The Selected Works of Voltairine de Cleyre: Poems, Essays, Sketches and Stories, 1885-1911
“The most gifted and brilliant anarchist woman America ever produced…a forceful personality, a brilliant mind, a fervent idealist, an unflinching fighter, a devoted and loyal comrade.” —Emma Goldman

“What can you say about a forgotten genius, a feminist foremother, Yiddish-speaking French immigrant’s child, Free Love champion and Gothic poet, defender of lost causes par excellence? Don’t be fooled by the patina of dust—in certain abandoned mines, there are underground fires that are still burning.” —Jesse Cohn, author of Underground Passages: Anarchist Resistance Culture, 1848–2011

Voltairine de Cleyre was undeniably one of the most important anarchist thinkers in the US or anywhere else. Historian Paul Avrich considered her “a greater literary talent than any other American anarchist” and, moreover, a woman whose “whole life was a revolt against this system of male domination which, like every form of tyranny and exploitation, ran contrary to her anarchistic spirit.” Plagued by poverty and poor health—and a nearly successful assassination attempt—she maintained an intense schedule of writing, speaking, and organizing for much of her life. Widely admired by her contemporaries, including many political enemies, she was one of the foremost advocates of an inclusive “anarchism without adjectives,” while at the same time advancing an uncompromising and principled direct-action approach to political and economic struggle.

Soon after her premature death, her comrades gathered a selection of her work, edited by Alexander Berkman, introduced by Hippolyte Havel, and published by Emma Goldman’s Mother Earth Publishing Association. This facsimile edition changes nothing from the original 1914 version. Voltairine de Cleyre’s essays, poems, and stories ring just as true and clear today as they did a century ago.

Voltairine de Cleyre, while little known today, was a crucial link in radical international milieus in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. One of the most prolific writers among US anarchists, she died at the young age of forty-five in 1912.

Alexander Berkman, author of What is Anarchism?, was a leading writer and organizer in the US anarchist movement.

Hippolyte Havel was an editor of numerous publications and author of dozens of articles. He was a major influence on many artists and radicals of his day.

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The Selected Works of Voltairine de Cleyre: Poems, Essays, Sketches and Stories, 1885-1911
“The most gifted and brilliant anarchist woman America ever produced…a forceful personality, a brilliant mind, a fervent idealist, an unflinching fighter, a devoted and loyal comrade.” —Emma Goldman

“What can you say about a forgotten genius, a feminist foremother, Yiddish-speaking French immigrant’s child, Free Love champion and Gothic poet, defender of lost causes par excellence? Don’t be fooled by the patina of dust—in certain abandoned mines, there are underground fires that are still burning.” —Jesse Cohn, author of Underground Passages: Anarchist Resistance Culture, 1848–2011

Voltairine de Cleyre was undeniably one of the most important anarchist thinkers in the US or anywhere else. Historian Paul Avrich considered her “a greater literary talent than any other American anarchist” and, moreover, a woman whose “whole life was a revolt against this system of male domination which, like every form of tyranny and exploitation, ran contrary to her anarchistic spirit.” Plagued by poverty and poor health—and a nearly successful assassination attempt—she maintained an intense schedule of writing, speaking, and organizing for much of her life. Widely admired by her contemporaries, including many political enemies, she was one of the foremost advocates of an inclusive “anarchism without adjectives,” while at the same time advancing an uncompromising and principled direct-action approach to political and economic struggle.

Soon after her premature death, her comrades gathered a selection of her work, edited by Alexander Berkman, introduced by Hippolyte Havel, and published by Emma Goldman’s Mother Earth Publishing Association. This facsimile edition changes nothing from the original 1914 version. Voltairine de Cleyre’s essays, poems, and stories ring just as true and clear today as they did a century ago.

Voltairine de Cleyre, while little known today, was a crucial link in radical international milieus in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. One of the most prolific writers among US anarchists, she died at the young age of forty-five in 1912.

Alexander Berkman, author of What is Anarchism?, was a leading writer and organizer in the US anarchist movement.

Hippolyte Havel was an editor of numerous publications and author of dozens of articles. He was a major influence on many artists and radicals of his day.

16.95 In Stock
The Selected Works of Voltairine de Cleyre: Poems, Essays, Sketches and Stories, 1885-1911

The Selected Works of Voltairine de Cleyre: Poems, Essays, Sketches and Stories, 1885-1911

The Selected Works of Voltairine de Cleyre: Poems, Essays, Sketches and Stories, 1885-1911

The Selected Works of Voltairine de Cleyre: Poems, Essays, Sketches and Stories, 1885-1911

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Overview

“The most gifted and brilliant anarchist woman America ever produced…a forceful personality, a brilliant mind, a fervent idealist, an unflinching fighter, a devoted and loyal comrade.” —Emma Goldman

“What can you say about a forgotten genius, a feminist foremother, Yiddish-speaking French immigrant’s child, Free Love champion and Gothic poet, defender of lost causes par excellence? Don’t be fooled by the patina of dust—in certain abandoned mines, there are underground fires that are still burning.” —Jesse Cohn, author of Underground Passages: Anarchist Resistance Culture, 1848–2011

Voltairine de Cleyre was undeniably one of the most important anarchist thinkers in the US or anywhere else. Historian Paul Avrich considered her “a greater literary talent than any other American anarchist” and, moreover, a woman whose “whole life was a revolt against this system of male domination which, like every form of tyranny and exploitation, ran contrary to her anarchistic spirit.” Plagued by poverty and poor health—and a nearly successful assassination attempt—she maintained an intense schedule of writing, speaking, and organizing for much of her life. Widely admired by her contemporaries, including many political enemies, she was one of the foremost advocates of an inclusive “anarchism without adjectives,” while at the same time advancing an uncompromising and principled direct-action approach to political and economic struggle.

Soon after her premature death, her comrades gathered a selection of her work, edited by Alexander Berkman, introduced by Hippolyte Havel, and published by Emma Goldman’s Mother Earth Publishing Association. This facsimile edition changes nothing from the original 1914 version. Voltairine de Cleyre’s essays, poems, and stories ring just as true and clear today as they did a century ago.

Voltairine de Cleyre, while little known today, was a crucial link in radical international milieus in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. One of the most prolific writers among US anarchists, she died at the young age of forty-five in 1912.

Alexander Berkman, author of What is Anarchism?, was a leading writer and organizer in the US anarchist movement.

Hippolyte Havel was an editor of numerous publications and author of dozens of articles. He was a major influence on many artists and radicals of his day.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781849352567
Publisher: AK PR INC
Publication date: 08/30/2016
Pages: 480
Product dimensions: 5.00(w) x 8.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Voltairine de Cleyre: Called "A brief comet in the anarchist firmament, blazing out quickly and soon forgotten by all but a small circle of comrades whose love and devotion persisted long after her death," by Paul Avrich, Voltairine de Cleyre was a little-known, but crucial link in the early American anarchist milieu of the 20th century. A poet and essayist, de Cleyre was plagued all her life by poverty, pain, and ill health, and died prematurely at the age of 45 in 1912.
Alexander Berkman: Alexander Berkman was a leading writer and participant in the 20th century Anarchist movement. The young, idealistic Berkman practiced "propaganda by deed" attempting to assassinate Henry Clay Frick during the Homestead Steel Strike of 1892. While imprisoned, he wrote the classic tale of prison life Prison Memoirs of and Anarchist. After his release, Berkman edited Emma Goldman's Mother Earth and his own paper The Blast!. Deported from New York City to his native Russia in 1919, were he saw first hand the failure of the Bolshevik revolution and dedicated himself to writing the classic primer on Anarchism, What is Anarchism?.
Hippolyte Havel: Hippolyte Havel was a Czech anarchist who lived most of his life in New York City. Editor of numerous publications, including Emma Goldman's Mother Earth, he wrote dozens of articles and was a major influence on many artists and radicals of his day.

Table of Contents

POEMS
The Burial of My Past Self
Night on the Graves
The Christian's Faith
The Freethinker's Plea
To My Mother
Betrayed
Optimism
At the Grave in Waldheim
The Hurricane
Ut Sementem Feceris, Ita Metes
Bastard Born
Hymn
You and I
The Toast of Despair
In Memoriam—To Dyer D. Lum
Out of the Darkness
Mary Wollstonecraft
The God, and the People
John P. Altgeld
The Cry of the Unfit
In Memoriam—To Gen. M. M. Trumbull
The Wandering Jew.
The Feast of Vultures
The Suicide's Defense
A Novel of Color
Germinal
"Light Upon Waldheim"
Love's Compensation
The Road Builders
Angiolillo
Ave et Vale
Marsh-Bloom
Written–in–Red

ESSAYS
The Dominant Idea
Anarchism
Anarchism and American Traditions
Anarchism in Literature
The Making of an Anarchist
The Eleventh of November, 1887
Crime and Punishment
In Defense of Emma Goldman
Direct Action
The Paris Commune
The Mexican Revolution
Thomas Paine
Dyer D. Lum
Francisco Ferrer
Modern Educational Reform
Sex Slavery
Literature the Mirror of Man
The Drama of the Nineteenth Century

SKETCHES AND STORIES
A Rocket of Iron
The Chain Gang
The Heart of Angiolillo
The Reward of an Apostate
At the End of the Alley—I
Alone
To Strive and Fail
The Sorrows of the Body
The Triumph of Youth
The Old Shoemaker.
Where the White Rose Died

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