The Politics Of The Unpolitical

The Politics Of The Unpolitical

$30.00 AUD

Availability: in stock at our Tullamarine warehouse

Condition: SECONDHAND

This is a secondhand book. The jacket image is a photograph of the exact copy we have in stock. This image shows the condition of this book. Further condition remarks are below.

Edition: First Edition

Condition remarks:
Book: Poor
Jacket: Damaged
Pages: Good
Markings: Previous owner
Condition remarks: Tears along folds of jacket. Very rubbed at binding edges.

A landmark work of political and aesthetic philosophy, The Politics of the Unpolitical presents Herbert Read's passionate argument that true human freedom and social harmony cannot be achieved through conventional political systems, but rather through the cultivation of art, craft, and organic community life. Read argues with eloquent conviction that the mechanized, centralized state — whether capitalist or socialist — deadens the human spirit, and that a genuine politics must be rooted in anarchist principles, personal integrity, and the creative instinct. Drawing on thinkers from Kropotkin to Ruskin, the work illustrates how art and beauty are not luxuries but essential foundations of a just and humane society. Written with the lyrical authority of a poet-critic, the prose is both visionary and urgent, challenging readers to reconsider the very meaning of political life. This collection of essays stands as one of the twentieth century's most compelling defenses of anarchism as a living, humanist philosophy rather than a doctrine of mere disorder.

Author: Herbert Read
Format: Hardback
Published: 1943, Routledge
Genre: Politics & law

Description

Edition: First Edition

Condition remarks:
Book: Poor
Jacket: Damaged
Pages: Good
Markings: Previous owner
Condition remarks: Tears along folds of jacket. Very rubbed at binding edges.

A landmark work of political and aesthetic philosophy, The Politics of the Unpolitical presents Herbert Read's passionate argument that true human freedom and social harmony cannot be achieved through conventional political systems, but rather through the cultivation of art, craft, and organic community life. Read argues with eloquent conviction that the mechanized, centralized state — whether capitalist or socialist — deadens the human spirit, and that a genuine politics must be rooted in anarchist principles, personal integrity, and the creative instinct. Drawing on thinkers from Kropotkin to Ruskin, the work illustrates how art and beauty are not luxuries but essential foundations of a just and humane society. Written with the lyrical authority of a poet-critic, the prose is both visionary and urgent, challenging readers to reconsider the very meaning of political life. This collection of essays stands as one of the twentieth century's most compelling defenses of anarchism as a living, humanist philosophy rather than a doctrine of mere disorder.