Daniel Guérin
Born
in Paris, France
May 19, 1904
Died
April 14, 1988
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Anarchism
by
43 editions
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published
1965
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No Gods No Masters: An Anthology of Anarchism
by
7 editions
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published
1965
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Fascism and Big Business
28 editions
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published
1936
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The Brown Plague: Travels in Late Weimar and Early Nazi Germany
by
8 editions
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published
1933
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For a Libertarian Communism (Revolutionary Pocketbooks)
by
10 editions
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published
2003
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Class struggle in the first French republic: bourgeois and bras nus 1793-1795
15 editions
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published
1946
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No Gods No Masters: 2
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Anarchism & Marxism
2 editions
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published
1980
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Rosa Luxemburg: Y la Espontaneidad Revolucionaria
12 editions
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published
1971
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Homosexualité et Révolution
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published
2013
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“If crimes are committed they must be seen as a disease, and punishment as treatment rather than as social vengeance.”
― Anarchism
― Anarchism
“Far from checking the spread of immorality, repression has always extended and deepended it. Thus it is futile to oppose it by rigorous legislation which trespasses on individual liberty.”
― Anarchism
― Anarchism
“In my opinion the basic cause for the relative failure of the two greatest revolutions in history resides not, to borrow again from Voline, in "historic inevitability," or simply in the subjective "errors" of revolutionary actors. The revolution bears within itself a serious contradiction (a contradiction which fortunately—and we will return to the subject —is not irremediable and is attenuated with time): it can only arise, it can only vanquish if it issues from the depths of the popular masses, from their irresistible spontaneous uprising; but although the class instinct drives the popular masses to break their chains, they are yet lacking in education and consciousness. And since, in their formidable but tumultuous and blind drive towards liberty, they run up against privileged, conscious, educated, organized, and tested social classes, they can only vanquish the resistance they meet if they succeed in obtaining in the heat of the struggle, the consciousness, the science, the organization, and the experience they lack. But the very fact of forging the weapons I have just listed summarily, and which alone can ensure their superiority over the enemy, bears an immense peril within it: that of killing the spontaneity that is the very spirit of the revolution; that of compromising freedom through organization; that of allowing the movement to be confiscated by an elite minority of more educated, more conscious, more experienced militants who, to begin with, offer themselves as guides in order, in the end, to impose themselves as chiefs and to subject the masses to new forms of the oppression of man by man.”
― For a Libertarian Communism
― For a Libertarian Communism