Anarchist symbolism
Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Template:Use American English {{#invoke:sidebar|collapsible | name = Anarchism sidebar | pretitle = Part of a series on | title = Anarchism | bodystyle = border: 4px double #000000; border-spacing:0.2em 0; | listtitlestyle = background:transparent; border-top:1px solid #000000; text-align:center; | image = "Circle-A" anarchy symbol | imageclass = skin-invert-image | expanded = culture | class = hlist template-anarchism-sidebar | templatestyles = Anarchism sidebar/styles.css | centered list titles = yes | abovestyle = padding-bottom:0.35em; border-top:1px solid #000000; border-bottom:0px solid; | above =
| list1name = schools | list1title = Schools of thought | list1 = {{#invoke:sidebar|sidebar | child = yes | contentclass = hlist | heading1 = | content1 = <section begin=Schools of thought />
<section end=Schools of thought /> | heading5 = Methodology | content5 = <section begin=Methodology />
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<section end=Methodology /> }} | list2name = theory | list2title =
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- Anarchy
- Anarchist Black Cross
- Anarchist criminology
- Anationalism
- Anti-authoritarianism
- Anti-capitalism
- Anti-militarism
- Affinity group
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<section end=Theory /> | list3name = people | list3title = People | list3 = <section begin=People />
- Alston
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<section end=People /> | list4name = issues | list4title = Issues | list4 = <section begin=Issues />
<section end=Issues /> | list5name = history | list5title = History | list5 = <section begin=History />
- French Revolution
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- Manifesto of the Sixteen
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- Biennio Rosso
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- Makhnovshchina
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- Anarchist insurrection of January 1933
- Anarchist insurrection of December 1933
- Spanish Revolution of 1936
- Barcelona May Days
- Red inverted triangle
- Labadie Collection
- Provo
- May 1968
- Kate Sharpley Library
- Carnival Against Capital
- 1999 Seattle WTO protests
- Really Really Free Market
- Occupy movement
<section end=History /> | list6name = culture | list6title = Culture | list6 = <section begin=Culture />
- A las Barricadas
- Anarchist bookfair
- Anarcho-punk
- Anarchy in the U.K.
- Arts
- DIY ethic
- Escuela Moderna
- Films
- Freeganism
- Infoshop
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- The Internationale
- Jewish anarchism
- Lifestylism
- May Day
- "No gods, no masters"
- Popular education
- "Property is theft!"
- Radical cheerleading
- Radical environmentalism
- Self-managed social center
- Symbolism
<section end=Culture /> | list7name = economics | list7title = Economics | list7 = <section begin=Economics />
- Communi{{#ifeq:{{{sp}}}|uk|s|z}}ation
- Cooperative
- Cost the limit of price
- Decentrali{{#ifeq:{{{sp}}}|uk|s|z}}ed planned economy
- Free association
- General strike
- Gift economy
- Give-away shop
- Labour voucher
- Market socialism
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- Mutual credit
- Social ownership
- Wage slavery
- Workers' self-management
<section end=Economics /> | list8name = by region | list8title = By region | list8 = <section begin=By region />
- Africa
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<section end=By region /> | list9name = lists | list9title = Lists | list9 = <section begin=Lists />
<section end=Lists /> | list10name = related | list10title = Related topics | list10 = <section begin=Related topics />
- Anti-corporatism
- Anti-consumerism
- Anti-fascism
- Anti-globali{{#ifeq:{{{sp}}}|uk|s|z}}ation
- Anti-statism
- Anti-war movement
- Autarchism
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- Communism
- Definition of anarchism and libertarianism
- Dual power
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- Labo{{#ifeq:{{{sp}}}|us||u}}r movement
- Left communism
- Left-libertarianism
- Libertarianism
- Libertarian socialism
- Marxism
- Template:Wraplink
- Situationist International
- Socialism
- Spontaneous order
<section end=Related topics /> | belowclass = plainlist | belowstyle = text-align:center; font-weight:normal; border-top:1px solid #000000; border-bottom:1px solid #000000; | below =
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Anarchists have employed certain symbols for their cause since the 19th century, including most prominently the circle-A and the black flag.Template:R<ref name="An Anarchist FAQ">Template:Cite book</ref> Anarchist cultural symbols have become more prevalent in popular culture since around the turn of the 21st century, concurrent with the anti-globalization movement and with the punk subculture.<ref name="revival">Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="Gordon">Template:Cite journal</ref>
FlagsEdit
Red flagEdit
The red flag was one of first anarchist symbols; it was widely used in late 19th century by anarchists worldwide.<ref name=cia>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Peter Kropotkin wrote that he preferred the use of the red flag.<ref name="PK">Template:Cite book</ref> French anarchist Louise Michel wrote that the flag "frightens the executioners because it is so red with our blood. [...] Those red and black banners wave over us mourning our dead and wave over our hopes for the dawn that is breaking."<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Use of the red flag by anarchists largely disappeared after the October Revolution, when red flags started to be associated only with Bolshevism and communist parties and authoritarian, bureaucratic and reformist social democracy, or authoritarian socialism.<ref name=cia/>
Black flagEdit
The black flag has been associated with anarchism since the 1880s, when several anarchist organizations and journals adopted the name Black Flag.Template:R
Howard J. Ehrlich writes in Reinventing Anarchy, Again:
The origins of the black flag are uncertain.Template:R Modern anarchism has a shared ancestry with—among other ideologies—socialism, a movement strongly associated with the red flag. As anarchism became more and more distinct from socialism in the 1880s, it adopted the black flag in an attempt to differentiate itself.<ref name="An Anarchist FAQ"/> It was flown in the 1831 Canut revolt,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> in which black represented the mourning of liberty lost.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
The French anarchist paper Le Drapeau Noir (The Black Flag), which printed its first issue in August 1883,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> is one of the first published references to use black as an anarchist color. Black International was the name of a London-based British anarchist group founded in July 1881.Template:PbOne of the first known anarchist uses of the black flag was by Louise Michel, participant in the Paris Commune in 1871.Template:R<ref name="Wehling">Template:Cite news</ref> Michel flew the black flag during a demonstration of the unemployed which took place in Paris on March 9, 1883. With Michel at the front carrying a black flag and shouting "Bread, work, or lead!" the crowd of 500 protesters soon marched off towards the boulevard Saint-Germain and pillaged three baker's shops before the police arrested them.<ref name="Wehling" /> Michel was arrested and sentenced to six years solitary confinement. Public pressure soon forced the granting of an amnesty.<ref name="Woodcock">Template:Cite book</ref> She wrote, "The black flag is the flag of strikes and the flag of those who are hungry".Template:Sfnp
The black flag soon made its way to the United States. The black flag was displayed in Chicago at an anarchist demonstration in November 1884.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> According to the English-language newspaper of the Chicago anarchists, it was "the fearful symbol of hunger, misery and death".Template:Sfnp Thousands of anarchists attended Kropotkin's 1921 funeral behind the black flag.Template:R
Bisected flagEdit
The colors black and red have been used by anarchists since at least the late 1800s when they were used on cockades by Italian anarchists in the 1874 Bologna insurrection and in 1877 when anarchists entered the Italian town of Letino carrying red and black flags to promote the First International.<ref name="An Anarchist FAQ"/> Diagonally divided red and black flags were used by anarcho-syndicalists in SpainTemplate:Sfnp such as the labor union CNT during the Spanish Civil War.<ref name="An Anarchist FAQ"/> George Woodcock writes that the bisected black-and-red flag symbolized a uniting of "the spirit of later anarchism with the mass appeal of the [First] International".Template:Sfnp
SymbolsEdit
Circle-A Edit
Template:Redirect Template:Multiple image
The symbol composed of the capital letter A surrounded by a circle is universally recognized as a symbol of anarchism<ref name="Baillargeon">Template:Cite book</ref> and has been established in global youth culture since the 1970s.<ref name="Britannica">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> An interpretation held by anarchists such as Cindy Milstein is that the A represents the Greek {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ('without ruler/authority'), and the circle can be read as the letter O, standing for order or organization, a reference to Pierre-Joseph Proudhon's definition of anarchism from his 1840 book What Is Property?: "As man seeks justice in equality, so society seeks order in anarchy"<ref name="Milstein">Template:Cite book</ref> (Template:Langx).<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
In the 1970s, anarcho-punk and punk rock bands such as Crass began using the circle-A symbol in red,<ref name="Sartwell">Template:Cite book</ref> thereby introducing it to non-anarchists. Crass founder Penny Rimbaud would later say that the band probably first saw the symbol while traveling through France.<ref name="The only way to be - Anarchy">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Black catEdit
The origin of the black cat symbol, also known as the "sabocat", is unclear, but according to one story it came from an Industrial Workers of the World strike that was going badly. Several members had been beaten up and were put in a hospital. At that time a skinny, black cat walked into the striker's camp. The cat was fed by the striking workers and as the cat regained its health, the strike took a turn for the better. Eventually the striking workers won some of their demands, and they adopted the cat as their mascot.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
The Swiss anarchist Théophile Steinlen made use of the black cat (Le Chat Noir) in a number of his paintings. In an 1890 oil painting, he depicted a black cat raising a red banner emblazoned with the word "Gaudeamus" (Template:Langx). And in the large landscape painting Apotheosis of the Cats of Montmartre, he showed a clowder of cats on the rooftops of a working-class Parisian neighbourhood, beneath the moon. Francophone anarchists like Steilein and Zo d'Axa were inspired by the independent and undomesticated nature of the cat.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
The name Black Cat has been used for numerous anarchist-affiliated collectives and cooperatives, including a music venue in Austin, Texas (which was closed following a July 6, 2002 fire) and a now-defunct "collective kitchen" in the University District of Seattle, Washington.
SlogansEdit
"Do as you wish! Do what you want!" is a slogan of Errico Malatesta's Anarchist Program. It is explained in his pamphlet Anarchy.<ref>Malatesta 1891</ref>
No gods, no mastersEdit
"No gods, no masters" is a phrase associated with anarchist philosophy and the leftist labor movement. A similar phrase appeared in an 1870 pamphlet by a disciple of Auguste Blanqui. The exact phrase appeared as the title of Blanqui's 1880 newspaper Template:Ill before it spread throughout the anarchist movement,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> appearing in Kropotkin's 1885 Words of a Rebel and an 1896 Bordeaux anarchist manifesto. Sébastien Faure resuscitated the slogan during World War I, after which Paris's Libertarian Youth adopted the name.Template:Sfn It has appeared on tombstones of revolutionaries,<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> as the slogan of birth control activist Margaret Sanger's newspaper The Woman Rebel,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> and as the title of a Template:Ill against capital punishment by Léo Ferré.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> In the 21st century, it has featured as a slogan for the secularization of Croatia.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
See alsoEdit
Template:Portal Template:Div col
- Anarchism and the arts
- Anarchist Black Cross
- Anarchist schools of thought
- Black bloc
- Black rose (symbolism)
- Communist symbolism
- Extinction symbol
- Political colour
- Property is theft!
- Sabotage
- Inflatable rat
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
- "Anarchism". Flags of the World.
- Template:Spunk
- "Blog: Heart in a Heartless World".
- "History of anarchist symbols". Anarchy Is Order.
- "The Symbols of Anarchy". An Anarchist FAQ.
- Errico Malatesta, "Anarchy," 1891.