: 172: 169: 167: 164: 162: 159: 158: 156: 147: 143: 139: 138: 134: 133: 129: 124: 120: 116: 112: 109: 108: 104: 102: 100: 96: 91: 89: 83: 81: 77: 76:first edition 72: 70: 66: 62: 58: 54: 53:nation states 50: 46: 42: 38: 34: 33: 19: 135: 92: 84: 73: 47:philosopher 31: 30: 29: 65:libertarian 155:Categories 105:References 88:capitalism 69:anarchist 45:anarchist 99:monopoly 61:communes 144:at the 117:, the 37:French 67:and 121:at 157:: 113:, 39:: 125:. 35:( 20:)

Index

The General Idea of the Revolution
French
anarchist
Pierre-Joseph Proudhon
nation states
central authority
communes
libertarian
anarchist
first edition
Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte
capitalism
Bank of France
monopoly
Graham, Robert
"The General Idea of Proudhon's Revolution"
Anarchy Archives
Pitzer College
General Idea of the Revolution in the Nineteenth Century
John Beverly Robinson
Fair Use Repository
Categories
1851 non-fiction books
Books about anarchism
Works by Pierre-Joseph Proudhon

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.

↑