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Anything Can Happen

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Perlman, Fredy

128 pages, Paperback

First published September 1, 1995

1 person is currently reading
71 people want to read

About the author

Fredy Perlman

28 books59 followers
Fredy Perlman (August 20, 1934 – July 26, 1985) was an author and publisher. His most popular work, the book Against His-Story, Against Leviathan!, is a major source of inspiration for anti-civilisation perspectives in contemporary anarchism.

Perlman was born in Brno, Czechoslovakia. He emigrated with parents to Cochabamba, Bolivia in 1938 just ahead of the Nazi takeover. The Perlman family came to the United States in 1945 and finally settled in Lakeside Park, Kentucky.

In 1952 he attended Morehead State College in Kentucky and then UCLA from 1953-55. Perlman was on the staff of The Daily Bruin, the school newspaper, when the university administration changed the constitution of the newspaper to forbid it from nominating its own editors, as the custom had been. Perlman left the newspaper staff at that time and, with four others, proceeded to publish an independent paper, The Observer, which they handed out on a public sidewalk at the campus bus stop, since they were forbidden by the administration to distribute in on the campus.

In 1956-59 he attended Columbia University, where he met his life-long companion, Lorraine Nybakken. He enrolled as a student of English literature but soon concentrated his efforts in philosophy, political science and European literature. One particularly influential teacher for him at this time was C. Wright Mills.

In late 1959, Perlman and his wife took a cross-country motor scooter trip, mostly on two-lane highways traveling at 25 miles per hour. From 1959 to 1963, they lived on the lower east side of Manhattan while Perlman worked on a statistical analysis of the world's resources with John Ricklefs. They participated in anti-bomb and pacifist activities with the Living Theatre and others. Perlman was arrested after a sit-down in Times Square in the fall of 1961. He became the printer for the Living Theatre and during that time wrote The New Freedom, Corporate Capitalism and a play, Plunder, which he published himself.

In 1963, the husband and wife left the U.S. and moved to Belgrade, Yugoslavia after living some months in Copenhagen and Paris. Perlman received a master's degree in economics and a PhD at the University of Belgrade's Law School; his dissertation was titled "Conditions for the Development of a Backward Region," which created an outrage among some members of the faculty. During his last year in Yugoslavia, he was a member of the Planning Institute for Kosovo and Metohija.

During 1966-69 the couple lived in Kalamazoo, Michigan. Perlman taught social science courses at Western Michigan University and created outrage among some members of the faculty when he had students run their own classes and grade themselves. During his first year in Kalamazoo, he and Milos Samardzija, one of his professors from Belgrade, translated Isaac Illych Rubin's Essay on Marx's Theory of Value. Perlman wrote an introduction to the book: "An Essay on Commodity Fetishism."

In May 1968, after lecturing for two weeks in Turin, Italy, Perlman went to Paris on the last train before rail traffic was shut down by some of the strikes that were sweeping Western Europe that season. He participated in the May unrest in Paris and worked at the Censier center with the Citroen factory committee. After returning to Kalamazoo in August, he collaborated with Roger Gregoire in writing Worker-Student Action Committees, May 68.

During his last year in Kalamazoo, Perlman had left the university and together with several other people, mostly students, inaugurated the Black and Red magazine, of which six issues appeared. Typing and layout was done at the Perlman house and the printing at the Radical Education Project in Ann Arbor, Michigan. In January 1969 Perlman completed The Reproduction of Daily Life. While traveling in Europe in the spring of 1969

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Petter Nordal.
211 reviews12 followers
September 24, 2013
A wonderful work by the underappreciated Yugoslav-American Jewish thinker from Detroit who foresaw the rise of seperatist movements in "The Continuing Appeal of Nationalism," worried about militarism in the Middle-East in "Anti-Semitism and the Beirut Pogrom (1982)" and argued already in the 1960's that technology will make it easy to communicate with those who are far away, to the same extent that people will feel isolated from those nearby. If you think the world can only be this way, then this book will do you good.
Profile Image for Alexander B.
66 reviews10 followers
October 16, 2025
Much of the book is kinda boring but “The reproduction of daily life” and “The continuing appeal of nationalism” are both excellent essays that also include great primers on capitalism and the history of revolutions and anti-capitalist movements.
Profile Image for Jeremy Jones.
6 reviews
March 3, 2024
A lot of these essays moved me and got me even though they seem to not be relatable to now, spoiler: They are.

Works sucks. Fascism sucks. Cops suck. Power SUCKS.

Read this and be blown away.
Profile Image for libby.
16 reviews
December 8, 2025
phenomenal. last couple essays were particularly enlightening (The Continuing Appeal of Nationalism and Progress & Nuclear Power especially). excited to read more.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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