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Anarchy (magazine)
Defunct british anarchist magazine From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Anarchy was an anarchist monthly magazine produced in London from March 1961 until December 1970.[1] It was founded and edited by anarchist Colin Ward[2] and was published by Freedom Press[3].
David Goodway observed in his Anarchist Seeds Beneath the Snow that Ward urged the case to his fellow editors for a 'more reflective' Freedom, to which they eventually responded 'by giving him his head with the monthly Anarchy from March 1961'.[4] The magazine included articles on anarchism and reflections on current events from an anarchist perspective, e.g. workers' control, criminology and squatting. It published contributions from established authors such as Marie Louise Berneri, Murray Bookchin, Stanley Cohen, Paul Goodman, George Woodcock and Nicholas Walter. From issue six onwards, graphic designer and illustrator Rufus Segar became the resident art director of the magazine.[5] Ward gave him significant freedom in his design of each issue, albeit while working to a tight deadline.[6]
Goodway commended Anarchy's 'simple excellence' [7], which he supported by citing the British Marxist historian and author Raphael Samuel:
'The editing, according to an admiring, though not uncritical contributor [Nicholas Walter], was minimal: nothing was rewritten, nothing even subbed. "Colin almost didn't do anything. He didn't muck it about, didn't really bother to read the proofs. Just shoved them all in. Just let it happen."'[8]
A second series of Anarchy was published into the 1980s with an editorship that included Chris Broad and Phil Ruff.[9]
Freedom Press later published A Decade of Anarchy 1961-1970: Selections from the Monthly Journal Anarchy which collected writing from the first series.[10]
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