Sách nói: Anarchism and Other Essays (Version 2)
- Download Biographic Sketch, pt. 1 audio
- Download Biographic Sketch, pt. 2 audio
- Download Biographic Sketch, pt. 3 audio
- Download Preface by Author audio
- Download Anarchism: What It Really Stands For, pt. 1 audio
- Download Anarchism: What It Really Stands For, pt. 2 audio
- Download Minorities vs. Majorities audio
- Download The Psychology of Political Violence, pt. 1 audio
- Download The Psychology of Political Violence, pt. 2 audio
- Download The Psychology of Political Violence, pt. 3 audio
- Download Prisons: A Social Crime & Failure, pt. 1 audio
- Download Prisons: A Social Crime & Failure, pt. 2 audio
- Download Patriotism: A Menace to Liberty, pt. 1 audio
- Download Patriotism: A Menace to Liberty, pt. 2 audio
- Download Francisco Ferrer & the Modern School, pt. 1 audio
- Download Francisco Ferrer & the Modern School, pt. 2 audio
- Download The Hypocrisy of Puritanism audio
- Download The Traffic in Women, pt. 1 audio
- Download The Traffic in Women, pt. 2 audio
- Download Woman Suffrage audio
- Download The Tragedy of Woman's Emancipation audio
- Download Marriage & Love audio
- Download The Modern Drama, pt. 1 audio
- Download The Modern Drama, pt. 2 audio
Thể loại sách nói
Tác giả
Giới thiệu
Emma Goldman, the most famous anarchist in American history, shows the whole range of her iconoclastic thought in this collection of essays. Drawing from a wealth of illustrative material, including the examples of fellow anarchists and radicals of her own acquaintance, modern martyrs, dissident playwrights, poets, and authors, etc., she delineates the main themes of her philosophy with incisiveness and evangelical passion. Included among these themes are: a definition of decentralized anarchism itself; the ambiguous morality of direct action; the curse of modern patriotism; the horrors of early twentieth-century prisons; the need for an entirely new kind of education; the relationship of legal marriage to true love; the insidious danger of Puritanical thought within feminism itself; the deadly spread of sex trafficking; the limitations or even undesirability of woman suffrage; and the extraordinary revolutionary potential of modern theatre. Sadly, none of these themes seem obsolete even to a modern reader; every one of them has direct application to twenty-first century society.
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