Citations:anarcho-Bolshevik

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English citations of anarcho-Bolshevik and anarcho-bolshevik

1930 1978 1986 2001 2007 2019
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.

Noun: anarchist with Bolshevist characteristics[edit]

1930, Leon Trotsky, chapter 25, in Max Eastman, editor, The History of the Russian Revolution[1], volume 1, →ISBN, page 384:
In all excesses the Liberals and Compromisers would see the hand of “Anarcho-Bolsheviks” and German agents.
1978, Murray Bookchin, chapter IX, in The Spanish Anarchists[2], New York: Harper Colophon Books, →ISBN, page 243:
Addressing herself to the major tendencies within Spanish Anarchosyndicalism, Federica Montseney, one of the FAI’s luminaries during the Republican period and a scion of the Urales, a famous Anarchist family, notes three currents: “Those known as Treintistas, who formed the right-wing, the anarchists who formed the left-wing, and a third current, the ‘anarcho-Bolsheviks,’ embodied by the group of Garda Oliver and the playful partisans of ‘one for all,’ who made glancing contact with the theories of the Russian revolutionaries.”
1986, Vladimir Viktorovich Alexandrov, chapter 15, in A Contemporary World History: 1917–1945[3], Union of Soviet Socialist Republics: Progress Publishers Moscow, page 549:
In November 1918, the anarcho-Bolshevik group, which had sprung up among the anarchists, staged an uprising in Rio de Janeiro and proclaimed a workers’ republic, which existed for a few days.
2001, “Trotskyism vs. Anarchism”, in Workers Vanguard[4], volume 32, number 769, New York: Spartacist Publishing Co., page 7:
For instance, in an article on early Argentine anarchism they write, “Sadly, with the rise of Leninism and his authoritarian brand of communism in Russia, so called anarcho-bolshevik groups formed all around Argentina, advocating for the dictatorship of the proletariat and justifying the state as a vehicle to an anarchist society” (“Anarchism in Early 20th Century Argentina,” Barricada No. 9, October 2001).
2007, Abel Paz, chapter II, in Durruti in the Spanish Revolution[5], Canada: AK Press, →ISBN, page 194:
The Left, even the Marxists, regarded their extreme anarchist position as a form of revolutionary infantilism. And, likewise, some members of the CNT derisively described them as anarcho-Bolsheviks.
2019, Lawrence Jarach, “Leftism 101”, in Anarchy: A Journal of Desire Armed[6], Grand Rapids: Sprout Anarchist Collective, page 4:
Their more principled anarchist opponents called the Platformists “anarcho-bolsheviks,” for whom it was merely a case of the unchecked authoritarian behavior of the Bolsheviks that led them to abandon true revolution; the necessary existence, goals, and methods of a self-conscious militarized revolutionary vanguard were accepted in full.