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Anything Can Happen PDF

168 Pages·2017·2.1 MB·English
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ANYTHING CAN HAPPEN FredyP erlman ANYTHING CAN HAPPEN Fredy Perlman Black and Green Press @ 2017 PO Box402 Salem, MO 65560 ISBN: 978-0-9972017-4-1 Printed in Canada on recycled paper. Originally published in October 1992 by Phoenix Press, London. CONTENTS IntroducKteivoinTn:u cker IV SeleBcitb liography vm AnythiCnagn H appen 1 TheP urpoosfeB lac&k Red 13 IA ccusTeh iLsi berUanli versity ofT erroarn dV iolence 23 TheR eproductoifDo ani lLyi fe 36 RevolitnS ocialYiusgto slavia 61 TenT heseosn t heP roliferation oft heE gocrat 86 ProgreasnsdN uclePaorw er 93 Anti-Semiatnidst mh eB eirut Pogrom 101 TheC ontinuAipnpge aolf Nationalism 120 Introduction Civilization has a tendency to repeat its own mistakes. This makes Fredy Perlman's insights about civilization increasingly relevant today. This book of his essays, original­ ly written between 1968 and 1984, and published by Phoenix Press in 1992, is a case in point. Fredy Perlman (1934-1984) is among the most impas­ sioned and articulate writers that anarchism could have asked for. While he was aligned with anarchist perspectives, he opted not to weigh himself down with the label. He famous­ ly stated that "the only -ist name I respond to is 'cellist.'" Despite his reluctance to use the word, Fredy has been one of the most influential writers on anarchist thought, particu­ larly anti-civilization, green anarchist and anarcho-primitivist strands. His monumental Against His-Story, Against Levia­ than gets my recommendation for one of the most important books ever written. The nine essays in this book are linked to Fredy's earlier Marxist-leaning critiques, his Situationist-inspired move to­ wards the "ultra-left," and initiate his critiques of civilization itself. As Mo of Phoenix Press succinctly described the spec­ trum covered in these essays in the Phoenix edition: The changes in Fredy s analyses, from Marxist econom­ ics to an anti-industrial perspective, produced contradic­ tions which the reader will have to resolve because Fredy died in 1985. It seems Fredy was too busy developing new ideas to go back and modify his earlier ones. IV Introduction: Kevin Tucker According to Lorraine Perlman's memoir of Fredy's life, Having Little, Being Much (Black & Red, 1989), it was a trip to Alaska in 1971 that turned his eye directly towards Prog­ ress and industrialism: the core drivers of modernized civili­ zation. The civilizer's hatred of the environment itself became a central theme of his work, most evident in the final three essays of this book. Yet all of his work is driven by a fierce and fiery passion to attack the core of political power. Not content to advocate a party line, these essays refuse to cater to weak liberal agen­ das as they assault the power-hungry aspirations of the left. Within the radical milieu, Fredy glimpsed the same form and function of the State. Always critical of the ideologue, there's cautiousness and reluctance towards the revolutionaries throughout that is as insightful as it is correct. These essays have a progression in thought and critique, but you can see that the underlying impulse: a consistent and innate refusal of the power-hungry politicians and their games. While anarchism has significantly incorporated these trajectories, the same practices persist. Not just within anar­ chism, nor in the leftist milieu, but in society as a whole. This is why an essay about socialist Yugoslavia (a nation that no longer exists nor are its remains socialist) and a 1969 letter about professors being fired from their University remain rel­ evant. 'Progress and Nuclear Power' was written in response to the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant leak in 1979. Today, the 2011 meltdown of the Fukushima nuclear pow­ er plant in Japan continues leaking and intensifying. While I write this, North Korea and the United States are engaged in threats of nuclear warfare between Egocrats. 'Anti-Semitism and the Beirut Pogrom' is an essay I find necessary to circulate again and again. I don't think anyone can consider that situation resolved. With the current glob­ al wave of reactionary populism, 'The Continuing Appeal of Nationalism' takes on a new sense of urgency. This book takes its name from the title of the first essay. It is the most Situationist inspired text in terms of content and in v Anything Can Happen terms of when it was written. You can feel an infectious sense of hope in what might come next. Hope has itself become a boogeyman amongst anarchists. To a certain degree, I understand. And I think Fredy would have as well. Within anarchist circles, hope has mistakenly been equated with naivety. I think Fredy certainly would have agreed that it isn't. Its hard to shake the idealism that the phrase "anything can happen" seems to steep in, but when faced with the reality of a world tom by Egocrats, shaped by the false notions of community in the guise of nationalism, when acts of repres­ sion and genocide are justified by victimization; "anything" might not always be seen positively. And that's where the realness enters. We have stepped onto new turf of the world that we cur­ rently live in; but only in terms of scale. Our problems are old ones with more technologically-driven consequences. As Fredy traces the repetitive and repressive history of civili­ zation in Against His-Story, Against Leviathan, as he charts the path of conquest and colonizers in The Strait, he never forgets that what cannot be destroyed is the undercurrent of resistance as old as �ivilization itself. This wild spirit remains alive: against all odds, against all circumstances. We may not know how this beast, this globalized civilization, will end. We may not know what lies ahead or what Leviathan will try to suffocate. We may presume the worst, but it doesn't make it true. We do know what is happening. We know what has hap­ pened. And we know we can resist it as others always have. Re­ sistance means remaining untethered to the conventions of revolutionaries. It means staying clear of organizational rigid­ ities and ideological platforms. If that wild spirit has not died, then the weaknesses of civilization will be found in the kinks in its armor. In the mistakes it has made and will continue to make. This is how we locate the vulnerabilities. Most crucial among them is that enraged, impassioned Vl Introduction: Kevin Tucker piece of each of us that refuses to be tamed. Fredy had a gift for essay writing. He was articulate in his anger and drive. This, in itself, is inspiring. If we refuse to domesticate our passions as wild beings, then maybe hope isn't such a bad thing. It might seem implausible, but it is the spark that re­ minds us that we aren't dead yet. We aren't crazy. Perhaps anything can happen. We, like the earth and all its communities, may be held captive by civilization. But we can also be very fucking dan­ gerous. I would like to take a moment to thank Lorraine Perlman for her steadfast and diligent work on this project. Without her exemplary effort, it certainly wouldn't be what it is. For wildness and anarchy, Kevin Tucker Spring 2017 vii Fredy's Bibliography: • The New Freedom: Corporate Capitalism. Self­ published in New York City, 1961 (91 copies). • Plunder, A play. Self-published in New York City, 1962; Black and Red (Detroit), 1973. • Roger Gregoire & Fredy Perlman, Worker-Student Action Committees. France May I968. Kalamzoo, Michigan, 1969 • "Essays on Commodity Fetishism", Telos, Buffalo, NY, Number 6, Fall 1970. • The Reproduction of Everyday Life, Black and Red (Detroit), 1969. •The Incoherence of the Intellectual: C. Wright Mills' Struggle to Unite Knowledge and Action, Black and Red (Detroit), 1970. • (with Lorraine Perlman) Manual for Revolution­ ary Leaders (attributed to Michael Velli), Black and Red (Detroit), 1972. • Letters of Insurgents (attributed to S. Nachalo & Y. Vochek), Black and Red (Detroit), 1976. • "Progress & Nuclear Power: The Destruction of the Continent and Its Peoples," Fifth Estate, April 8, 1978. • "Anti-Semitism and the Beirut Pogrom," Left Bank Books (Seattle), 1983. viii • Against His-story, Against Leviathan! Black and Red (Detroit), 1983. • "The Continuing Appeal of Nationalism," Black and Red (Detroit), 1985. • The Strait (Vol. 1) "Book of Obenabi. His Songs," Black and Red (Detroit), 1988. • The Strait (Vol. 2) "Book of Robert Dupre. His Tales," Incomplete and unpublished. About Fredy: • Lorraine Perlman, Having Little, Being Much: A Chronicle of Fredy Perlman' s Fifty Years, Black and Red (Detroit), 1989. lX

Description:
Few have been as influential to the direction of radical, anarchist, and, particularly, anti-civilization thought as Fredy Perlman. This collection of essays contains Fredy's essential shorter writings that only seem to gain relevance with time. The nine essays in this book trace the expansion of hi
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