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Overview

The Conquest of Bread presents the clearest statement of Kropotkin's anarchist social doctrines. It possesses a lucidity of style not often found in books on social themes. In Kropotkin's own description, the book is “a study of the needs of humanity, and the economic means to satisfy them”. Taking the Paris Commune as its model, its paramount aim is to show how a social revolution can be made and how a society, organized on libertarian lines, can then be built on the ruins of the old. Form Stirner's individualism, Proudhon's mutualism and Bakunin's collectivism Kropotkin proceeded to the principle of “anarchist communism”, by which private property and inequality of income would give way to the free distribution of goods and services. In summing up his beliefs he said, “The anarchists conceive a society in which all the mutual relations of its members are regulated... by mutual agreements between the members of the society and by a sum of social customs and habits...continually developing and continually readjusting in accordance with the ever-growing requirements of a free life stimulated by the progress of science, invention and the steady growth of higher ideals.”  In his introduction, George Woodcock throws a modern light on the significance and scope of Kropotkin's work.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780141396118
Publisher: Penguin Publishing Group
Publication date: 12/08/2015
Pages: 224
Sales rank: 232,794
Product dimensions: 5.00(w) x 7.70(h) x 0.70(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

PETER KROPOTKIN (1842-1921) came from a major aristocratic Russian family but turned his back on it to embrace a life of imprisonment and exile in pursuit of his beliefs. His major works are The Conquest of Bread and Mutual Aid. His funeral was marked as the last permitted gathering of anarchists in the USSR. 

DAVID PRIESTLAND (introducer) is the author of Red Flag and Merchant, Soldier, Sage.  He teaches at St Edmund's Hall, University of Oxford.

Table of Contents

An Introduction by George Woodcock

Preface by Elisee Reclus To The First French Edition

Preface To The 1907 Edition

Chapter 1: Our Riches

Chapter 2: Well-Being For All

Chapter 3: Anarchist Communism

Chapter 4: Expropriation

Chapter 5: Food

Chapter 6: Dwelling

Chapter 7: Clothing

Chapter 8: Ways and Means

Chapter 9: The Need for Luxury

Chapter 10: Agreeable Work

Chapter 11: Free Agreement

Chapter 12: Objections

Chapter 13: The Collectivist Wages System

Chapter 14: Consumption and Production

Chapter 15: The Division of Labour

Chapter 16: The Decentralization of Industry

Chapter 17: Agriculture
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