From the Archives

Henry Edger, “Prostitution and the International Woman’s League” (1877)

Henry Edger, “Prostitution and the International Woman’s League,” The Radical Review 1, no. 3 (November 1877): 397-418. PROSTITUTION AND THE INTERNATIONAL WOMAN’S LEAGUE. Human questions need for their effectual study to be regarded from all points of view, and from all points of view simultaneously. — Richard Congreve. A YEAR or two ago there were distributed to a select few in this and some other countries some pamphlets, —one the Prospectus, and another the “ Constitution and By-laws,” of a projected “International Woman’s League,” the object of which League is stated to be “ the advancement and elevation of woman […]
From the Archives

Stephen Pearl Andrews, “The Labor Dollar” (1877)

As the labor question is steadily and rapidly increasing in recognized importance, every effort should be made to place its “social solutions” upon a thoroughly scientific basis. One of these “solutions” relates specially to the true and ultimate system of currency. I have just received from some unknown friend, probably the author, a small pamphlet entitled “The Labor Question: what it is, method of its solution, and remedy for its evils,” by Charles Thomas Fowler.

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From the Archives

Joshua King Ingalls, “Work and Wealth” (1878)

[one_third padding=”0 10px 0 0px”] Joshua King Ingalls (1816 – 1898) [/one_third][two_third_last padding=”0 0px 0 10px”] WORK AND WEALTH. I HAVE chosen the above terms in preference to Labor and Capital, because they convey more exact ideas. The word labor carries with it the impression of compulsory, or servile, toil. Capital is a word which economists themselves cannot satisfactorily define, and to which they apply only an arbitrary meaning. The things signified by work and wealth are subject to no equivocal interpretation, are understood by all, and stand to each other in the relation of a natural sequence. Speaking from […]
Contr'un

Exploring intellectual history with Benjamin R. Tucker

[ezcol_1third] Contr’un Revisited: [commentary coming soon] [/ezcol_1third] [ezcol_2third_end] There is probably no figure in the history of anarchism about whom I am as, well, “passionately ambivalent” as Benjamin R. Tucker. He was the great popularizer of Proudhon, Greene and Warren, and an important partisan of Stirner, but also, in each case, something of a bowdlerizer. The plumb-line approach was worlds away from Proudhon’s notion of truth-in-relations, and his wholly “negative” understanding of anarchism ultimately at odds, to some degree at least, with the projects of all of his mutualist predecessors. He was the prototype for every left-libertarian who has trouble […]
Contr'un

Tucker’s “Radical Review”

A complete collection of Benjamin R. Tucker’s “Radical Review” is now available on Google Books. The searchable text is incomplete, but the page prints are better than those that I used to put together my archive of the magazine. With two sets to work from, the process of getting a fully searchable text archive—already well underway—should be accelerated considerably.
Uncategorized

B. W. Ball, The Revolution

B. W. Ball, “The Revolution,” The Radical Review, 720. THE REVOLUTION. There is no pause. Still blow resounds on blow,The order old making to shake and reelFrom base to pinnacle. To dust brought low,Crescent and Cross the shock of ruin feel.Shallow Reaction tries in vain to stemThe Revolution’s surge, which more and more,Drowning tiara, throne, and diadem.Spreads undulating wide from shore to shore.What though Priest, Kaiser, Sultan, King still sitSceptred and crowned above the encroaching flood?Belshazzar’s legend is above them writ,And they grow pale before Man’s altered mood.Voices of Revolution, trumpet-clear,Byron and Shelley, lo, your day is near! B. W. […]
Uncategorized

Edward Stanwood, Mr. Spooner’s Island Community

Edward Stanwood, “Mr. Spooner’s Island Community,” The Radical Review, 578-581. MR. SPOONER’S ISLAND COMMUNITY. If one could only accept all of Mr. Lysander Spooner’s assumptions as true, his argument would be sound and his conclusions would follow. Unfortunately for him, his most material assumptions have no basis. Letus take his first case: one hundred men on a solitary island; each producing ten bushels of wheat, exactly enough for his own wants; each the possessor of coined money to the amount of what we call five dollars. It is true, wheat would have no price, though it would have a value. […]
Uncategorized

I. G. Blanchard, The Warfare

I. G. Blanchard, “The Warfare,” The Radical Review, 533. THE WARFARE. Along the battle’s flaming van We mark the tried and true, —Defenders of the cause of man, A chosen, peerless few.Born to their mission and inspired, Oh, should they fall, we feelNo spirit would like theirs be fired, No hand could wield their steel. Yet, one by one, they step aside, Or on the red field lie,And still their places are supplied, Still rings the battle-cry;Still o’er the hoary walls of Wrong Truth’s startling missiles fly,And still, with steady step and strong, Her hosts are marching by. And so […]
From the Archives

Elie Reclus, “Female Kinship and Maternal Filiation” (1877)

Radical Review, August 1877, 205-223. FEMALE KINSHIP AND MATERNAL FILIATION. 1.—Das Mutterrech, eine Untersuchung über die Gjynoekokratie der altere Welt, nach ihrer religiösen und rechtlichen Natur. By I. I. Bachofen. Stuttgart. 1861. 2.—Studies in Ancient History, comprising a reprint of “Primitive Marriage.” An inquiry into the origin of the form of capture in marriage ceremonies. By G. T. M’Lennan. London. 1876. THE learned Mr. Bachofen had read, as we all have, the story of Orestes, who, having killed his mother Clytemnestra in order to revenge the murder of his father, was summoned to answer for his crime before the Areopagus […]
Uncategorized

Sidney H. Morse, The All-Loving

Radical Review, 307 THE ALL-LOVING. Million-Folded are my likings, All the world my well-loved home;Would my kindred not regale me, To their world-fires I would roam. Pleasant ‘tis with love to tarry,— Pleasant to recount its store:Glooms and sorrows passing by me Leave my heart young as before. Listen, loved ones, o’er the planet! Think ye not I’m lost, if missingFrom your fire-lit hearths my greetings: All your loves my love is kissing. Warm and glowing goes my spirit Toward my million-fated kin.Oh! I keep their hearts enshrined In the deep my heart within. Sidney H. Morse.