Corvus Editions

Corvus Editions: The Archive

I’m in the process of uploading all of the Corvus Editions pamphlets of which I still have pdf copies. My goal is to make important texts available in imposed, printable form—and also to complete a few unfinished projects along the way.

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Corvus Editions

Corvus Editions: Non-Resistance and Come-Outerism

CE-4701 pdf William Goodell, Come-Outerism (1845) CE-4702 pdf Adin Ballou, Non-Resistance in Relation to Human Governments (1839) CE-4703 pdf Sidney Hook, The Philosophy of Non-Resistance (1922) CE-4704 imposed pdf Charles K. Whipple, The Non-Resistance Principle: With Particular Application to the Help of Slaves by Abolitionists (1860) CE-4705 Thomas Cooper, Two Orations [This pamphlet was never published. I’ll finish proofreading the half-prepared text and publish it when I get time.] CE-4706 text Nathaniel P. Rogers, An Anti-Slavery Tour of the White Hills (1841)
Corvus Editions

Corvus Editions: Cultural Studies

CE-1901 pdf Dromologies/Pornologies Dromologies: Paul Virilio: Speed, Cinema, and the End of the Political State [text] Pornologies: Dworkin, Bataille, Foucault: Sex/Violence/Power/Knowledge My grad school years were also some of the early years of the World Wide Web and much of my scholarly work at the time involved the study of emerging “virtual communities.” The “information wants to be free” ethic of the time, particularly in the cyberpunk-tinted circles that I ran in, encouraged the free circulation of writings and, as a result, some of my college papers circulated widely enough that they are still not too hard to find online […]
Corvus Editions

Corvus Editions: The History of Mutualism

The History of Mutualism was among the series I was most excited about publishing, despite the fact that, in the years I was dragging them around to book fairs, enthusiasm for this sort of deep historical material was perhaps not sufficient to justify the weight in my luggage. But Corvus Editions was basically unintelligible as a purely commercial enterprise, particularly in the period when there were still plenty of bookfairs on the west coast. The point was often just to spread the most unlikely things out on the table as if they belonged there—in the hope that, at some point, some of them really would.

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Corvus Editions

“LeftLiberty” and “The Mutualist” (2009-2011)

The Corvus Editions project started with LeftLiberty: A Journal of Mutualist Anarchist Theory and History, a zine produced in the context of the Alliance of the Libertarian Left, a “big tent” coalition of “market anarchists.” It lasted for two issues and received almost no attention. As my own trajectory started to diverge from that of the Alliance, the project was reinvented as The Mutualist: A Journal for Free Absolutes, with an explicitly “neo-Proudhonian” emphasis. The one issue published shows all the signs, I think, of a project being pursued to please no one but myself. Subsequent issues suffered from the difficulty that has always haunted my attempts at publication: I was uncovering new material at such a rate that my critical and interpretive writings were often “out of date” long before I could finish writing them. I eventually collected the best of LeftLiberty, together with some posts from my blog, in a special “0” issue of The Mutualist, which, from a historical standpoint, is interesting as an anticipation of the Contr’un zine series and as one of the first Corvus Editions to use what would become the “house style” in layout and typography. 

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Our Lost Continent

Our Lost Continent: Summaries and Rationales

Our Lost Continent and the Journey Back Links: Our Lost Continent: Episodes from an Alternate History of the Anarchist Idea, 1837–1936 [project page] Preliminaries (2015-2018) Mappings: Notes for an Introduction (2017-2020) Part I: Our Lost Continent: On the Uses of the Anarchist Past A Dedication of Sorts Anarchist History: Lessons from the Outbound Journey On Anarchy and Anarchism: w/ Propositions for Discussion September 23, 2016 Anarchy and Its Uses Fundamental to everything I’ve been saying about anarchy and anarchism over the last couple of years is a sense that anarchy works as a useful guiding principle only when we take […]
Our Lost Continent

Our Lost Continent: Preliminaries (2015-2018)

RELATED: Main page Preliminaries Mappings: Notes for an Introduction Summaries and Rationales Our Lost Continent and The Journey Back: Episodes from an Alternate History of the Anarchist Idea, 1837–1936, as They Happened, as They are Recorded in the Margins of More Familiar Histories and as They Might Have Happened, if Observed through Other Lenses, with Reflections on the Past and Future Development of Anarchism.   “Our Lost Continent” (April 4, 2015) The “lost continent” of anarchist history has been there all along, not so much lost but rather willfully ignored or dismissed, a blank spot on our map marked, not […]
Our Lost Continent

Mappings: Notes for an Introduction

RELATED: Main page Preliminaries Mappings Summaries and Rationales Our Lost Continent and The Journey Back: Episodes from an Alternate History of the Anarchist Idea, 1837–1936, as They Happened, as They are Recorded in the Margins of More Familiar Histories and as They Might Have Happened, if Observed through Other Lenses, with Reflections on the Past and Future Development of Anarchism.   Extrications: History, Tradition, Theory (August 7, 2017) The initial task in these Extrications is analytic: we want to pull things apart a bit, enough to see if we can’t isolate some terms and make some useful distinctions. I want […]
Working Translations

Charles-Auguste Bontemps, “The Sustainability of Anarchism” (1967)

I am reminded that some libertarian communists or socialists, who claim to be revolutionaries in the politico-social sense of the term, have renounced or demand that those of their tendency renounce what they call the anarchist label. That anarchist label, from their perspective,  conceals a very questionable sort of anarchism. They are disturbed by it and disturb still more the propagation of a specifically anarchist philosophy.

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Featured articles

In Search of the Great Divide

I’ve decided to devote a section of the project, In Search of the Great Divide, to the pre-1840 period—and specifically to the question of how and when to start a general history of anarchism, addressing some of the alternatives in the beginning and taking the opportunity to look at how various other general histories have tackled the problem.

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