An Anarchy of Everyday Life
An Anarchy of Everyday Life
Jeff Shantz
Contemporary anarchism offers a mid-range movement organized somewhere between the levels
of everyday life, to which it is closest, and insurrection. Rooted in the former they seek to move
towards the latter. Anarchists look to the aspects of people’s daily lives that both suggest life
without rule by external authorities and which might provide a foundation for anarchist social
relations more broadly. This commitment forms a strong and persistent current within diverse
anarchist theories. This perspective expresses what might be called a constructive anarchy or an
anarchy of everyday life, at once conserving and revolutionary.
Colin Ward suggests that anarchism, “far from being a speculative vision of a future society…is
a description of a mode of human organization, rooted in the experience of everyday life, which
operates side by side with, and in spite of, the dominant authoritarian trends of our society” (Ward,
1973: 11). As Graeber (2004) suggests, the examples of viable anarchism are almost endless. These
could include almost any form of organization, from a volunteer fire brigade to the postal service,
as long as it is not hierarchically imposed by some external authority (Graeber, 2004).
Even more, as many recent anarchist writings suggest, the potential for resistance might be found
anywhere in everyday life. If power is exercised everywhere, it might give rise to resistance
everywhere. Present-day anarchists like to suggest that a glance across the landscape of
contemporary society reveals many groupings which are anarchist in practice if not in ideology.
Examples include the leaderless small groups developed by radical feminists, coops,
clinics, learning networks, media collectives, direct action organizations; the
spontaneous groupings that occur in response to disasters, strikes, revolutions and
emergencies; community-controlled day-care centers; neighborhood groups; tenant and
workplace organizing; and so on (Ehrlich, Ehrlich, DeLeon and Morris 18).
While these are obviously not strictly anarchist groups, they often operate to provide examples of
mutual aid and non-hierarchical and non-authoritarian modes of living which carry the memory of
anarchy within them. Often the practices are essential for people’s day-to-day survival under the
crisis states of capitalism. Ward notes that “the only thing that makes life possible for millions in
the United States are its non-capitalist elements….Huge areas of life in the United States, and
everywhere else, are built around voluntary and mutual aid organisations” (Ward and Goodway,
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2003: 105).
Kropotkin (1972: 132) notes that the state, the formalized rule of dominant minorities over
subordinate majorities, is “but one of the forms of social life.” For anarchists, people are quite
capable of developing forms of order to meet specific needs and desires. As Ward (1973: 28)
suggests, “given a common need, a collection of people will…by improvisation and experiment,
evolve order out of the situation — this order being more durable and more closely related to their
needs than any kind of order external authority could provide.”
Order, thus arrived at, is also preferable for anarchists since it is not ossified and extended, often
by force, to situations and contexts different than those from which it emerged, and for which it
may not be suited. This order, on the contrary is flexible and evolving, where necessary giving way
to other agreements and forms of order depending on peoples’ needs and the circumstances
confronting them.
Living examples of the anarchist perspectives on order emerging “spontaneously” out of social
circumstances are perhaps most readily or regularly observed under conditions of immediate need
or emergency as in times of natural disaster and/or economic crisis, during periods of revolutionary
upheaval or during mass events such as festivals. Anarchists try to extend mutual aid relations until
they make up the bulk of social life. Constructive anarchy is about developing ways in which
people enable themselves to take control of their lives and participate meaningfully in the decision-
making processes that affect them, whether education, housing, work or food.
Anarchists note that changes in the structure of work, notably so-called lean production,
flexibalization and the institutionalization of precarious labour, have stolen people’s time away
from the family along with the time that might otherwise be devoted to activities in the community
(Ward and Goodway, 2003: 107). In response people must find ways to escape the capitalist law of
value, to pursue their own values rather than to produce value for capital. This is the real
significance of anarchist do-it-ourselves activity and the reason that I would suggest such activities
have radical, if overlooked, implications for anti-capitalist struggles.
For Paul Goodman, an American anarchist whose writings influenced the 1960s New Left and
counterculture, anarchist futures-present serve as necessary acts of “drawing the line” against the
authoritarian and oppressive forces in society. Anarchism, in Goodman’s view, was never oriented
only towards some glorious future; it involved also the preservation of past freedoms and previous
libertarian traditions of social interaction. “A free society cannot be the substitution of a ‘new
order’ for the old order; it is the extension of spheres of free action until they make up most of the
social life” (Marshall, 1993: 598). Utopian thinking will always be important, Goodman argued, in
order to open the imagination to new social possibilities, but the contemporary anarchist would also
need to be a conservator of society’s benevolent tendencies.
Capitalist society consists largely of “the accumulation of life as work,” to use Cleaver’s (1992:
116) apt description. Valorization speaks to the processes by which capital can manage to put
people to work, and to do so in such a way that the process is repeated on an ever increasing scale
(Cleaver, 1992a). The structure of the wage, the division of labour and surplus value are all
mechanisms through which exploitation is organized (Cleaver, 1992a). Notably, the circuit of
valorization involves circulation (exchange) as well as production.
Valorization expresses the fact that, from the perspective of capital, the specific character of each
productive activity is unimportant, so long as that activity produces something that can, through its
sale, realize enough surplus to allow the process to start all over again (Cleaver, 1992a). The
enormously diverse range of human activities, mental or physical, that people are capable of are
rendered the same in the eyes of capital. What is important is that they can be put in the service of
(exchange) value creation (for capital). More recently theorists, including Antonio Negri and
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Michael Hardt, have discussed the way in which contemporary capital makes use of “immaterial
labour,” especially emotional or psychological capacities that allow people to care for each other, a
point that echoes historic anarchist concerns.
If valorization represents the subordination of people’s productive activities to capitalist
command, Cleaver (1992a: 120) suggests that disvalorisation expresses people’s loss of those
abilities taken up by capital. This effects a broader impoverishment of social life as the specific
qualities of a diversity of skills and abilities are replaced by a narrower range of commercialized,
mechanized skills (Cleaver, 1992a).
A central, and ongoing, process in the history of capitalism is “the replacement of the self-
production of use-values by the consumption of commodities” (Cleaver, 1992a: 119). This is in
large part what a whole series of practices, from the enclosures through colonialism more broadly,
have been geared towards. This separation of people from the capacities for self-production of use-
values has entailed the various forms of violence that Marx has called primitive accumulation. An
ongoing process, primitive accumulation involves the actual, often bloody, practices by which
capitalism takes over and commercializes growing areas of human life. This has included the
clearing of peasants from common lands, the destruction of artisanal workshops, the canceling of
local rights to the land and the destruction of entire homes and villages. As Cleaver (1992a: 119)
notes, a central aspect of primitive accumulation has been “the displacement of domestic food and
handicraft production by capitalist commodities.” Nowhere has the creation of the “home market”
been established without such displacements.
But of this we gain little insight from Marx. In his city-boy ignorance of rural life and
perhaps in a desire to avoid any backward-looking sentimentalism, Marx seems to
have spent little time or energy during his studies of primitive accumulation in England
and in the colonies trying to understand what positive values might have been lost.
Unlike many of his generation who did worry about the nature of those social ties and
communal values which were rapidly disappearing, Marx kept his attention fixed
firmly toward the future (Cleaver, 1992a: 122).
Interestingly, the response to primitive accumulation, and its effects, has been one of the key
points distinguishing Marxists from anarchists historically. Anarchists have taken a vastly different,
and less sanguine, approach to primitive accumulation from that taken by many Marxists, and
certainly from the approach taken by Marx. Speaking about Marx, Cleaver (1992a: 121) notes:
When we examine his writings on primitive accumulation and colonialism — from the
Communist Manifesto to Capital — we often find little or no empathy for the cultures
being destroyed/subsumed by capital. He certainly recognised such
destruction/subsumption but frequently saw its effects on feudalism and other pre-
capitalist forms of society as historically progressive. For Marx, workers were being
liberated from pre-capitalist forms of exploitation (they ‘escaped from the regime of
the guilds’) and peasants from ‘serfdom’ and ‘the idiocy of rural life.’
Such an uncaring approach found its most widespread and influential expression within Marxism
under the Second International view that societies could not be revolutionary until they had entered
the capitalist stage. This perspective was used among other things to argue against the possibility of
revolution in Russia since it was a feudal rather than capitalist society.
Anarchists have been deeply concerned about exactly the values that have been lost. For
anarchists these lost abilities and skills extend beyond tasks of labour to include important elements
of social life such as decision-making or social interaction. Cleaver discusses this loss, and related
centralization and professionalization, in terms that are reminiscent of the historic anarchist
analysis as discussed below: “The rise of professional medicine, for example, not only produced a
widespread loss of abilities to heal, but it also involved the substitution of one particular paradigm
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of healing for a much larger number of approaches to ‘health’, and thus an absolute social loss —
the virtual disappearance of a multiplicity of alternative ‘values'” (1992a: 120). It is the attempt to
identify, to understand and to recover the values that have been lost, overlooked or subsumed under
capitalism that has inspired major anarchist projects whether Kropotkin’s Mutual Aid, the works of
Elisee Reclus or, more recently, Graeber’s False Coin.
More than the destruction of villages, workshops, farms or houses, primitive accumulation
entails the destruction of entire ways of life, communities and cultures. Primitive accumulation
involves fundamentally the theft of people’s independent means of production and living. Cleaver
(1992a: 124) suggests that the very history of capitalism has been, fundamentally, “a history of a
war on autonomous subsistence activities” (what we might at this point call the history of
disvalorisation). He suggests that there has been such a war “because such subsistence activities
have both survived and been repeatedly created anew — more so in some places than in others”
(Cleaver, 1992a: 124). It is in no way simply coincidental that primitive accumulation has been
directed specifically at indigenous practices of gift economies, for example.
Related to these processes is the degrading of skills experienced by many workers and the
monopolization of skilled labour by higher paid “mental workers” such as engineers. Opposing,
and to some extent reversing, this replacement is a crucial, perhaps the key, aspect of anarchist
activity today. It is this opposition that underlies anarchist criticisms of the monopolization of
learning skills by professional instructors or the monopolization of care-giving skills by
professional social workers.
At the same time, anarchists are careful not to over-estimate the success of capital’s destructive
power or to fail to appreciate the tenacity and perseverance of non-capitalist social relations.
Indeed, a vast array of struggles against capitalism, both historically and contemporarily, have been
based on precisely these supposedly “archaic” relations. Anarchist styles of sociation and
organization express the persistence of archaic forms within the (post-) modern context. They
reveal the return of the repressed in sociological types exemplary of “mechanical solidarity” and
Gemeinschaft [community].
Anarchists attempt to organize against dependency on commodities and professional “experts,”
the manifestations of the commodification of needs and of market supplied services. Anarchists
emphasize the significance of autonomous creativity in the struggles against states and capital.
Anarchists view these activities in terms of the possibilities for a post-capitalist future.
In many of his writings the anarcho-syndicalist Sam Dolgoff stresses the importance of
constructive anarchism, rich in positive and practical ideas rather than instinctual acts and negative
or reactive stances. Still, constructive anarchy does not rely on ready-made plans or “scientific”
calculation. The basis for constructive anarchism, as in Cleaver’s discussion of auto-valorization, is
already available in currently existing social relations, even if these relations are dominated and
obscured by the authoritarian society around them.
The anarchist theoreticians limited themselves to suggest the utilization of all the
useful organisms in the old society in order to reconstruct the new. They envisioned the
generalization of practices and tendencies which are already in effect. The very fact
that autonomy, decentralization and federalism are more practical alternatives to
centralism and statism already presupposes that these vast organizational networks
now performing the functions of society are prepared to replace the old bankrupt
hyper-centralized administrations. That the “elements of the new society are already
developing in the collapsing bourgeois society” (Marx) is a fundamental principle
shared by all tendencies in the socialist movement (1979: 5).
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If society is “a vast interlocking network of cooperative labour” (5) then those networks of
cooperation will provide a good starting point, if only a starting point, towards throwing off the
bonds of coercion, authoritarianism and exploitation. It is in the relations of cooperative labour,
which encompasses millions of daily acts, that one can find the real basis for social life. Without
these networks, often unrecognized and unpaid, society would collapse.
A beginning step in these processes of emancipation is the abolition of the wage system and the
distribution of goods and services according to the old communist principle, “from each according
to ability, to each according to need.”
Libertarian Communism is the organization of society without the State and without
capitalist property relations. To establish Libertarian Communism it will not be
necessary to invent artificial forms of organization. The new society will emerge from
the “shell of the old”. The elements of the future society are already planted in the
existing order. They are the syndicate (union) and the Free Commune (sometimes
called the ‘free municipality’) which are old, deeply rooted, non-Statist popular
institutions spontaneously organized and embracing all towns and villages in urban and
in rural areas. The Free Commune is ideally suited to cope successfully with the
problems of social and economic life in libertarian communities. Within the Free
Commune there is also room for cooperative groups and other associations, as well as
individuals to meet their own needs (providing, of course, that they do not employ
hired labor for wages). The terms ‘Libertarian’ and ‘Communism’ denote the fusion of
two inseparable concepts, the individual pre-requisites for the Free Society:
COLLECTIVE AND INDIVIDUAL LIBERTY (1979: 6).
Of course, experiences of both the syndicate and the free commune have been greatly eroded, if
not entirely eliminated, over centuries of statist imposition. This situation has been addressed by
the anarchist Paul Goodman in rather poignant terms: “The pathos of oppressed people, however, is
that, if they break free, they don’t know what to do. Not having been autonomous, they don’t know
what it’s like, and before they learn, they have new managers who are not in a hurry to abdicate”
(Goodman quoted in Ward, 2004: 69). That means that people have to construct approximations in
which the social relations of a future society can be learned, experienced and nurtured.
This is part of the impetus behind the creation of “free schools,” “infoshops,” industrial unions
and squats. These are places in which the life of the free commune, buried beneath the debris of
authoritarian systems, can be glimpsed again, if only in a limited form.
Anarchism envisions a flexible, pluralist society where all the needs of mankind would be
supplied by an infinite variety of voluntary associations. The world is honeycombed with affinity
groups from chess clubs to anarchist propaganda groups. They are formed, dissolved and
reconstituted according to the fluctuating whims and fancies of the individual adherents. It is
precisely because they “reflect individual preferences” that such groups are the lifeblood of the free
society (1979: 8).
In his discussion of the US labor movement, “The American Labor Movement: A New
Beginning”(ALM), Dolgoff reminds readers that the labor movement once put a great deal of
energy into building more permanent forms of alternative institutions. An expanding variety of
mutual aid functions were provided through unions in the early days of labor.
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They created a network of cooperative institutions of all kinds: schools, summer camps
for children and adults, homes for the aged, health and cultural centers, insurance
plans, technical education, housing, credit associations, et cetera. All these, and many
other essential services were provided by the people themselves, long before the
government monopolized social services wasting untold billions on a top-heavy
bureaucratic parasitical apparatus; long before the labor movement was corrupted by
“business unionism” (1980: 31).
That Dolgoff learned these often forgotten or overlooked lessons from a critical engagement with
the labor movement is telling. As a militant anarchist Dolgoff had little time for those who, seeking
comfort or moral privilege in anarchist “purity,” refuse to engage in the real struggles in which
people find themselves. Anarchy cannot be abstracted from day-to-day life situations and the
difficult choices with which people are confronted.
As Dolgoff concludes, anarchism is no “panacea that will miraculously cure all the ills of the
social body” (1979: 10). Anarchism is simply a “guide to action based on a realistic conception of
social reconstruction” (1979: 10-11). Far from the economic determinism or workerism which
syndicalists are so often accused of, Dolgoff’s vision shares many important insights with the views
of recent “cultural” anarchists such as Paul Goodman and Colin Ward.
Among the primary historical influences on everyday anarchy, perhaps the most significant is
Kropotkin’s version of anarcho-communism and, especially, his ideas about mutual aid. In Mutual
Aid Kropotkin documents the centrality of co-operation within animal and human groups and links
anarchist theory with everyday experience. Kropotkin’s definition suggests that anarchism, in part,
“would represent an interwoven network, composed of an infinite variety of groups and federations
of all sizes and degrees…temporary or more or less permanent…for all possible purposes” (quoted
in Ward and Goodway, 2003: 94). As Ward (2004: 29) reminds us: “A century ago Kropotkin noted
the endless variety of ‘friendly societies, the unities of oddfellows, the village and town clubs
organised for meeting the doctors’ bills’ built up by working-class self-help.” Both Kropotkin and,
to a much lesser extent, Marx, commented on and were inspired by peasant collaboration in various
aspects of daily life from the care of communal lands and forests, harvesting, the building of roads,
house construction and dairy production.
Kropotkin’s political archeology, and especially his studies of the French Revolution and the
Paris Commune, informed his analyses of the Russian revolutions of 1905 to 1917 and coloured his
warnings to comrades about the possibilities and perils that waited along the different paths of
political change (Cleaver, 1992b). This remains an important social and political undertaking in the
context of crisis and structural adjustment impelled by the forces of capitalist globalization.
In 1917 Kropotkin saw the dangers in the crisis: both those of reaction and those
disguised in the garb of revolution, whether parliamentary or Bolshevik…In 1917
Kropotkin also knew where to look for the power to oppose those dangers and to create
the space for the Russian people to craft their own solutions: in the self-activity of
workers and peasants…In 1917, as we know, the power of workers to resist both
reaction and centralization proved inadequate — partly because the spokespersons of
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the latter cloaked their intentions behind a bright rhetoric of revolution. Today…such
rhetoric is no longer possible and in its place there is only the drab, alienating language
of national and supranational state officials (Cleaver, 1992b: 10).
Kropotkin’s vast research into “mutual aid” was motivated by a desire to develop a general
understanding of the character of human societies and their processes of evolution. It was partly
concerned with providing a sociological critique of the popular views of social Darwinists like
Huxley and Spencer. More than that, as Cleaver (1992b) notes, his work was aimed at laying the
foundation for his anarcho-communist politics by showing a recurring tendency in human societies,
as well as in many other animal societies, for individuals to help each other and to cooperate with
other members of the species, rather than to compete in a Hobbesian war of all against all.
In several book-length research works, including Mutual Aid, The Conquest of Bread and Fields,
Factories and Workshops, Kropotkin tried to sketch the manifestation and development of mutual
aid historically. What his research suggested to him was that mutual aid was always present in
human societies, even if its development was never uniform or the same over different periods or
within different societies. At various points mutual aid was the primary factor of social life while at
other times it was submerged beneath forces of competition, conflict and violence. The key,
however was that, regardless of its form, or the adversity of circumstances in which it operated, it
was always there “providing the foundation for recurrent efforts at co-operative self-emancipation
from various forms of domination (the state, institutional religion, capitalism)” (Cleaver, 1992b: 3).
Kropotkin was not, in a utopian manner, trying to suggest how a new society might or should
develop. In his view it was already happening. The instances were already appearing in the present.
Anarchism is not involved in the drawing up of social blueprints for the future. This is one
reason that anarchists, to this day, have been so reluctant to describe the “anarchist society.” Instead
anarchists have tried mainly to identify and understand social trends or tendencies, even
countervailing ones. The focus is resolutely on manifestations of the future in the present.
In major works such as The Conquest of Bread, Kropotkin seeks to detail how the post-capitalist
future was already emerging in the here and now. His research in this case was concerned with, and
indeed managed to offer examples, of practical cases in the present, which suggested aspects of a
post-capitalist society. In this way Kropotkin’s work, as with the work of other anarcho-
communists, offers something more than simply a proposition. Thus his politics were grounded in
ongoing, if under-appreciated, aspects of human societies (Cleaver, 1992b).
Kropotkin argued that human societies developed through processes involved in the ongoing
interplay of what he called the “law of mutual struggle” and the “law of mutual aid.” These forces
manifested themselves in various ways depending on historical period or social context but
significantly for Kropotkin, they were typically observed in conflict rather than in stasis or
equilibrium. Neither was this a strictly evolutionary schema, since Kropotkin included critically
within his view of the interplay between these forces, periods of revolutionary upheaval.
On the one side were the institutions and behaviors of mutual struggle such as narrow-
minded individualism, competition, the concentration of landed and industrial property,
capitalist exploitation, the state and war. On the other side were those of mutual aid
such as cooperation in production, village folkmotes, communal celebrations, trade
unionism and syndicalism, strikes, political and social associations (Cleaver, 1992b: 4).
According to Kropotkin, one or the other force tended to be predominant, depending on the era
or instance, but it was his considered opinion that forces of mutual aid were on the rise, even as
capitalism appeared triumphant. In fact, in his view the sort of industrial development for which
capitalism was famous could not be possible without an incredible degree of co-operative labour.
Kropotkin argued against capitalist myth-making that presented the rapid growth of industrial
development as the result of competition and instead suggested that the scope and efficiency of
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cooperation were more important factors (see Cleaver, 1992a; 1992b). In this his analysis was
remarkably close to that of Marx, who indeed saw the mass co-operation of industrial production as
a prerequisite for communism.
Anarchist sociologists might do well to remember Kropotkin’s advice concerning the methods to
be followed by anarchist researchers. In his 1887 book, Anarchist Communism, Kropotkin suggests
that the anarchist approach differs from that of the utopian: “[The anarchist] studies human society
as it is now and was in the past…tries to discover its tendencies, past and present, its growing
needs, intellectual and economic, and in his [sic] ideal he merely points out in which direction
evolution goes” (quoted in Cleaver, 1992b: 3).
Marx’s writings offered much less detail than Kropotkin’s works when it comes to the issue of
working class subjectivity in contrast to the rather extensive analysis Marx provided with regard to
capitalist domination. It was only through the decades of work carried out by various autonomist
Marxists that there was developed any Marxist analysis of working class autonomy that came close
to a parallel of Kropotkin’s work (Cleaver, 1992b: 7).
Perhaps the broadest and most sustained vision of constructive anarchy comes from Colin Ward.
Ward is best known through his third book Anarchy in Action (1973) which was, until his 2004
contribution to the Oxford Press “Short Introduction” series, Anarchism: A Very Short Introduction,
his only book explicitly about anarchist theory. Longtime anarchist George Woodcock identified
Anarchy in Action as one of the most important theoretical works on anarchism and I would have to
agree. It is in the pages of that relatively short work that Ward makes explicit his highly distinctive
version of anarchism, what I term ‘an anarchy of everyday life.’
Ward follows Kropotkin in identifying himself as an anarchist communist and has even
suggested that Anarchy in Action is merely an extended contemporary footnote to Mutual Aid
(Ward and Goodway, 2003: 14). Still, Ward goes beyond Kropotkin in the importance he places on
co-operative groups in anarchist social transformation.
Ward is critical of anarchists’ preoccupation with anarchist history and in his own works prefers
to emphasize the here-and-now and the immediate future (Ward and Goodway, 2003). Ward
describes his approach to anarchism as one that is based on actual experiences or practical
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examples rather than theories or hypotheses. Through the responses of readers to articles published
in Anarchy Ward found that for many people anarchy aptly described the “organized chaos” that
people experienced during their daily lives, even at their workplaces. Incredibly, this perspective on
anarchism was so outside of the parameters of mainstream anarchism that in 1940, when Ward tried
to convince his Freedom Press Group colleagues to print a pamphlet on the squatters’ movement “it
wasn’t thought that this is somehow relevant to anarchism” (Ward and Goodway, 2003: 15).
While having no formal background in sociology Ward argues for the importance of taking a
sociological approach to the world. In developing a sociological anarchism Ward takes up the call
of fellow anarchist and popular sex educator Alex Comfort who was one of the first to argue that
anarchists had much to learn from sociologists. In his work Delinquency (1951) Comfort called for
anarchism to become a libertarian action sociology.
Ward draws some of his inspiration from the sociology of autonomous groups. His readings of
the now out of print sociology bulletin Autonomous Groups contributed to understandings of
capacities for influencing social change within informal networks such as the Batignolles Group,
founders of Impressionism and the Fabian Society. Notably these groups were incredibly effective,
exercising an influence well beyond their numbers. As Ward (2003: 48) notes because anarchists
traditionally “have conceived of the whole of social organisation as a series of interlocking
networks of autonomous groups.” Thus it is important that anarchists pay serious attention to the
lessons to be learned from successful ones.
Autonomous groups that he has studied or participated in are characterized by “having a secure
internal network based on friendship and shared skills, and a series of external networks of contacts
in a variety of fields” (Ward, 2003: 44). Among these groups Ward includes the Freedom Press
Group, A.S. Neill’s Summerhill School of alternative education, Burgess Hill School and South
London’s Peckham Health Centre which offered approaches to social medicine. Autonomous
groups are distinguished from other forms of organization characterized by “hierarchies of
relationships, fixed divisions of labour, and explicit rules and practices” (Ward, 2003: 48).
Autonomous groups are marked by a high degree of individual autonomy within the group, reliance
on direct reciprocities in decision-making, for decisions affecting all group members, and the
temporary and fluctuating character of leadership.
When people have no control over, or responsibility for, crucial decisions over important aspects
of life, whether regarding housing, education or work, these areas of social life become obstacles to
personal fulfillment and collective development. Yet when people are free to make major decisions
and contribute to the planning and implementation of decisions involving key areas of daily life
there are improvements in individual and social well-being (Ward and Goodway, 2003: 76). Ward
finds resonance in the findings of industrial psychologists who suggest that satisfaction in work is
very strongly related to the “span of autonomy,” or the proportion of work time in which workers
are free to make and act on their own decisions.
The provisions of the welfare state are, of course, contradictory and most anarchists do not take a
cavalier approach to what have been important, and often necessary, services for many people,
including many anarchists. In discussing the welfare state, Colin Ward sums up its positive and
negative aspects in short: “The positive feature of welfare legislation is that, contrary to the
capitalist ethic, it is a testament to human solidarity. The negative feature is precisely that it is an
arm of the state” (Ward and Goodway, 2003: 79). Ward points out that the provision of social
welfare did not originate from government through the “welfare state.” Rather, it emerged in
practice “from the vast network of friendly societies and mutual aid organizations that had sprung
up through working-class self-help in the 19th century” (Ward, 2004: 27). This is the same point
made by Sam Dolgoff with reference to the importance of mutual aid groups for the provision of
education to elder care within the labour movement in the US.
In numerous works Ward has illustrated how, since the late nineteenth century, “‘the tradition of
fraternal and autonomous associations springing up from below’ has been successively displaced
by one of ‘authoritarian institutions directed from above'” (Ward and Goodway, 2003: 17). As Ward
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suggests, this displacement was actively pursued, with often disastrous results, in the development
of the social citizenship state: “The great tradition of working-class self-help and mutual aid was
written off not just as irrelevant, but as an actual impediment, by the political and professional
architects of the welfare state…The contribution that the recipients had to make…was ignored as a
mere embarrassment” (quoted in Ward and Goodway, 2003: 18). From his research on housing
movements Ward comments on “the initially working-class self-help building societies stripping
themselves of the final vestiges of mutuality; and this degeneration has existed alongside a tradition
of municipal housing that was adamantly opposed to the principle of dweller control” (Ward and
Goodway, 2003: 18).
Ward’s work is directed towards providing useful “pointers to the way ahead if we are to stand
any chance of reinstituting the self-organisation and mutual aid that have been lost” (Ward and
Goodway, 2003: 18). Ward focuses on recent examples, such as holiday camps in Britain, “in which
a key role was played by the major organisations of working-class self-help and mutual aid, the co-
operative movement and trade unions” (Ward and Goodway, 2003: 17). A significant theme in the
perspectives of everyday anarchy is “the historic importance of such institutions in the provision of
welfare and the maintenance of social solidarity” (Ward and Goodway, 2003: 17).
The collapse of the “actually existing” socialist states and the crisis-inducing development of
capitalist globalization have in various ways impelled a re-thinking of issues of social
transformation and the surpassing of capitalism by anarchists as well as Marxists. Various streams
of anarcho-communism, most notably those that are part of the stream of everyday anarchy from
Kropotkin to Goodman to Ward, can be seen to have strong similarities, or even affinities, with
certain traditions of libertarian socialism. This is especially so when one considers the anarcho-
communist and libertarian socialist approaches to the questions of constructing alternatives to
capitalism in the here and now.
There are striking similarities, for example, between autonomist Marxist writings on self-
valorization and anarchist writings on mutual aid and affinity. The types of concrete/actually
existing mutual aid activities initiated or supported by anarchists certainly embody the notion of
self-valorization and the self-constitution of alternative modes of living, as discussed by Cleaver
(1992a). These are autonomous self-valorizing activities which, as discussed again by autonomists,
are confronted by capitalist attempts at disvalorization.
As noted above, Harry Cleaver (1992b) finds a great resonance, especially, between the analyses
of Peter Kropotkin, and his concern with the emergence of a new society from within capitalism,
and the analyses of autonomist Marxists who suggest that the future might be glimpsed within
current processes of working-class self-valorization, or those autonomous practices by which
people attempt to create alternative social relations, either at work or in their communities. Cleaver
(1992b: 11) notes that as “a replacement for an exhausted and failed orthodoxy” the autonomist
Marxists offer a more vital and engaged Marxism, “one that has been regenerated within the
struggles of real people and as such, has been able to articulate at least some elements of their
desires and projects of self-valorization.” Given this close political affinity, Cleaver (1992b)
suggests that, against more sectarian positions, those inspired by Kropotkin might do well to pay
attention to the libertarian socialists just as the Marxists might find inspiration for their own work
in Kropotkin’s efforts. I would agree and suggest that contemporary anarchists, who have tended to
eschew analyses of class, can gain much especially through an engagement with autonomist
Marxist ideas of auto-valorization. Auto-valorization helps to create some broader possibilities for
people, individually and collectively, to take further actions to act in their own interests and to gain
greater opportunities for the self-determination of larger parts of their lives.
The notion of auto-valorization, as used by contemporary anarchists and libertarian communists
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builds upon Marx’s discussion of use value versus exchange value. While under communist social
relations there will be no exchange value, what is produced will still retain use value. People
produce things because they have some kind of use for them; they meet some need or desire. This
is where the qualitative aspect of production comes in. Generally people prefer products that are
well-made, function as planned, are not poisonous and so on. Under capitalism, exchange value, in
which a coat can get two pairs of shoes, predominates use value. This is the quantitative aspect of
value that does not care whether the product is durable, shoddy or toxic as long as it secures its
(potential) value in sale or other exchange with something else.
And capitalism’s driving focus on the quantitative at the expense of the qualitative also comes to
dominate human labour. The quality (skill, pleasure, creativity) of the particular work that people
do is not primarily relevant for the capitalist (except that skilled labour costs more to produce and
carries more exchange value). That is partly because exchange is based on the quantity of ‘average-
socially-necessary-labour-time’ embodied in the product human labour produces. That simply
means that if some firm takes a longer time to produce something on outdated machinery they
cannot claim the extra labour time they take, due to inefficiencies, compared to a firm that produces
more quickly using updated technology, and that is one reason why outmoded producers go under.
Capitalist production is geared towards exchange as the only way that surplus value is actually
realized rather than being potential; the capitalist cannot bank surplus as value until the product has
been exchanged. Use value plays a part only to the extent that something has to have some use for
people or else they would not buy it; well, if the thing seems totally useless the bosses still have
advertising to convince people otherwise. Under other non-capitalist “modes of production”, such
as feudalism, most production is geared towards use value production rather than exchange value.
Surely, if under communism, people are producing to meet their needs, they will continue to
produce use values (and even a surplus of them in case of emergency) without regard for exchange
value (which would, certainly, be absent in a truly communist society anyway): Unless one is
talking about a communism of uselessness. Certainly people would value their work (qualitatively)
in ways that cannot be imagined now since they would be meeting their community’s needs and
would try to do so with some joy and pleasure in work, providing decent products without fouling
up the environment.
Anarchists try to avoid a productivist vision of life, emphasizing the great diversity of ways in
which human life might be realized. Anarchists again share common ground with autonomist
Marxists in arguing that the only way that work can be an interesting mode of self-realization for
people is “through its subordination to the rest of life, the exact opposite of capitalism” (Cleaver,
1992: 143, n. 59). Anarchists are attempting to organize their productive activities, and to extend
this organization, in order to impede, initially and, eventually, to break capitalist command over
society.
What is common in the approach taken by Kropotkin to the issue of superceding capitalism and
that taken by the autonomist Marxists is the emphasis on manifestations of the future in the present.
The shared concern is with, as Cleaver (1992b: 10) suggests, “the identification of already existing
activities which embody new, alternative forms of social cooperation and ways of being.”
Autonomist Marxists, like anarchists, emphasize the primary importance of the self-activity and
creativity of people in struggle.
The attempt to reconceptualize the process of moving beyond capitalism, as developed in the
works of autonomist Marxists, bears quite striking similarities to the approach offered by Kropotkin
regarding this question (Cleaver, 1992b). Autonomist Marxists share with most anarchists a
rejection of concepts of “the transitional period” or “the transitional program.” In place of “the
transition” autonomists and anarchists emphasize some version of what Hakim Bey calls
“immediatism,” or activities that suggest the revolution is already underway.
The focus on workers’ autonomy has led to a rejection of orthodox Marxist arguments that the
transcendence of capitalism and movement to a post-capitalist society requires some form of
transitional order, i.e. socialism, characterized by party management of the state in the name of the
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people (Cleaver, 1992b). Autonomist Marxists’ emphasis on the autonomy of working class self
activity stresses not only autonomy from capital but also autonomy from the “official”
organizations of the working class, especially from trade unions and socialist (or more specifically,
social democratic) parties. This approach shares with anarchism an analysis of the Russian
revolution of 1917 that saw the Bolshevik takeover of the soviets as the beginning of the restoration
of domination and exploitation (Cleaver, 1992b). Thus the subversion of the revolution is viewed as
occurring much earlier than with the emergence of Stalinism to which most Leninists and
Trotskyists point as the moment that marked the revolution’s betrayal.
Autonomists, like anarchists, argue that the process of building a new society must be the work
of the people themselves lest it be doomed from the outset. Class struggle has a dual character and
its categories can be understood from either the perspective of capital or the perspective of the
working class. The shift in focus away from capital, the domain of orthodox Marxist approaches,
and towards workers has opened new realizations, including a recognition that the “working class”
is itself a category of capital, and, crucially, one that people have struggled to avoid or escape
(Cleaver, 1992b: 7).
Conclusion
Anarchists argue that for most of human history people have organized themselves collectively
to satisfy their own needs. Social organization is conceived as a network of local voluntary
groupings. Anarchists propose a decentralized society, without a central political body, in which
people manage their own affairs free from any coercion or external authority. These self-goverened
communes could federate freely at regional (or larger) levels to ensure co-ordination or mutual
defence. Their autonomy and specificity must be maintained, however. Each locality will decide
freely which social, cultural and economic arrangements to pursue. Rather than a pyramid,
anarchist associations would form a web.
Anarchists sometimes point to post offices and railway networks as examples of the way in
which local groups and associations can combine to provide complex networks of functions
without any central authority (Ward, 2004). Postal services work as a result of voluntary
agreements between different post offices, in different countries, without any central world postal
authority (Ward, 2004). As Ward suggests: “Coordination requires neither uniformity nor
bureaucracy” (2004: 89).
As we have seen, anarchists do disagree over the tactics which they view as necessary to realize
a free society. Anarchists also vary greatly in their visions of the libertarian future. Unlike utopian
thinkers, anarchists exercise extreme caution when discussing “blueprints” of future social relations
since they believe that it is always up to those seeking freedom to decide how they desire to live.
Still, there are a few features common to anarchist visions of a free society. While anarchists are
not in agreement about the means to bring about the future libertarian society, they are clear that
means and ends cannot be separated.
The moment we stop insisting on viewing all forms of action only by their function in
reproducing larger, total, forms of inequality of power, we will also be able to see that
anarchist social relations and non-alienated forms of action are all around us. And this
is critical because it already shows that anarchism is, already, and has always been, one
of the main bases for human interaction. We self-organize and engage in mutual aid all
the time. We always have (Graeber, 2004:76).
The anarchist future present must, almost by definition, be based upon ongoing experiments in
social arrangements, in attempting to address the usual dilemma of maintaining both individual
freedoms and social equality (Ehrlich, 1996b). The revolution is always in the making. These
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projects make up what the anarchist sociologist Howard Ehrlich calls “anarchist transfer cultures.”
References
Cleaver, Harry 1992a. “The Inversion of Class Perspective in Marxian Theory: From Valorization
to Self-Valorization.” In Essays on Open Marxism, eds. W. Bonefeld, R. Gunn, and K.
Psychopedis. London: Pluto, 106–144.
———. 1992b. “Kropotkin, Self-valorization and the Crisis of Marxism.” Paper presented at the
Conference on Pyotr Alexeevich Kropotkin, Russian Academy of Science, Moscow, St.
Petersburg, and Dimitrov, December 8–14.
Dolgoff, Sam. 1980. The American Labor Movement a New Beginning. Resurgence.
———. 1979. The Relevance of Anarchism to Contemporary Society. Minneapolis: Soil of Liberty.
Ehrlich, Howard, Carol Ehrlich, David DeLeon, and Glenda Morris. 1996. “Questions and Answers
about Anarchism.” In Reinventing Anarchy, Again, ed. Howard Ehrlich. Oakland: AK Press.
Marshall, Peter. 1993. Demanding the Impossible: A History of Anarchism. London: HarperCollins.
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Ward, Colin. 2004. Anarchism: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Ward, Colin and David Goodway. 2003. Talking Anarchy. Nottingham: Five Leaves.
Woodcock, George. 1962. Anarchism: A History of Libertarian Ideas and Movements. New York:
World Publishing Company.
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