The Slow Burning Fuse: The Lost History of the British Anarchists

The Slow Burning Fuse: The Lost History of the British Anarchists

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In the accounts of the radical movements that have shaped our history, anarchism has received a raw deal. Its visions and aims have been distorted and misunderstood, its achievements forgotten. The British anarchist movement during the years 18801930, while borrowing from Europe, was self-actuated and independent, with a vibrant tale all its own.

In The Slow Burning Fuse, John Quail shows a history largely obscured and rewritten following 1919 and the triumph of Leninist communism. The time has arrived to resurrect the works of the early anarchist clubs, their unsung heroes, tumultuous political activities, and searing manifestos so that a truer image of radical dissent and history can be formed. Quail's story of the anarchists is one of utopias created in imagination and half-realised in practice, of individual fights and movements for freedom and self-expression-a story still being written today.

John Quail was a member of Solidarity, a libertarian socialist group active in the UK between 1960 and 1992. He is now a visiting fellow at the University of York. Constance Bantman is a senior lecturer in French at the University of Surrey, who has published extensively on the history of transnational anarchism. Nick Heath has published biographical articles about anarchists as well as articles on the Hungarian Revolution, the Makhnovists, and the Third Revolution in the Soviet Union.

Author: John Quail
Format: Paperback, 416 pages, 152mm x 229mm
Published: 2019, PM Press, United States
Genre: Current Affairs & Issues

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Description

In the accounts of the radical movements that have shaped our history, anarchism has received a raw deal. Its visions and aims have been distorted and misunderstood, its achievements forgotten. The British anarchist movement during the years 18801930, while borrowing from Europe, was self-actuated and independent, with a vibrant tale all its own.

In The Slow Burning Fuse, John Quail shows a history largely obscured and rewritten following 1919 and the triumph of Leninist communism. The time has arrived to resurrect the works of the early anarchist clubs, their unsung heroes, tumultuous political activities, and searing manifestos so that a truer image of radical dissent and history can be formed. Quail's story of the anarchists is one of utopias created in imagination and half-realised in practice, of individual fights and movements for freedom and self-expression-a story still being written today.

John Quail was a member of Solidarity, a libertarian socialist group active in the UK between 1960 and 1992. He is now a visiting fellow at the University of York. Constance Bantman is a senior lecturer in French at the University of Surrey, who has published extensively on the history of transnational anarchism. Nick Heath has published biographical articles about anarchists as well as articles on the Hungarian Revolution, the Makhnovists, and the Third Revolution in the Soviet Union.