Nicholas Apoifis
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The early years of Greek anarchism
‘It just doesn’t mean anything to me’
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Greece's fertile anarchist and anti-authoritarian history shares constant contention and metamorphosis in its own evolution, albeit while spurning the clamour for state power. Greece's anarchism has shifted between currents since surfacing as a social movement in the 1860s. This chapter focuses on the period between the 1860s and World War II, which was dominated by social anarchist currents including anarcho-collectivism, anarcho-communism and anarcho-syndicalism. It relies on the works of ethnohistorians to empower the voices of the author's interviewees. The author begins the chapter with some background on Greece's transition into statehood. This is followed by a history of early Greek anarchism that is largely informed by Tina, Yianni and Vasili, the author's three respondents with extensive knowledge of this period, and is primarily supported with clarifying evidence from Paul Pomonis' The Early Days of Greek Anarchism.

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Anarchy in Athens

An ethnography of militancy, emotions and violence

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