#8 Dec 1980
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vox-anglosphere · 20 days ago
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1940-1980
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luigixd · 20 days ago
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I wish things played out differently.
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keirmoonrock · 1 year ago
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YALL
w-WHAT ARE THE ODDS
RIGHT NEXT TO EACH OTHER
and TODAY?!!!!
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remembering with love John Lennon shot in New York 44 years ago 8 Dec 1980.
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iannozzigiuseppe · 1 year ago
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John Lennon: "Preferisco le idee agli ideali" - Aforismi e citazioni
John Lennon: “Preferisco le idee agli ideali” (Liverpool, 9 ottobre 1940 – New York, 8 dicembre 1980) Preferisco le idee agli ideali Tutti ti amano quando sei due metri sotto terra. Combattere per la pace è come fare sesso per la verginità. La donna è la schiava degli schiavi. La costringiamo a truccarsi la faccia e ballare. La insultiamo ogni giorno in televisione. E poi ci chiediamo perché non…
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doomandgloomfromthetomb · 8 days ago
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Sister Ray In The 70s
Something special to close out the year — SISTER RAY IN THE 70s! This custom-made Doom & Gloom compilation gathers together a whole lot of "Sister Ray," as performed by Lou Reed and his various bands between 1972 and 1980. One hour, 47 minutes. More ding-dongs than Hostess. Would make a great quadruple LP bootleg, if you ask me.
Everyone’s favorite transgressive-in-many-more-ways-than-one Velvet Underground epic wasn't exactly a standard during this time. But when Lou wanted to let everyone (including himself) off the leash for a bit, he'd break "Sister Ray" out as a vehicle for some unholy/unhinged jams/vamps/raveups ... and judging by what we've got here, he really enjoyed doing so. This is gnarly stuff, shameless, harrowing and totally fun. Not for the faint of heart — but none of you are faint of heart, right?!
"Sister Ray" (Leicester University, Oct. 14, 1972)
A roar rises up from the crowd when Lou announces: "This is the sad, sad story of Sister Ray." With the Tots grooving behind him, it starts off in a mellow mode — which is good, because it allows Lou to really sing, making sure to annunciate every nasty lyric. Soon, everyone’s cooking (for the down five).
"Sister Ray" (Kansas City, May 2, 1973)
The short-lived Moogy Klingman-led lineup gives "Sister Ray" a cartoony, streetwalking funk strut, hooting and hollering behind Lou. Extra props to the drummer (known only as Chocolate), who taps out the appropriate beat during the "Who is that knocking?" section. "RIGHT!!!!" Lou exclaims approvingly.
"Sister Ray" (Buffalo, Dec. 8, 1973)
As far as I know, this is the only recording of the Rock & Roll Animal band tackling "Sister Ray," but it's a 20+-minute doozy. Of course, it takes about 10 minutes for Lou to enter the scene — lord only knows what he was getting up to backstage. Despite a wonky mix that occasionally is overtaken by pummeling drums and bass, it's a vicious listen. I like that it all comes to a pretty definitive conclusion before Lou realizes he hasn't sung the concluding verse and revs things for a final ride ride.
"Sister Ray" (Stockholm, May 14, 1974)
This one starts at a blinding white light/white heat pace, everyone riding a locked-groove riff for as long as they can. Guitarist Danny Weis is off the chain here, reveling in both chicken scratch funk and insane feedback. Lou's tambourine accents make me think of On The Corner's infernal sleigh bells, and his "CooooouLLLLDDDNnnnnt hiiiiIIIIIIIIITTTTTttttt iiiIIIIITTTTTtttttt siiiiiIIIIIIIIIdewaaaaaayyyys" vocalizations towards the end are wicked.
"Sister Ray" (Boston, October 29, 1976)
Lou had Doug Yule, an actual member of the Velvet Underground, in his band in 1975, but for some reason, "Sister Ray" wasn't played that year. But she was back in action in '76 — and in Boston, we get to hear a key "Ray" ingredient we haven't heard much of so far: Lou's skronked out guitar work. It's as if he walked past the old Boston Tea Party on the Fenway that afternoon and thought, "Ohhhh yeah, I used to really shred!" And shred he does, dueling mightily and furiously with sax man Marty Fogel. I'll also recommend this video of "Sister Ray" from a week later, which doesn't feature any six-string pyrotechnics but is awesome nonetheless.
"Sister Ray" (Lund, March 26, 1977)
With Michael Fonfara's icy electric keys mixed way up and Michael Suchorsky's locked-in drums, this almost sounds more like "Kicks" than "Sister Ray." I think that's Lou on distorto guitar there at the beginning, but he mainly focuses on delivering his whiplash vocals as the song progresses. Fogel starts to get pretty loose towards the middle, though I wish he'd cut loose even more — and I definitely wish there was a tape of Don Cherry sitting in on "Sister Ray" from around this era! The car crash ending is a blast, too.
"Sister Ray" (New York City, May 21, 1978)
"Sister Ray" takes no prisoners! This one from one of the many Bottom Line sets Lou and the Everyman Band played in 1978 is a tense slow-burner, sometimes dropping down to a whisper, Lou adding profane/profound asides and stopping to tell an old Warhol story. "Andy said, 'Make sure you do the song that's got suckin' on my ding-dong on it.' I said, 'Oh, why? Social commentary?'" Also fun: the band seems to be having a long disagreement about where the changes of this three-chord boogie are. Come on, Moose! (Sadly, this is one of the more lo-fi documents included here — where, oh where, is my Take No Prisoners: The Complete Recordings boxed set?!)
"Sister Ray" (London, April 10, 1979)
One of the weirder "Sister Ray"s I've come across — though that might be partly the fault of the cavernous acoustics we're dealing with. There's a long solo guitar extravaganza (Chuck Hammer, I presume?) to kick things off, and then a monomaniacal/mechanical beat from Suchorsky, the crowd clapping along, Lou hollering over the top; it almost has a Suicide vibe? Then there's a terrifying drone-metal dirge coda ... Chaos! But that's what "Sister Ray" is all about, right?
"Sister Ray" (Avellino, June 16, 1980)
Lou's insane 1970s had ended and the sober 1980s loomed (Loum-ed?) before him. But he wasn't done with "Sister Ray." Or maybe "Sister Ray" wasn't done with him. Fittingly, this version feels a little bit exhausted, some flop-sweat, some out-of-gas fumes. "Give me some rhythm — FUCK!" Lou yells at the gang early on. But it still rocks, don't worry. My favorite part is Fonfara's wildly inappropriate synth solo. Mainline located!
📷: Lars Jonsson, Copenhagen May 1974 (via weaponsetc)
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beatlepaul4ever · 1 year ago
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Posting to save and read later!
Extract:
Many have theorized that Lennon was eying some form of reunion with McCartney prior to his murder on Dec. 8, 1980. No one will ever know for sure, but the thought certainly lends a level of significance to the words of "Now and Then."
And now and then
If we must start again
We will know for sure
That I love you
[Giles] Martin is unable to confirm the song’s lyrical significance to McCartney, but he has his suspicions. “I do feel as though ‘Now and Then’ is a love letter to Paul written by John. I mean, I've never really asked Paul about it, and I'm not sure whether Paul would say, ‘Oh, that's definitely it,' because he wouldn't want to second guess John. But that's the sense I get. And I get the feeling that's why Paul was so determined to finish it.”
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fireintheimpala · 10 months ago
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McLennon Playlists
I have been working putting together some McLennon playlists. I mean "McLennon" pretty broadly and vaguely with these lists, so choose your own adventure. It's a useful short portmanteau for for the creative partnership of Lennon/McCartney. But I do also think there is a powerful human relationship here, disregarded from the classic Beatles narrative. And I think this relationship is pivotal to much of their songwriting.
This is a work in progress but here are the acts so far:
Act I: The Beatles before India '68. This is a foundational period. For the most part, I don't think these songs are consciously referencing each other. Rather, they providing a foundation for future references. That said, I think Hide Your Love Away deserves a second look.
Act II: The Beatles after India '68. The contrast is remarkable. Not everything on this list is written by Lennon/McCartney. I think George's While My Guitar Gently Weeps is actually the best expression for the whole time. Anyway, they're breaking up. Passionately. Chronology is a total mash since most of these songs were written or produced in a small period of time.
Act III: The 70's up through approximately 1975. Here especially the chronology of songs begins to be sacrificed for highlighting some back and forth. I personally find their mirroring right after the Beatles--with the front and center band wives and antipodal messages right when they're sending each other cutting missives through hit singles--hilarious. But after that you get this escalating back and forth in moods. Still sent through international hits! Lol. Which they simply presume will work. Anyway, if you listen in order, the positivity increases. Unfortunately, a playlist shift is required once John returns to Yoko in 75ish.
Act IV: '76ish through 1980. After a period of musical productivity and reconnecting with old friends including McCartney, John returns to Yoko. Let's not weight into that but merely note that it changes all music vibes for both musicians. John goes completely silent for 5 years, except for later release home demos. (I'm using Spotify for this which doesn't have most of Lennon's demos unfortunately. But the demos for Free as a Bird and Real Love are recorded during this time so those songs are included. Now and Then demo also, but c'mon let's save that.) McCartney in the meantime writes a series of IMPASSIONED songs about things like his baby who won't call him back, and his lover who needs to beware. Idk what is going on with Wings in production, but LIVE he is absolutely wailing. He starts '76 going on tour worldwide with every song so far I would ever include in these lists. He wails into that void so hard... Things dip, but then escalate back up in 1980. Coming Up. Starting Over Again. But then unfortunately...
Act V: Post Dec 8, 1980. Pending. There's a lot here, but it's so sad it's taking me awhile.
Please contribute suggestions if I've missed relevant songs!
I'll be working on providing more details explanations of some song inclusions.
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guitarnacle · 1 year ago
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H.R Giger, 1940-2014
(Long) list of works:
1, 2 and 3: What I assume are early versions of the Pisces, Capricorn and Ares statues from Giger's 'zodiac fountain' project, 1996. Pictures by Louis Stalder from https://www.hrgiger.com/zodiac.htm
4 (and 6): The "Harkonnen Chair" series. 1981, created from fibreglass for the never completed film 'DUNE' (dir. Alejandro Jodorowsky). 4 is from https://www.hrgiger.com/chairs.htm (no image credit)
5 (and 28): Giger's microphone stand designed for the band 'Korn', in roughly 2001. 1 of 5 works in that series. (side note the website I found it on through google images is a gaming website that also apparently hosts pictures of Giger's Korn mic stand??) also referred to as 'Nubian Queen' on his website.
6: See 4
7: Concept art of the "space jockey" in 'Alien', 1979. Giger also directed the creation of the alien and set (!!).
8: 'Mirror Image' 1977, airbrush painting.
9. Depiction of the alien life cycle for the 1979 'Alien' film.
10. part IV of Giger's N.Y City portfolio, 'Torso 456'. 1980-1982.
11. One of the 'Birth machine baby' sculptures, inspired by the 1967 drawing "Birthmachine".
12: Part of the 'Erotomechanics' series, 1979.
13: I couldn't find much on this one, on Giger's website it is called 'Bei Sydow-Zirkwitz' and the image I found of it is an (unverified) print being sold online that claims to be an original lithograph/stone print from 1976. Also calls it "Promethius New York city." They seem to be largely the same, I just chose this one for higher quality.
14. 'Homage to S. Beckett I', 1968 (This series is one of my favourites and this one is often linked to Dali's painting 'The Great Masturbator', which I thought was interesting).
15, 16: Photographs by Pino Carafa, from Giger's Nov-Dec 1996 exhibition in Milan. The head has a placard that looks like it reads 'Mask 11', but with a quick look into it I couldn't find a proper name or identification for these pieces except for their presence in the past exhibits on the HR Giger website.
17: 'Drawing for sil/Sil's baby', 1994 (?) a sketch I only found because of the Giger database which is an amazingly detailed and and easy to access record of literally everything Giger ever did, here it is (https://www.littlegiger.com/gigerdb/index.php) the images are tiny however :(
18: Noracyclin (contraceptive-pill) 1965, same source as above - H.R Giger has said this and the 'birthmachine'/baby theme throughout his work are (partly) demonstrations of his fears for the planet due to overpopulation
19: From the page on Giger's website about the bars across the world that use his designs and imagery. The image is an example of the bar in Gruyères, Switzerland, which opened in 2003.
20, 21 and 24: 'Biomechanoid' statues, the one with the green/blue finish created 2010, the silver one 2002.
22: A photograph of H.R Giger and a model from one of the 'Alien' films. From the Giger Work Catalogue, image owned by Matthias Belz, as are 20, 24, 25 and 26.
23: 'The Great Beast', Giger's concept art for the 1985 film 'Poltergeist'.
24: See 20 & 21
25: 'Guardian Angel', sculpture from 2002. Could also be the rusted version.
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look here 👆 in particular for more excellent images that will blow your tits clean off
these are just some of my favorites that i wanted other people to know about, his website, catalogue and database have so much more PEACE AND LOVE
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krispyweiss · 9 days ago
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Quarter Notes: Blurbs & Briefs from Sound Bites
- In this edition: Bobby Weir & Wolf Bros; Joan Baez; King Crimson; & Iron Maiden
BOBBY WEIR AND WOLF STREAM FOR NYE: Bobby Weir & Wolf Bros Featuring the Wolfpack will stream their New Year’s run - Dec. 27-28 and 30-31 - from Florida on Nugs.net.
JOAN BAEZ AND FRIENDS TO MARK 30 YEARS OF SWEET RELIEF: Emmylou Harris, Rosanne Cash, Margo Price, Bonnie Raitt, Tom Morello, Lucinda Williams and Taj Mahal are among the friends and musical colleagues who will join Joan Baez to celebrate 30 years of the Sweet Relief Musicians Fund.
More performers for the Feb. 8, 2025, fundraiser in San Francisco will be announced.
“Looking forward to performing with so many wonderful musicians,” Baez said.
BEAT GOES ON: After 65 U.S. tour dates, BEAT, the Adrian Belew- and Tony Levin-fronted band playing the 1980s King Crimson catalog, announced a show for May 6, 2025, in Chile.
“These have been some of the most special concerts I have ever experienced,” Belew said of playing alongside Levin, guitarist Steve Vai and drummer Danny Carey.
“Pure joy.”
SIMON DAWSON IS NEW IRON MAIDEN DRUMMER: Simon Dawson has joined Iron Maiden, replacing Nicko McBrain, who retired.
Dawson plays alongside Maiden bassist Steve Harris in British Lion.
12/20/24
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bookgeekgrrl · 13 days ago
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My media this week (8-14 Dec 2024)
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📚 STUFF I READ 📚
😍 Network Effect (The Murderbot Diaries #5) (Martha Wells, author; Kevin R Free, narrator) - I had a jones for some Murderbot
🥰 System Collapse (The Murderbot Diaries #7) (Martha Wells, author; Kevin R Free, narrator)
🥰 then a small thing happened (BeaArthurPendragon) - 41K, stucky no powers AU - "After a bomb ends combat photographer Bucky Barnes’ career several decades ahead of schedule, he returns to the lake house he hasn’t visited since his parents died to put the pieces back together over the long, lonely winter...an unexpected friendship with his elderly neighbor—and then her astronaut son—leads to the kind of connection he never thought he’d get to have." perfect holiday fic, very gentle and lovely
🙂Snowed In: An MM Romance Charity Anthology (Kiki Clark, Lark Taylor, Nicole Dykes, Cora Rose) - read 4 of the 9 stories, fine, what it says on the tin
😊 Constituent Service: A Third District Story (John Scalzi, author; Amber Benson, narrator) - "Parks and Recreation meets the Federation of Planets" - my fave flavor of Scalzi, the comedic chaos adventure
😍 tender is the Ghost series (Hark_bananas) - 191K, Stucky, post-WS canon-divergent recovery fic; Part 1: A Little Key, a Heavy Door - 39K, almost epistolary; Part 2: Tender is the Ghost - 151K main fic - amazing, magnificent, warm, fluffy, domestic, delightful. forever fave
💖💖 +118K of shorter fic so shout out to these I really loved 💖💖
Endgame: 2014 (Speranza) - MCU: stucky, 5K - Part 24 of 4 Minute Window - "and in the end, the love you take is equal to the love you make" - the most perfect way to end and begin this legendary series. I genuinely cried at the rightness of it.
DILLIGAF (One-EyedBossman (desert000rose), SecretFandomStories) - MCU: stucky, 37K - Part 16 of Differently Okay Local Idiots - another lovely entry in this fantastic series, just spending a weekday evening with the boys
📺 STUFF I WATCHED 📺
Would I Lie To You? - Jo Brand, James Acaster & Mel Giedroyc
A Cup of Yuletide Fear: Monsters of the Holiday Season With Cory Hutcheson - Session 2: The Women of Winter
Monster of the Month w/ Colin Dickey: Frankenstein
Handsome - Pretty Little Episode #17
Nobody Asked - s1, e2
Handsome - Sharon & Bram ask a question… in song!
Ghosts (US) - s4, e7
Elementary - s5, e18-24; s6, e1-6
What We Do In The Shadows - s6, e10
Brilliant Minds - s1, e11
D20: Time Quangle - "A Candied Coup" (s1, e3)
🎧 PODCASTS 🎧
Pop Culture Happy Hour - Black Doves
The Curious History of Your Home - Beds
⭐ The Atlas Obscura Podcast - Circling The Great Loop on a JetSki
It's Been a Minute - Your date gave you 'The Ick?' That might be a YOU problem.
Switched on Pop - Kendrick Lamar: from Pulitzer to pop
Shedunnit - Father Christmas
The Fandom Show - Stephen Sondheim with Jocelyn Geddie
Vibe Check - Oh Luigi!
Pop Culture Happy Hour - 2024 Pop Culture Favorites
Short Wave - In The Club, We All … Archaea?
The Atlas Obscura Podcast - Palace of Depression
Ologies - Mnemonology (MEMORY) Part 2 with Michael Yassa
Dear Prudence - I Came Out. Now My Mean Sister’s an Ally. Help!
Pop Culture Happy Hour - Queer and What's Making Us Happy
All Songs Considered - Hip-hop in 2024 was on a wild ride
Switched on Pop - The best (and worst) of holiday music in 2024
⭐ Hit Parade - I’d Like to Teach the World to Buy Edition
🎶 MUSIC 🎶
Presenting ZZ Top
Chill Supermix
The Struts
The B-52's [The B-52s] {1979}
Wild Planet [The B-52s] {1980}
Whammy! [The B-52s] {1983}
Bouncing Off the Satellites [The B-52s] {1986}
Cosmic Thing [The B-52s] {1989}
Good Stuff [The B-52s] {1992}
Funplex [The B-52s] {2008}
Presenting Tanya Tucker
Instrumental Pop Covers
'80s Slow Dance
Christmas 25th Anniversary Collection [Mannheim Steamroller] {2009}
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darkmaga-returns · 18 days ago
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Mikael Valtersson comes to the surface, after a long absence. I’ll post his map first, because it says so much. For Americans WW1 is ancient history. Not so for the Turks. The Arabs all remember, too:
Part 2 hasn’t appeared yet. If Part 2 appears …
Mikael Valtersson @MikaelValterss1 ANALYSIS: TÜRKIYE AND GEOPOLITICS, DEC 8, 2024 Part 1/2 Background The fall of Assad and the capture of the majority of Syria by Turkish supported HTS and SNA is the biggest active geopolitical victory for Erdogan and Türkiye for much more than a century. Much has happened since the 1970s. When I started to take an interest in Turkish geopolitics around 1980, as a teenager, I saw a situation where Türkiye slowly came out of a very precarious geopolitical situation in the 1970s. Then Türkiye was surrounded by many strong military powers and in dire need of US and NATO protection. The biggest threat was of course the combined might of the Soviet Union and the Warzaw pact with military forces close to Istanbul in Bulgaria. Then we have Syria, Iraq and Iran, all with strong militaries. Iraq and Syria were also closely aligned with the Soviet union. Iran under the Shah aimed at becoming the leading power in the Middle East. At the same time relations with the neighbouring NATO ally Greece was on the verge of war and Türkiye was also partially isolated internationally due to the invasion of Cyprus in 1974. The chaos in Iran after the fall of the Shah in 1979 and the long and hard Iraqi-iranian war 1980-88 reduced the threat to Türkiye greatly. Then came the fall of the Warzaw pact in 1989 and the fall of the Soviet union in 1991. This changed everything. Türkiye was now surrounded by smaller, independent and non hostile nations to the north west and northeast. At the same time Syria lost its backer and slowly began to decline. It was a totally different geopolitical situation for Türkiye in the 1990s compared to the 1970s. Now Türkiye is the strongest, not one of the weakest, country in the neighborhood. This was the country I did geopolitical research about in the 1990s. This development was in itself a geopolitical revolution for Türkiye, but then came a second geopolitical revolution when Türkiye evolved to a regional dominant power with large geopolitical aspirations. This development wasn't clear during the beginning of the Erdogan rule in Türkiye. He became first Prime Minister of Türkiye in 2003 and then President in 2012, when the constitution was changed to strong presidential power. Erdogan is both a pragmatic islamist and a neo-Ottoman "nationalist".
Importantly, he’s a Muslim Bro. That’s absolutely crucial to understanding Erdogan—outside of the fact that he’s a Turk.
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shefanispeculator · 1 year ago
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Dates from "la-okie" our Shefani friend (that has since passed)
Special Dates / Birthdays
Jan, 4, 1976   -  Jen Stefani
Feb 24,  1946 -  Patti Stefani
Feb 28, 2014  -  Apollo
March 1, 1974  -  Todd Stefani
March 2, 1980  -  Alison Burke  (Jen’s sister)
March 7, 1972 - Endy Shelton Intrieri
April 2, 1948      -  Mike Shackleford
April 13,       -  Emmett Plath
May 26, 2006  -  Kingston
Jun 5, 1999 -  Todd & Jen’s Anniversary
June 11, 1966  -  Patty & Dennis’ Anniversary
June 17, 1967  -  Eric Stefani
June 18, 1976  -  Blake
July 4,1945  - Dennis Stefani
August 12, 1977  -  Mike Intrieri
August 21, 2008  -  Zuma
Sept. 5-11 2006 ?  -  Ryan  
Sept. 13, 1946  -  Dorothy Shelton
Oct 3, 1969  -  Gwen
Oct. 6, 2008  -  Stella
Oct. 16 or 17, 2020 - ❤️🎉 Blake & Gwen’s Engagement 🎉❤️
Oct. 28, 2010  -  Jace  
Nov 6,  2013  -  Leo
Nov. 11       -  Oliver Plath
Dec 8, 1955   -  Peter Plath
Dec. 15, 1972  -  Jill Stefani  (Plath)
Dec 22  -  Maddie
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piratewithvigor · 1 year ago
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AEW Roster Organized By Age (& events, for context)
Source: Smackdown Hotel
Jan 3 1952 - Jim Ross
Feb 8 1952 - Elizabeth II crowned
May 30 1955 - Jake Roberts
Nov 3 1957 - Laika becomes first animal in space
Nov 7 1957 - Tony Schiavone
May 13 1958 - Velcro is patented
Sep 20 1958 - Arn Anderson
Mar 20 1959 - Sting
Jun 12 1963 - Jerry Lynn
Jul 1 1963 - ZIP codes are introduced in the US
Oct 13 1963 - Don Callis
Nov 11 1963 - Daddy Ass
Apr 14 1967 - Jeff Jarrett
May 9 1967 - Kevin Kelly
Oct 11 1967 - Taz
Dec 6 1967 - First successful heart transplant
May 10 1968 - William Regal
Oct 30 1968 - Luther
Apr 10 1969 - Dustin Rhodes
Jul 16 1969 - Apollo 11 lands the first people on the moon
Mar 24 1970 - Christopher Daniels
Nov 9 1970 - Chris Jericho
Dec 18 1970 - Rob Van Dam
Apr 3 1971 - Alex Marvez
Jun 12 1971 - Mark Henry
Feb 8 1972 - Paul Wight
Oct 12 1972 - Karen Jarrett
Nov 29 1972 - Atari releases Pong
Oct 30 1973 - Adam Copeland
Nov 30 1973 - Christian Cage
Jan 1 1974 - Jim Ross starts his career in wrestling
Sep 23 1974 - Matt Hardy
Oct 8 1975 - Michael Nakazawa
Jan 23 1976 - Nigel McGuinness
May 8 1976 - First roller coaster with a loop in it opens
Oct 4 1976 - Emi Sakura
Feb 28 1977 - Lance Archer
Aug 31 1977 - Jeff Hardy
Nov 9 1977 - Alex Abrahantes
Dec 12 1977 - The Butcher
Mar 17 1979 - Samoa Joe
Aug 1 1979 - Prince Nana
Oct 3 1979 - Johnny TV
Dec 29 1979 - Justin Roberts
May 6 1980 - Colt Cabana
Jun 2 1980 - The Blade
Jul 16 1980 - Excalibur
Nov 17 1980 - Mercedes Martinez
Dec 27 1980 - Claudio Castagnoli
Feb 19 1981 - Shawn Spears
May 22 1981 - Bryan Danielson
Aug 1 1981 - MTV debuts
Dec 12 1981 - Eddie Kingston
Apr 7 1982 - Sonjay Dutt
May 21 1982 - Kota Ibushi
Aug 3 1982 - Nyla Rose
Oct 10 1982 - Tony Khan
Dec 3 1982 - Jake Hager
Mar 1 1983 - Mark Sterling
Mar 19 1983 - Matt Sydal
Apr 1 1983 - Scorpio Sky
Jul 26 1983 - Roderick Strong
Oct 16 1983 - Kenny Omega
Dec 7 1983 - Matt Menard
Jan 26 1984 - JD Drake
Feb 2 1984 - Brian Cage
Feb 17 1984 - Jimmy Jacobs
Feb 23 1984 - Serpentico
Mar 20 1984 - Angelo Parker
May 4 1984 - Orange Cassidy
Jun 30 1984 - Dax Harwood
Jul 1 1984 - PG13 rating is invented
Sep 19 1984 - Renee Paquette
Nov 4 1984 - Ryan Nemeth
Nov 8 1984 - Keith Lee
Dec 26 1984 - Pat Buck
Dec 29 1984 - Anthony Henry
Jan 17 1985 - Mark Briscoe
Feb 13 1985 - Truth Magnum
Feb 26 1985 - Penta El Zero Miedo
Mar 13 1985 - Matt Jackson
Mar 19 1985 - Luchasaurus
Mar 20 1985 - Matt Taven
Mar 23 1985 - CJ
Mar 31 1985 - First Wrestlemania
May 16 1985 - Mike Bennett
May 19 1985 - Malakai Black
Apr 20 1985 - Jay Lethal
Jul 15 1985 - QT Marshall
Aug 6 1985 - Tony Nese
Sep 9 1985 - The Bunny
Dec 7 1985 - Jon Moxley
Dec 25 1985 - Miro
Jan 24 1986 - Vincent
Feb 5 1986 - Madison Rayne
Feb 19 1986 - Shawn Dean
Feb 21 1986 - The first Zelda game is released
Mar 2 1986 - Bishop Kaun
Mar 4 1986 - Dalton Castle
Apr 8 1986 - Big Bill
Apr 22 1986 - Chuck Taylor
Jun 15 1986 - Cezar Bononi
Jun 29 1986 - Serena Deeb
Jul 22 1986 - Thunder Rosa
Aug 21 1986 - Pac
Oct 22 1986 - Taya Valkyrie
Jan 13 1987 - Ian Riccaboni
Feb 4 1987 - Aaron Solo
Mar 1 1987 - Kyle O'Reilly
Mar 7 1987 - Angelico
Mar 10 1987 - Alex Reynolds
Mar 17 1987 - Brody King
Mar 30 1987 - Trent Beretta
May 17 1987 - Cash Wheeler
Apr 21 1987 - Dutch
Jun 18 1987 - Brandon Cutler
Jul 20 1987 - Evil Uno
Sep 5 1987 - AR Fox
Jan 19 1988 - Wardlow
Mar 20 1988 - Josh Woods
Apr 14 1988 - Marina Shafir
Apr 17 1988 - Dasha Gonzalez
Jun 11 1988 - Hikaru Shida
Jul 18 1988 - RJ City
Aug 23 1988 - Metalik
Aug 28 1988 - EJ Nduka
Aug 31 1988 - Athena
Sep 26 1988 - Buddy Matthews
Sep 29 1988 - Rush
Nov 24 1988 - Anthony Ogogo
Jan 25 1989 - Stu Grayson
Apr 10 1989 - Juice Robinson
Apr 11 1989 - Ari Daivari
Jun 14 1989 - Peter Avalon
Jul 5 1989 - Adam Cole
Jul 27 1989 - Nick Jackson
Jul 31 1989 - Max Caster
Sep 20 1989 - Ethan Page
Nov 3 1989 - Andrade El Idolo
Dec 17 1989 - The Simpsons premiers
Aug 17 1990 - Danhausen
Aug 20 1990 - Mark Davis
Sep 30 1990 - Swerve Strickland
Nov 12 1990 - Stokely Hathaway
Dec 18 1990 - Anthony Bowens
Dec 30 1990 - Rey Fenix
Jan 9 1991 - Ruby Soho
Jan 23 1991 - Powerhouse Hobbs
Jan 30 1991 - Toa Liona
Feb 4 1991 - Mike Santana
Apr 22 1991 - Nick Comoroto
Apr 23 1991 - Dr Britt Baker DMD
May 18 1991 - Colten Gunn
Jun 4 1991 - John Silver
Jul 14 1991 - Diamante
Jul 21 1991 - Adam Page
Aug 23 1991 - World Wide Web starts up
Sep 27 1991 - Ortiz
Nov 22 1991 - Brandon
Nov 22 1991 - Brent
Jan 15 1992 - Preston Vance
Apr 7 1992 - Abadon
May 19 1992 - Kip Sabian
Jun 3 1992 - Red Velvet
Aug 17 1992 - Saraya
Sep 14 1992 - Penelope Ford
Sep 15 1992 - Dralistico
Oct 9 1992 - Jay White
Dec 27 1992 - Yuka Sakazaki
Jan 7 1993 - Darby Allin
Jul 28 1993 - Sammy Guevara
Jan 25 1994 - Willow Nightingale
Feb 21 1994 - Ricky Starks
Mar 26 1994 - Paige Vanzant
Apr 12 1994 - Marq Quen
Jun 6 1994 - Lee Moriarty
Aug 26 1994 - Austin Gunn
Sep 16 1994 - Kiera Hogan
Apr 17 1995 - Bandido
Apr 23 1995 - Jamie Hayter
May 29 1995 - Konosuka Takeshita
Jun 6 1995 - Tay Melo
Aug 7 1995 - Kris Statlander
Oct 19 1995 - Toni Storm
Nov 13 1995 - Boulder
Nov 13 1995 - Bronson
Nov 22 1995 - Toy Story is released
Dec 10 1995 - Satnam Singh
Mar 15 1996 - MJF
Aug 11 1996 - Lexy Nair
Oct 26 1996 - Wheeler Yuta
Apr 29 1997 - El Hijo Del Vikingo
Jun 4 1997 - Riho
Jun 15 1997 - Jack Perry
Jul 10 1997 - Isiah Kassidy
Oct 27 1997 - Leyla Hirsch
Dec 13 1997 - Lee Johnson
Mar 9 1998 - Parker Boudreaux
Jul 15 1998 - Anna Jay
Aug 4 1998 - Mariah May
Sep 7 1998 - Daniel Garcia
Dec 15 1998 - Komander
Dec 24 1998 - Kyle Fletcher
May 4 1999 - Hook
Sep 20 1999 - Darius Martin
Oct 2 1999 - Skye Blue
Mar 3 2001 - Dante Martin
Mar 23 2001 - WWF buys WCW
Nov 8 2001 - Julia Hart
Oct 13 2004 - Billie Starkz
Jul 10 2005 - Nick Wayne
Jan 17 2012 - Negative One
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i-am-the-oyster · 1 year ago
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“I was met at the airport by Ringo’s car and went to Apple, said hello to Derek and was chauffeured to where John lived, which is now, I think, Ringo’s house. I spent the weekend with John at his house. It was the weekend that Cynthia [Lennon’s first wife] moved out and Yoko moved in."
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dailyanarchistposts · 3 months ago
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Bibliography for FAQ
Anarchist and Libertarian Works
Aberdeen Solidarity, Spartakism to National Bolshevism: The K.P.D. 1918–1924, Solidarity, Aberdeen, 1970.
ACF, Marxism and Its Failures, ACE Editions, London, 1990.
Ackelsberg, Martha A., Free Women of Spain: anarchism and the struggle for the emancipation of women, AK Press, Oakland/Edinburgh, 2005.
Free Women of Spain: anarchism and the struggle for the emancipation of women, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, 1991.
Anarchist Federation, The Role of the Revolutionary Organisation, Anarchist Communist Editions, London, 2008.
Anderson, Andy, Hungary ’56, Phoenix Press, London, date unknown.
Anonymous, “Community Organising in Southern Italy”, Black Flag, no. 210, pp. 16–19.
Anonymous, Fighting the Revolution (2 volumes), Freedom Press, London, 1985.
Anonymous, Red Years Black Years: Anarchist Resistance to Fascism in Italy, ASP, London, 1989.
Anonymous, “Trotskyism, Lies and Anarchism”, Black Flag, no. 211, pp. 24–5.
Anger, Max, “The Spartacist School of Falsification”, Anarchy: A Journal of Desire Armed, no, 43, Spring/Summer 1997, pp. 50–2.
Arshinov, Peter, The History of the Makhnovist Movement, Freedom Press, London, 1987.
The Two Octobers available at: http://flag.blackened.net/revolt/russia/arshinov_2_oct.html
Avrich, Paul, An American Anarchist: The Life of Voltairine de Cleyre,Princeton University Press, Princeton, 1978.
Anarchist Voices: An Oral History of Anarchism in America, AK Press, Edinburgh/Oakland, 2005 Kronstadt 1921, W.W. Norton and Company Inc., New York,1970. The Russian Anarchists, W.W. Norton & Company, New York, 1978. Anarchist Portraits, Princeton University Press, Princeton, 1988. The Haymarket Tragedy, Princeton University Press, Princeton, 1984. “Bolshevik Opposition To Lenin: G. Miasnikov and the Workers Group”, pp. 1–29, Russian Review, vol. 43, no. 1.
Bakunin, Micheal, The Basic Bakunin, Robert M. Cutler (trans. and ed.),Promethus Books, Buffalo, N.Y., 1994.
Bakunin on Anarchism, 2nd Edition, Sam Dolgoff (ed.),Black Rose Books, Montreal, 1980. The Political Philosophy of Bakunin, G.P. Maximov (ed.),The Free Press, New York, 1953. Michael Bakunin: Selected Writings, Arthur Lehning (ed.),Jonathan Cape, London, 1973. Statism and Anarchy, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge,1990. God and the State, Dover, New York, 1970. Marxism, Freedom and the State, K.J. Kenafick (ed.), Freedom Press, London, 1984.
Barclay, Harold, The State, Freedom Press, London, 2003.
Barrett, George, “The Anarchist Revolution” contained in The Last War, Pirate Press, Sheffield, 1990.
“Objections to Anarchism”, The Raven: AnarchistQuarterly, no. 12 (Vol. 3, No. 4), Oct-Dec 1990, Freedom Press, pp. 339–364. Objections to Anarchism available at http://www.spunk.org/library/intro/sp000146.txt
Bennello, George, “The Challenge of Mondragon” in Reinventing Anarchy, Again, Howard Ehrlich (ed.), AK Press, Edinburgh/San Francisco, 1996.
Bennello, George C., From the Ground Up, Black Rose Books, Montreal, 1992.
Berkman, Alexander, What is Anarchism?, AK Press, Edinburgh/London/Oakland, 2003.
The ABC of Anarchism, Freedom Press, London, 1977. What is Communist Anarchism?, Phoenix Press, London, 1989. The Russian Tragedy, Phoenix Press, London, 1986. The Bolshevik Myth, Pluto Press, London, 1989. Life of an Anarchist: The Alexander Berkman reader,Gene Fellner (ed.), Four Walls Eight Windows, New York,1992.
Berkman, Alexander (ed.), The Blast, AK Press, Edinburgh/Oakland, 2005.
Berneri, Camillo, “Peter Kropotkin: His Federalist Ideas”, The Raven: Anarchist Quarterly, no. 31 (Vol. 8, No. 3), Autumn 1993, Freedom Press, pp. 268–82
Berneri, Marie-Louise, Neither East Nor West: Selected Writings 1939–48, Freedom Press, London, 1988.
Journey Through Utopia, Freedom Press, London, 1982.
Berry, David, A History of the French Anarchist Movement, 1917–1945, Greenwood Press, Westport, 2002.
Black, Bob, The Abolition of Work and other essays, Loompanics Unlimited, Port Townsend, 1986.
Friendly Fire, Autonomedia, New York, 1992. Anarchy After Leftism, CAL Press, Columbia, 1997. The Abolition of Work, available at http://www.spunk.org/library/writers/black/sp000156.txt The Libertarian as Conservative, available at http://www.applicom.com/pnews/libertarian.html Smokestack Lighting, available at http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/Lobby/3998/smokestack.html
Bonanno, Alfredo M., Anarchism and the National Liberation Struggle, Bratach Dubh Editions, Catania, 1981.
Bookchin, Murray, Post Scarcity Anarchism, 3rd Edition, AK Press, Edinburgh/Oakland, 2004.
Post Scarcity Anarchism, Wildwood House, London, 1971. The Spanish Anarchists: The Heroic Years 1868–1936, AK Press, Edinburgh/San Francisco, 1998. The Third Revolution: Popular Movements in the Revolutionary Era, Volume 1, Cassel, London, 1996. The Third Revolution: Popular Movements in the Revolutionary Era, Volume 2, Cassel, London, 1998. Toward an Ecological Society, Black Rose, Montreal, 1980. Remaking Society: Pathways to a Green Future, South End Press, Boston, MA., 1990. Social Anarchism and Lifestyle Anarchism, AK Press, Edinburgh/San Francisco, 1995. The Modern Crisis, New Society Publishers, Philadelphia, 1986. The Ecology of Freedom: The Emergence and Dissolution of Hierarchy, AK Press, Edinburgh/Oakland, 2005 The Ecology of Freedom: The Emergence and Dissolution of Hierarchy, Cheshire Books, Palo Alto, California, 1982. “Communalism: The Democratic Dimension of Anarchism”, Democracy and Nature, No. 8 (vol. 3, no. 2), pp. 1–12. Which Way for the Ecology Movement?, AK Press, Edinburgh/San Francisco, 1994. The Philosophy of Social Ecology, Black Rose Books, Montreal/New York, 1990. From Urbanisation to Cities: Toward a New Politics of Citizenship, Cassell, London, 1995. “Nationality and the ‘National Question’”, Society and Nature, no. 5, vol. 2, no. 2, pp. 8–36. The Communist Manifesto: Insights and Problems, available at: http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/anarchist_archives/bookchin/comman.html “Looking Back at Spain,” The Radical Papers, pp. 53–96, Dimitrios I. Roussopoulos (ed.), Black Rose Books, Montreal/New York, 1987 The Murray Bookchin Reader, Janet Biehl (ed.), Cassell, London, 1997. Anarchism, Marxism, and the Future of the Left: Interviews and Essays, 1993–1998, AK Press, Edinburgh/San Francisco, 1999. To Remember Spain: The Anarchist and Syndicalist Revolution of 1936, AK Press, Edinburgh/San Francisco, 1994.
Bookchin, Murray and Dave Foreman, Defending the Earth: A Dialogue between Murray Bookchin and Dave Foreman, Black Rose Books, Montreal/New York.
Bradford, George, How Deep is Deep Ecology?, Times Change Press, California, 1989.
“Woman’s Freedom: Key to the Population Question”, pp. 65–84, How Deep is Deep Ecology?, Times Change Press, California, 1989.
Bricianer, SergePannekoek and the Workers’ Councils, Telos Press, Saint Louis, 1978.
Brinton, Maurice, For Workers’ Power: The Selected Writings of Maurice Brinton, David Goodway (ed.), AK Press, Edinburgh/Oakland, 2004.
The Bolsheviks and Workers’ Control 1917 to 1921: the State and Counter-Revolution, Solidarity and Black and Red, London and Detroit, 1975. The Irrational in Politics, Soldarity (London), London, 1975.
Brown, L. Susan, The Politics of Individualism: Liberalism, Liberal Feminism and Anarchism, Black Rose, Montreal/New York, 1993.
Brown, Tom, Syndicalism, Phoenix Press, London, 1990.
Buber, Martin, Paths in Utopia, Beacon Press, Boston, 1958.
Cardan, Paul, Modern Capitalism and Revolution, 2nd edition, Solidarity,London, 1974.
Carson, Kevin A., The Iron Fist Behind the Invisible Hand, available at: http://www.mutualist.org/id4.html
Studies in Mutualist Political Economy, available at: http://www.mutualist.org/id47.html
Carter, Alan, Marx: A Radical Critique, Wheatsheaf Books, Brighton, 1988.
Casa, Juan Gomez, Anarchist Organisation: The History of the FAI, Black Rose Books, Montreal, 1986.
Castoriadis, Cornelius, Workers’ Councils and the Economics of a Self-Managed Society, Wooden Shoe Pamphlet, Philadelphia, 1984.
Political and Social Writings, vol. 1, translated and edited by David Ames Curtis, University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, 1988. Political and Social Writings, vol. 2, translated and edited by David Ames Curtis, University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, 1988. Political and Social Writings, vol. 3, translated and edited by David Ames Curtis, University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, 1993. The Meaning of Socialism, Philadelphia Solidarity, Philadelphia, 1994. “The Role of Bolshevik Ideology in the Birth of the Bureaucracy”, contained in Political and Social Writings, vol. 3, pp. 89–105
Chomsky, Noam, Chronicles of Dissent: Interviews with David Barsamian, Common Courage and AK Press, Monroe, 1992.
Deterring Democracy, Vintage, London, 1992. Keeping the Rabble in Line: Interviews with David Barsamian, AK Press, Edinburgh, 1994. Noam Chomsky on Anarchism, available at: http://www.zmag.org/chomsky/interviews/9612-anarchism.html Language and Politics, Expanded Second Edition,C.P. Otero (ed.), AK Press, Edinburgh/London/Oakland, 2004. “Marxism, Anarchism, and Alternative Futures”, pp. 775–785, Language and Politics, Expanded Second Edition. Preface to Rudolf Rocker’s Anarcho-Syndicalism, Pluto Press, London, 1989. World Orders, Old and New, Pluto Press, London, 1994. Radical Priorities, Black Rose Books, Montreal, 1981. Year 501: The Conquest Continues, Verso, London, 1993. Necessary Illusions: Thought Control in Democratic Societies, Pluto Press, London, 1991. Expanding the Floor of the Cage, available at: http://www.chomsky.info/interviews/199704--.htm Rollback Parts I to IV, Z Magazine, January to May 1995available at: http://www.chomsky.info/articles/199505--.htm Interview on Pozner/Donahue in 1992, available at http://flag.blackened.net/liberty/chomskydon.html For Reasons of State, Fontana/Collins, Suffolk, 1973. The Umbrella of US Power: The Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the Contradictions of US Policy, Open Media Pamphlet, Seven Stories Press, New York, 1999. The Chomsky Reader, James Peck (ed.), Pantheon Books, New York, 1987. Turning the Tide: US Intervention in Central America and the Struggle for Peace, Pluto Press, 1985. Language and Politics, Black Rose Books, Montreal, 1999. Rogue States: The Rule of Force in World Affairs, Pluto Press, London, 2000. Understanding Power: The Indispensable Chomsky, Peter R. Mitchell and John Schoeffel (eds.), The New Press, New York, 2002. Problems of Knowledge and Freedom: The Russell Lectures, The New Press, New York/London, 2003. Hegemony or Survival: America’s Quest for Global Dominance, Hamish Hamilton, London, 2003. Powers and Prospects: Reflections on Human Nature and the Social Order, Pluto Press, London, 1996. Class Warfare: Interviews with David Barsamian, Pluto Press, London, 1996. American Power and the New Mandarins, Penguin Books, London, 1969. Anarchism Interview: Noam Chomsky interviewed by Ziga Vodovnik, available at: http://www.chomsky.info/interviews/20040714.htm Letters from Lexington: Reflections on Propaganda, Common Courage Press/AK Press, Monroe/Edinburgh, 1993. Chomsky on Anarchism, AK Press, Edinburgh/Oakland, 2005. Government in the Future, Seven Stories Press, New York, 2005. Propaganda and the Public Mind: Conversations with Noam Chomsky, Pluto Press, London, 2001. Failed States: The Abuse of Power and the Assault on Democracy, Hamish Hamilton, London, 2006. The Culture of Terrorism, Pluto Press, London, 1989. Imperial Ambitions: Conversations with Noam Chomsky on the post-9/11 World, Penguin Books, London, 2005. Manufacturing Consent: Noam Chomsky and the Media, Mark Achbar (ed.), Black Rose Books, Quebec/New York, 1994. Reluctant Icon: Noam Chomsky interviewed by Tim Halle available at http://www.chomsky.info/interviews/1999----.htm
Christie, Stuart, We, the Anarchists! A Study of the Iberian Anarchist Federation (FAI) 1927–1927, The Meltzer Press and Jura Media, Hastings/Petersham, 2000.
My Granny made me an Anarchist (The Christie File part 1, 1946–1964), Christie Books, Hastings, 2002.
Christie, Stuart and Meltzer, Albert, The Floodgates of Anarchy, Kahn & Averill, Southampton, 1984.
Ciliga, Ante, The Russian Enigma, Ink Links Ltd, London, 1979.
Clark, John, The Anarchist Moment: Reflections on Culture, Nature and Power, Black Rose Books, Montreal, 1984.
Clark, John P., Max Stirner’s Egoism, Freedom Press, London, 1976.
Clark, John P and Martin, Camille (eds.), Anarchy, Geography, Modernity: The Radical Social Thought of Elisée Reclus, Lexington Books, Lanham, 2004.
Cleaver, Harry, Reading Capital Politically, AK Press/Anti-theses, London, 2000.
Cohn-Bendit, Daniel & Gabriel, Obsolete Communism: The Left-Wing Alternative, AK Press, Edinburgh, London & San Franciso, 2000.
Cole, G.D.H., Guild Socialism Restated, Transaction Books, New Brunswick, 1980.
Self-Government in Industry, Hutchinson Educational, London,1972.
Comfort, Alex, Authority and Delinquency in the Modern State: A Criminological Approach to the Problem of Power, Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1950.
Writings against Power and Death: The Anarchist articles and Pamphlets of Alex Comfort, David Goodway (ed.), Freedom Press, London, 1994.
Crump, John, Hatta Shuzo and Pure Anarchism in Interwar Japan, St. Martin’s Press, Inc., New York, 1993.
Dana, Charles A., Proudhon and his “Bank of the People”, Charles H. Kerr Publishing Co., Chicago, 1984.
de Cleyre, Voltairine, The Voltairine de Cleyre Reader, A.J. Brigati (ed.), AK Press, Oakland/Edinburgh, 2004.
Exquisite Rebel: The Essays of Voltairine de Cleyre — Anarchist, Feminist, Genius, Sharon Presley and Crispin Sartwell (eds.), State University of New York Press, New York, 2005. “Anarchism”, pp. 30–34, Man!, M. Graham (ed.), Cienfuegos Press, London, 1974. Direct Action, available at http://www.etext.org/Politics/Spunk/library/writers/decleyre/sp001334.html The Economic Tendency of Freethought, available at http://alumni.umbc.edu/~akoont1/tmh/voltair.html Anarchism and American Traditions, available at http://alumni.umbc.edu/~akoont1/tmh/vdc.html The First Mayday: The Haymarket Speeches 1895–1910, Cienfuegos Press, Libertarian Book Club and Soil of liberty, Orkney/ Minneapolis, 1980
de Ligt, Bart, The Conquest of Violence, Pluto Press, London, 1989.
de Llorens, Ignaio, The CNT and the Russian Revolution, The Kate Sharpley Library, unknown, undated.
de Santillan, D. A., After the Revolution: Economic Reconstruction in Spain Today, Greenberg, New York, 1937 (facsimile edition by Jura Media, Petersham, 1996).
Debord, Guy, Society of the Spectacle, Rebel Press/Aim Publications, Exeter, 1987.
Dielo Trouda, The Organisational Platform of the Libertarian Communists, Workers Solidarity Movement, Dublin, 1989.
Direct Action Movement, Winning the Class War: An Anarcho-Syndicalist Strategy, Direct Action Movement-IWA, Manchester/Glasgow, 1991.
Direct Action in Industry, available at: http://www.spunk.org/texts/intro/practice/sp001703.html
Dobson, V.G., Bringing the Economy Home from the Market, Black Rose Books, Montreal, 1993.
Dolgoff, Sam, The Cuban Revolution: A Critical Perspective, Black Rose Books, Montreal, 1976.
The American Labour Movement: A New Beginning, Resurgence, Champaign, Il., 1980. A Critique of Marxism, Soil of Liberty, Minneapolis, unknown.
Draughn, Jeff, Between Anarchism and Libertarianism: Defining a New Movement, available at http://flag.blackened.net/liberty/between.html
Ervin, Lorenzo Kom’boa, Anarchism and the Black Revolution, Monkeywrench Press and the Workers Self-Education Foundation, Philadelphia, 1994.
Fabbri, Luigi, Bourgeois Influences on Anarchism, Acrata Press, San Francisco, 1987.
“Anarchy and ‘Scientific’ Communism”, in The Poverty of Statism, pp. 13–49, Albert Meltzer (ed.), Cienfuegos Press, Sanday, 1981.
Fernandez, Frank, Cuban Anarchism: The History of a Movement, See Sharp Press, Tucson, 2001.
Fernandez, Neil C., Capitalism and Class Struggle in the USSR: A Marxist Theory, Ashgate, Aldershot, 1997.
Fleming, Marie, The Geography of Freedom: The Odyssey of Elisée Reclus, Black Rose Books, Montreal/New York, 1988.
Foner, Philip S. (ed.), The Autobiographies of the Haymarket Martyrs, Monad Press, New York, 1977.
Fontenis, Georges, Manifesto of Libertarian Communism,Anarchist Communist Editions, London, 1989.
For Ourselves, The Right to Be Greedy: Thesis on the Practical Necessity of Demanding Everything, Loompanics Unlimited, Port Townsend, Washington, 1983.
Fotopoulos, Takis, “The Economic Foundations of an Ecological Society”,Society and Nature, No. 3 (vol. 1 no. 3), pp. 1–40.
“The Nation-state and the Market,” Society and Nature, No. 5 (vol. 2, no. 2), pp. 37–80. Towards an Inclusive Democracy: The crisis of the growth economy and the need for a new liberatory Project, Cassell, London/New York, 1997.
Ford, Earl C. and Foster, William Z., Syndicalism, Charles H. Keer Publishing Co., Chicago, 1990.
Franks, Benjamin, Rebel Alliances: The means and ends of contemporary British anarchisms, AK Press and Dark Star, Edinburgh/Oakland, 2006.
Friends of Durruti, Towards a Fresh Revolution, Zabalaza Books, Johannesburg, 2003.
Fromm, Erich, To Have Or To Be?, Abacus, London, 1993.
Man for Himself: An Enquiry into the Psychology of Ethics, Ark Paperbacks, London, 1986. The Sane Society, Kegan Paul, 1959. The Fear of Freedom, Ark Paperbacks, London, 1989.
Galleani, Luigi, The End of Anarchism?, Cienfuegos Press, Orkney, 1982.
Godwin, William, The Anarchist Writings of William Godwin, Peter Marshall (ed.), Freedom Press, London, 1986.
An Enquiry concerning Political Justice, Penguin, Harmondsworth, 1976
Goldman, Emma, Red Emma Speaks: An Emma Goldman Reader, 3rd Edition, Alix Kates Shulman (ed.), Humanity Books, New York, 1998.
Red Emma Speaks, Alix Kates Shulman (ed.), Wildwood House, London, 1979. Anarchism and Other Essays, Dover Publications Ltd., New York, 1969. Vision on Fire: Emma Goldman on the Spanish Revolution, Commonground Press, New Paltz New York, 1985. My Disillusionment in Russia, Thomas Y. Crowell Company, New York, 1970. Living My Life (in 2 volumes), Dover Publications, New York, 1970. Emma Goldman: A Documentary History of the American Years volume 1: Made for America, 1890–1901, Candace Falk (ed.), University of California Press, Berkeley/Los Angeles/London, 2003. Emma Goldman: A Documentary History of the American Years volume 2: Making Speech Free, 1902–1909, Candace Falk (ed.), University of California Press, Berkeley/Los Angeles/London, 2005. Writings of Emma Goldman: Essays on Anarchism, Feminism, Socialism, and Communism, Red and Black Publishers, St. Petersburg, Florida, 2013
Goodway, David, Anarchist Seeds Beneath the Snow: Left-Libertarian Thought and British Writers from William Morris to Colin Ward, Liverpool University Press, Liverpool, 2006.
Goodway, David (ed.), For Anarchism: History, Theory and Practice, Routledge, London, 1989.
Gorter, Herman, Open Letter to Comrade Lenin, Wildcat, 1989.
Graeber, David, Fragments of an Anarchist Anthropology, Prickly Paradigm Press, Chicago, 2004.
Possibilities: Essays on Hierarchy, Rebellion, and Desire,AK Press, Edinburgh/Oakland, 2007.
Green Anarchy, Against Mass Society, available at: http://www.primitivism.com/mass-society.htm
Greene, William B., Mutual Banking, West Brookfield, 1850.
Guerin, Daniel, Anarchism: From Theory to Practice, Monthly Review Press, New York/London, 1970.
Class Struggle in the First French Republic: Bourgeois and Bras Nus 1793–1795, Pluto Press, London, 1977.
Harper, Clifford, Anarchy: A Graphic Guide, Camden Press, London, 1987.
Hoffman, Robert L., Revolutionary Justice: The Social and Political Theory of P.J. Proudhon, University of Illinois Press, Urbana, 1972.
International Workers Association, Principles, Aims and Statutes of the International Workers Association, Monty Millar Press, Broadway, 1983.
Industrial Workers of the World, How to fire your boss, available at: http://fletcher.iww.org/direct_action/title.html
Kelman, James, Some Recent Attacks: Essays Cultural and Political, AK Press, Stirling, 1992.
Kelsey, Graham A., Anarchosyndicalism, libertarian communism and the state: the CNT in Zaragoza and Aragon 1930–1937, International Institute of Social History, Dordrecht, London, 1991.
“Anarchism in Aragon,” in Spain in Conflict 1931–1939: democracy and its enemies, Martin Blinkhorn (ed.), pp. 60–82, Sage, London, 1986.
Kenafick, K.J., Michael Bakunin and Karl Marx, Melbourne, 1948.
Klafta, Lance, “Ayn Rand and the Perversion of Libertarianism”, Anarchy: A Journal of Desire Armed, no. 34, pp. 59–62.
Knabb, Ken, Public Secrets, Bureau of Public Secrets, Berkeley, 1997.
The Poverty of Primitivism, available at http://www.slip.net/~knabb/CF/primitivism.htm
Knabb, Ken (ed.), Situationist International Anthology, Bureau of Public Secrets, Berkeley, 1981.
Kropotkin, Peter, Anarchism: A Collection of Revolutionary Writings, Roger N. Baldwin (ed.), Dover Press, New York, 2002.
Act for Yourselves: articles from Freedom 1886–1907,N. Walter and H. Becker (eds), Freedom Press, London, 1988. Ethics: Origin and Development, Blom, 1968. Mutual Aid, Freedom Press, London, 1987. The Conquest of Bread, Elephant Editions, Catania, 1985. The State: Its Historic Role, Freedom Press, London, 1987. Anarchism and Anarchist Communism: Its Basis and Principles, Freedom Press, London, 1987. The Great French Revolution (in two volumes), Elephant Editions, Catania, 1986. Words of a Rebel, Black Rose Books, Montreal, 1992. Evolution and Environment, Black Rose Books, Montreal, 1995. Fields, Factories and Workshops Tomorrow, Colin Ward (ed.), Freedom Press, London, 1985. Direct Struggle Against Capital: A Peter Kropotkin Anthology, Iain McKay (ed.), AK Press, Edinburgh, Oakland, Baltimore, 2014. Modern Science and Anarchy, Iain McKay (ed.), AK Press, Edinburgh, Oakland, Chico, 2018. Small Communal Experiments and Why They Fail, Jura Media, Sydney, 1997. The Place of Anarchism in Socialistic Evolution, Practical Parasite Publications, Cymru, 1990. Selected Writings on Anarchism and Revolution, Martin A. Miller (ed.), MIT Press, Cambridge, 1970. Memiors of a Revolutionist, Black Rose Books, Montreal/New York, 1989. The Conquest of Bread and Other Writings, Unversity Press, Cambridge, 1995. Kropotkin’s Revolutionary Pamphlets, R.N. Baldwin (ed.),Dover Press, New York, 1970. “Syndicalism and Anarchism”, Black Flag, no. 211, pp. 16–19. The Commune of Paris, available at: http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/anarchist_archives/kropotkin/pcommune.html
Labadie, Joseph A., Anarchism: What It Is and What It Is Not, available at: http://alumni.umbc.edu/~akoont1/tmh/anar_jal.html
Different Phases of the Labour Question, available at: http://members.aol.com/labadiejo/page11.html What is Socialism?, available at: http://members.aol.com/labadiejo/page7.html
Landauer, Gustav, For Socialism, Telos Press, St. Louis, 1978.
Law, Larry, Spectacular Times: Bigger Cages, Longer Chains, A-Distribution/Dark Star Press, London, 1991.
Le Guin, Ursula K., The Dispossessed, Grafton Books, London, 1986.
Leier, Mark, Bakunin: The Creative Passion, Thomas Dunne Books, New York, 2006.
Leval Gaston, Collectives in the Spanish Revolution, Freedom Press, London, 1975.
Levy, Carl, Gramsci and the Anarchists, Berg, Oxford, 1999.
Magón, Ricardo Flores, Dreams of Freedom: A Ricardo Flores Magón Reader, AK Press, Edinburgh/Oakland, 2005.
Land and Liberty: Anarchist influences in the Mexican Revolution, David Poole (ed.), Cienfuegos Press, Sanday, 1977.
Mailer, Phil, Portugal: The Impossible Revolution, Solidarity, London,1977.
Makhno, Nestor, The Struggle Against the State and other Essays, AK Press, Edinburgh/San Francisco, 1996.
My Visit to the Kremlin, Kate Sharpley Library, London, 1993.
Makhno, Nestor, Ida Mett, Piotr Archinov, Valevsky, Linsky, The Organisational Platform of the Libertarian Communists, Workers Solidarity Movement, Dublin, 1989.
Malatesta, Errico, Anarchy, Freedom Press, London, 2001.
Anarchy, Freedom Press, London, 1974. Errico Malatesta: His Life and Ideas, 3rd Edition, Vernon Richards (ed.), Freedom Press, London, 1993. Life and Ideas, Vernon Richards (ed.), Freedom Press, London, 1965. The Anarchist Revolution, Vernon Richards (ed.), Freedom Press, London, 1995. Fra Contadini: A Dialogue on Anarchy, Bratach Dudh Editions, Catena, 1981. At the Cafe: Conversations on Anarchism, Freedom Press, London, 2005. A Talk about Anarchist Communism, Freedom Press, London, 1894. “Towards Anarchism”, pp. 73–78, Man!, M. Graham (ed.), Cienfuegos Press, London, 1974. “Anarchism and Syndicalism”, pp. 146–52, Geoffrey Ostergaard, The Tradition of Workers’ Control, Freedom Press, London, 1997. Anarchistes, Socialistes et Communistes, Group 1er Mai, Annecy, 1982.
Malet, Michael, Nestor Makhno in the Russian Civil War, MacMillan Press, London, 1982.
Martin, James J., Men Against the State: The Expositors of Individualist Anarchism in America, 1827–1908, Ralph Myles Publisher Inc., Colorado Springs, 1970.
Marshall, Peter, Demanding the Impossible: A History of Anarchism, Fontana, London, 1993.
Nature’s Web: An Exploration of Ecological Thinking, Simon & Schuster, London, 1992.
Marzocchi, Umberto, Remembering Spain: Italian Anarchist Volunteersthe Spanish Civil War, Kate Sharpley Library, London, 1991.
Mattick, Paul, Economic Crisis and Crisis Theory, M.E. Sharpe, White Plains, New York, 1981.
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5 notes · View notes