BOOK REVIEW
Listen Anarchist!:

Murray Bookchin's

Defence of Orthodoxy

Murray Bookchin. Social Anarchism or Lifestyle Anarchism:
An Unbridgeable Chasm. Edinburgh: AK Press, 1995, 86pp.

Jeffrey Shantz

Unless I am gravely mistaken—as I hope I am—the revo-
lutionary and social goals of anarchism are suffering a

far-reaching erosion to a point where the word anar-

chy will become part of the chic bourgeois vocabulary

of the coming century—naughty, rebellious, insouciant,

but deliciously safe (Bookchin, 1995: 3).

A spectre is haunting social theory—the spectre of anarchism.
Anarchist politics have enjoyed, since the early 1990s, some-

thing of a renaissance. While it certainly cannot be said that all

the Old Powers have entered into a holy alliance to exorcize this

spectre, it would appear that anarchism is back on the agenda.

Making matters even more interesting, that which currently passes

for anarchism often materializes in strange, unrecognizable forms

bearing little obvious resemblance to what is traditionally known

as anarchism, those historic movements against coercive author-

ity, hierarchy and injustice in their many guises. It is precisely

the novelty of contemporary anarchism which has prompted the

writing of Bookchin's text.

Penned by perhaps the most significant and widely read

anarchist thinker of the post-WW II era, Social Anarchism or
Lifestyle Anarchism has exploded like a bomb amongst the anar-

Alternate Routes, Volume 14, 1997

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chist communities of North America, becoming one of the most

controversial works in a tradition of controversial literature. More

ink has been spilled responding to this slim volume than any

other anarchist book in recent memory (including Hakim Bey's
contentious Temporary Autonomous Zone (1991)). That most of

the responses have consisted of angry denunciations of Bookchin,

going so far as to question his character and motive, suggests

that the work has struck a very raw nerve.

In his introductory chapter, "A Note to the Reader," Bookchin

situates his book as a response to "the fact that anarchism stands

at a turning point in its long and turbulent history" (1). For

Bookchin, however, this turning point is not one which prom-

ises renewal as some have celebrated. Rather, anarchism now
finds itself at a day of reckoning because contemporary anar-

chists have forsaken the revolutionary tradition of anarchism,

preferring to become just another bohemian subculture with no

interest in confronting the powers of State and Capital. Bookchin

^^ suggests that contemporary anarchism represents a fatal retreat
from the social concerns (and communal politics) of classical

anarchism into episodic adventurism and a decadent egoism.

This unfortunate transformation threatens to make anarchism

irrelevant at precisely the moment when it is most needed as a
counterforce to globalization and the social dislocations engen-

dered by neoliberal policies. Through the book's two chapters,

"Social Anarchism or Lifestyle Anarchism" and "The Left That

Was: A Personal Reflection," Bookchin offers his meditations
on what has gone wrong with anarchism as he sees it and how
anarchists might return to the social roots of their past glories.

The book's first and principal essay "Social Anarchism or

Lifestyle Anarchism" consists of an extended polemic against

the main theoretical proponents of lifestyle anarchism. The es-

say provides a valuable survey of trends within contemporary

anarchist thought. Bookchin identifies four main streams of life-

style anarchism: "individualist anarchism," "mystical or irration-

al ist anarchism," "anti-technologism" and "neo-primitivism." Com-



ing under particular scrutiny are the diverse works of L. Susan

Brown (1993) (individualism), Hakim Bey and his notion of

Temporary Autonomous Zones (1991) (mysticism), and John

Zerzan ((1994), neo-primitivist theorist and author of Future

Primitive. Bookchin also manages to single out for condemna-

tion the editors and writers of the Fifth Estate and Anarchy maga-

zines, the most influential anarchist periodicals (and ironically

organized as collectives). This section is worthwhile reading for

sociologists and social theorists seeking a basic (though by no

means friendly) introduction to major debates and initiatives

currently engaged within anarchist thought. Those pondering

the prospects for social movements in a postmodern age will

find Bookchin's harsh characterization of anarchy a provocative

contribution to current discussions.

Bookchin recognizes that the history of anarchism has al-

ways expressed a tension between a personalistic commitment

(emphasizing individual autonomy,) and a collectivist commit-

ment (emphasizing social freedoms). The author illustrates that ffy
with the advent of anarcho-syndicalism and anarcho-commu-

nism at the turn of the twentieth century, individualist anar-

chism was largely marginalized amidst the emergence of mass

workers' movements and the organized power of general strikes.

Individualist anarchism came to be seen as little more than bo-

hemian exotica, a distinctly petty-bourgeois indulgence charac-

teristic of liberalism rather than anarchism (7). Rather than reach-

ing a reconciliation, however, these tendencies have coexisted in

constant struggle with either becoming predominant according

to context or era. Indeed, this tension has been celebrated by

some anarchists as evidence of anarchism's pluralism, ideologi-

cal tolerance and creativity (4). For Bookchin, however, it is the

very failure of anarchism to resolve this conflict over the rela-

tionship of the individual to the collective which has given rise

to the worrisome condition in which he finds contemporary an-

archism. Now the individualists are back and with a vengeance
which threatens to end the anarchist project.



What all of the new (but definitely not improved) lifestyle
anarchists have in common is that they have given up social
analysis in favour of a "trendy" nihilism. In place of any analysis

of alienated labour or the workings of the market, anarchists

have mystified capitalism into vague abstractions such as "indus-

trial society" or the "megamachine" in which oppression becomes

an effect of a decontextualized Technology. Instead of traditional

anarchist concerns with hierarchy, statism and the

commodification of everyday life, lifestylists are preoccupied

with "autonomy," "primitivism" and "personal insurrection." For

lifestylists, "[h]istory and civilization consist of nothing but a

descent into the inauthenticity of 'industrial society'" (50). The

return to "authenticity," now anarchism's motive force, is driven

by intuition and instinct rather than by analysis and reason. The

turn towards the "irrational" means that anarchists have given

away the tools needed to dismantle neoliberalism. This leads to

Bookchin's angry conclusion that lifestyle anarchism is not an-

ff% archist at all and has no legitimate claims to the courageous
heritage of the social anarchists who too often paid for their

convictions and commitment to social transformation with their

lives.

Bookchin derides the "polymorphous concepts of resistance"

and "theoretical pluralism" of individualist anarchism. Instead

he proposes a "democratic communal ism" in which anarchism is

conceived as "a majoritarian administration of the public sphere"

(57). His vision of anarchy allows for the "rule" of the majority

and nonconsensual decisions. This seems a step backwards for

anarchist conceptions of democracy. It does not require much

imagination to envision the possibly authoritarian implications

of Bookchin's communalism.

The second essay, "The Left That Was: A Personal Reflec-
tion," consists of Bookchin's nostalgic trip down memory lane to

the supposed "good old days" of the political Left. The reason

for its inclusion along with the main essay appears to be an

appeal to anarchists to give up their wayward individualist ways



by following the proper path of the socialist which the essay

reveals. This essay provides summary statements of Leftist con-

ceptions of internationalism, democracy and revolution which

guided nineteenth and early-twentieth century resistance to capi-

talism and which are supposedly lacking from today's "Left"

(68). Bookchin does not limit this discussion to anarchists, but

gives significant attention to the works of Marx and Engels and

Rosa Luxemburg. Unfortunately, this account is quite cursory,

and will be of little interest to readers with any knowledge of

radical politics or history.

Overall, Bookchin fails to understand (or to admit) the com-

plexly nuanced relationship between individualist and socialist

tendencies in anarchism, seeing an "unbridgeable chasm" rather

than an unavoidable byproduct of the innovation and experimen-

tation of actors seeking to question profoundly all established

conventions. It is precisely this creative rethinking of accepted

authority from which anarchism has drawn its strength and sus-

tenance, and which has served as the source of its renown. A ^ft
glance at most anarchist publications actually shows a lively and

engaged mix of "individualist" and "socialist" perspectives. Like-

wise, Bookchin chooses to overlook the intermingling of life-

style and social anarchists in action. For example, the members

of the ultra-lifestylist Trumbell Theater Complex in Detroit re-

cently affiliated to the syndicalist Industrial Workers of the World.

Furhter, one finds lifestyle concerns in the programmatic anar-

chism of the Love and Rage Federation.

Bookchin identifies lifestylists as anti-theoretical, yet his

book is entirely devoted to dissecting lifestyle theories and theo-

rists. For someone so concerned with impacts upon activists

they are noticeably absent from his discussion. Bookchin is un-

able to provide any insights into whether or not anarchists even

read Hakim Bey or L. Susan Brown. Given the "Letters" col-

umns of such unrepentant lifestyle "rags" as the Fifth Estate and

Anarchy it appears that those who have read them do not much
agree with them. Certainly Bookchin has overstated the threat.



This suggests, if anything, that he is out of touch with what

anarchists are actually doing.

His characterization of lifestylists' commitment to imagi-

nation, desire, ecstasy and everday life as apolitical suggests that

Bookchin is also out of touch with the insights of recent social

movements which recognize that the personal is indeed politi-

cal. Additionally, Bookchin's claim that, during the heyday of

social anarchism, individualists exercised hardly any influence,

is undermined if one considers only the case of Emma Goldman
who Bookchin himself identifies as an extreme individualist, "a
Nietzschean" (8). For Bookchin the only approved forms of so-

cial action seem to be creating organizations and developing

programs. Cultural activism is missing from his conception of

politics. However, some of the most striking acts of lifestyle

anarchism—culture jamming, video activism, micro-radiobroad-

casts—are profoundly social, directed at disrupting the passifying

effects of consumer society and the practices of social produc-

^ft tion and reproduction.
Furthermore, it is not even accurate to charge lifestylists

with "allowing no room for social institutions, political organi-

zations, and radical programs" (51). Rather, lifestylists are con-

cerned with developing new forms which are appropriate to the

needs and wishes of contemporary actors. Most anarchists are

social anarchists who still believe in possibilities for social trans-
formation. Bookchin's deep nostalgia for past practices (even

failed and discredited ones) again interferes with his understanding

of what today's anarchists are trying to accomplish.

That Bookchin is out of touch with anarchist practice is

perhaps most clearly reflected in his assessment that "precisely

at a time when mass disillusionment with the state has reached

unprecedented proportions, anarchism is in retreat" (59). He

even blames this "failure of anarchism" upon "the insularity of

lifestyle anarchism" (59). Nothing could be further from the

truth. Anarchism has enjoyed a tremendous comeback recently

and the creativity and vibrancy of lifestylists has contributed



much to this.

Finally, a brief note about the style and tone of this book. It

is often a chore to find the analysis amidst the invective and

snarling personal attacks. In order to benefit from the book, one

must read past the vitriol. Similarly, Bookchin throws around

hazy and vague accusations referring to individualists at one

moment as petty bourgeois, at others as lumpen. Such a loose
play of terminology renders the words meaningless beyond be-

ing arbitrarily applied epithets. Indeed, the contempt with which

Bookchin treats the authors under consideration must make the

reader wary of much of the characterizations.

Bookchin's book is most interesting and helpful as an intro-

duction to some of the major currents engaged with the re-emer-

gence of anarchist theory. It is important in bringing attention to

a traditionally overlooked sector of social movement activism.

In this regard, it will prove useful for students of social move-

ments and radical politics. It will furthermore be of interest to

sociologists concerned with critically rethinking individual/so- ^ft
ciety relationships and questions of structure and agency.

Ironically, the lifestylist variants criticized by Bookchin

sound more compelling, and more liberatory, than the "ortho-

dox anarchism" to which they are counterpoised. In the final

analysis, readers interested in contemporary anarchism should

pick up the Fifth Estate, Anarchy, Love and Rage or the Liber-

tarian Labor Review.

References.

Bey, Hakim

1991 T.A.Z.: The Temporary Autonomous Zone, OntologicalAnarchy

,

Poetic Terrorism. Brooklyn: Autonomedia.

Brown, L. Susan.

1993 The Politics ofIndividualism: Liberalism, Liberal Feminism and
Anarchism. Montreal: Black Rose Books.

Zerzan, John

1994 Future Primitive. Brooklyn: Autonomedia and Anarchy.



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