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Libertarian Book Club and League

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Libertarian League
AbbreviationLL
PredecessorVanguard Group
Formation1945; 79 years ago (1945)
(Libertarian Book Club)
1954; 70 years ago (1954)
(Libertarian League)
FoundersSam Dolgoff
Esther Dolgoff
Russell Blackwell
Dissolved1965; 59 years ago (1965)
PurposeLibertarian socialism
Anarcho-syndicalism
Location
Main organ
Views and Comments

The Libertarian Book Club and Libertarian League were two postwar anarchist groups in New York City associated with Sam and Esther Dolgoff.

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Transcription

Libertarian Book Club

The Libertarian Book Club was an anarchist circle in postwar New York City. Established by Sam and Esther Dolgoff in 1945 at the behest of Grigorii Maksimov, the group held monthly discussion fora and social events in a rented Workmen's Circle room and served as a social center for a small, aging group of immigrant radicals whom the Dolgoffs knew from their work on Road to Freedom and Vanguard.[1]

The Libertarian Book Club published multiple volumes and distributed domestically other major books and international publications from the anarchist movement.[1] The publisher reprinted Steven T. Byington's English translation of Paul Eltzbacher's Anarchism in 1960.[2]

Libertarian League

In 1954, the Dolgoffs and anarchist Russell Blackwell formed the Libertarian League to supplement the Book Club.[3] In their founding statement, titled "What We Stand For", the League suggested an alternative to the bipolar Cold War: a libertarian socialist society with a worldwide federation of free communities, cooperatives, and workers' councils. Sam Dolgoff described their aims as anarcho-syndicalist society with anarcho-communist sympathies.The League hosted weekly political discussions and published Views and Comments.[4]

Only a few members joined the league at first and though others cycled in and out, attendance at group meetings rarely went above a dozen. Notably, core members of the group were librarians and printers, decidedly more professionalized than the industrial unionism for which they advocated.[4]

Views and Comments began as a mimeographed newsletter and became a monthly journal between 20 and 40 pages.[5] Its aesthetic predated that of the 1980s zines. Contributors were commonly anonymous or used pseudonyms, given fears stemming from McCarthyism.[6]

The League dissolved in mid-1965.[7]

References

  1. ^ a b Cornell 2016, p. 215.
  2. ^ Weir, David (1997). Anarchy & Culture: The Aesthetic Politics of Modernism. University of Massachusetts Press. pp. 270–271. ISBN 978-1-55849-084-0.
  3. ^ Cornell 2016, pp. 215–216.
  4. ^ a b Cornell 2016, p. 216.
  5. ^ Cornell 2016, pp. 216–217.
  6. ^ Cornell 2016, p. 217.
  7. ^ Cornell 2016, p. 232.

Bibliography

This page was last edited on 23 January 2024, at 10:57
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