Andrej Grubačić
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El suport mutu
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published
1891
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358 editions
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Wobblies and Zapatistas: Conversations on Anarchism, Marxism, and Radical History
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published
2008
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14 editions
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Yugoslavia: Peace, War, and Dissolution
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published
2018
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14 editions
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Loose Tops Short Summer V-collar Leisure T-shirt Sleeve Printed Women's Women's Blouse Ladies Long Sleeve
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published
1992
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11 editions
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In, Against, and Beyond Capitalism: The San Francisco Lectures
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published
2016
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7 editions
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Don't Mourn, Balkanize!: Essays after Yugoslavia
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published
2010
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7 editions
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Beyond State, Power, and Violence
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published
2004
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13 editions
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Battle for the Mountain of the Kurds: Self-Determination and Ethnic Cleansing in Rojava
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Living at the Edges of Capitalism: Adventures in Exile and Mutual Aid
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Rumo a um Novo Anarquismo
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“I feel absolutely no loyalty to Serbian, Croatian, or Bosnian national causes. I have no other emotion but utter contempt for people who helped destroy Yugoslavia, and I feel the same about the people who are now selling what is left of it." (p. 13)”
― Don't Mourn, Balkanize!: Essays after Yugoslavia
― Don't Mourn, Balkanize!: Essays after Yugoslavia
“Imperial and colonial attitudes still define the terms 'civilized world,' 'international community' and 'civil society.' Balkan people were never too impressed by civilization. As early as 1871, the founder of the Balkan socialist movement, Svetozar Marković, ridiculed the entire 'civilized world,' from Times to the obedient Serbian press. The civilized world, he wrote, 'was composed of rich Englishmen, Brussels ministers and their deputies (the representatives of the capitalists), the European rulers and their marshals, generals, and other magnates, Viennese bankers and Belegrade journalists'...[he] believed...in a pluricultural Balkan Federation organized as a decentralized, directly demotractic society based on local agricultural and industrial associations. This is the kind of antinomian imagination that needs to be rediscovered: a horizontalist tradition of the barbarians who never accepted the civilized world that is now collapsing. (p.44)”
― Don't Mourn, Balkanize!: Essays after Yugoslavia
― Don't Mourn, Balkanize!: Essays after Yugoslavia
“I became an anarchist very early on. Anarchism, in my mind, meant taking democracy seriously and organizing prefiguratively- that is, in a way that anticipates that the society we are about to create. Instead of taking the power of the state, anarchism is concerned with socializing power- with creating new political and social structures not after the revolution, but in the immediate present, in the shell of the existing order. The basic goal, however, remains the same. Like my grandparents, I too believe in and dream of a region where many worlds fit, and where everything is for everyone. (p.12)”
― Don't Mourn, Balkanize!: Essays after Yugoslavia
― Don't Mourn, Balkanize!: Essays after Yugoslavia
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