The kind of history books that are not broad or global, but more local and period specific; that does a good job (in your mind) of capturing the complexities of the anarchist movement. Which ones do you regard as the best (or your favorite)? I am hoping this thread can provide a compilation of books that would serve as alternatives to standard broad accounts of anarchism, including Black Flame.
And please mention the location and time period that's covered.
Check out this book
Check out this book https://libcom.org/library/beer-revolution-german-anarchist-movement-new-york-city-1880-1914-tom-goyens
Which looks at the anarchist scene in NYC 1880-1914. Is this the type of work you mean?
Agent of the Proletariat
Agent of the Proletariat
https://libcom.org/library/no-gods-no-masters-anthology-anarchism
No Gods No Masters is pretty good as far as original sources go, a collection of writings from all the major anarchist thinkers. It's as specific as it gets, giving the firsthand accounts of people like Makhno and the Kronstadters. There's also the various reading guides on here about specific historical periods in which anarchists played a part.
From another thread. Check
From another thread.
Check out: [url=http://www.press.uillinois.edu/books/catalog/62ckh5bh9780252039386.html]Immigrants Against the State: Yiddish and Italian Anarchism in America by Kenyon Zimmer. [/url]
Here's from the book's blurb:
I always rather liked "A
I always rather liked "A Short History Of Anarchism" by Max Nettlau, Author. As an anarcho-syndcalist, Nettlau's views are not close to mine, yet the book is informative. And it was a "first" of its kind.
I don't think there's a free on line version yet, so.... https://www.akpress.org/shorthistoryofanarchism.html
If you're looking for
If you're looking for something specific to anarchism, any Peirats books should do just fine (mostly focuses on Spain in the 30's, but can trace back to the late 19th century as well.):
http://libcom.org/tags/josé-peirats
Libcom has it's recommended list too:
http://libcom.org/library/libcomorg-reading-guide
Pennoid wrote: Which looks
Pennoid
Yes, definitely.
I'm looking for works that allows anarchist individuals and groups, even the less popular or "unknowns", to speak for themselves, if you know what I mean. That highlights the differences or evolving nature of the politics of those covered. I feel like a lot of histories, even if they are written by those who share our "class struggle anarchist" position, can suffer from a tendency to look back and only find what supports their own perspective, and hence providing a flat picture of the movement.
If you read Albert Meltzer's or Barry Pateman's views on the writings of anarchist history, here and here, they express similar sentiments.
Concerning Ukraine and the
Concerning Ukraine and the Makhnovist movement, I would recommend:
Primary Sources
Peter Arshinov, History of the Makhnovist Movement (Freedom Press, 2005)
Voline, The Unknown Revolution (Black Rose Books, 1975)
Nestor Makhno, [i]The Russian Revolution in Ukraine[/i (Black Cat Press, 2007)
Nestor Makhno, Under the Blows of the Counterrevolution (Black Cat Press, 2009)
Nestor Makhno, The Ukrainian Revoluiton (Black Cat Press, 2011)
Secondary Sources
Alexandre Skirda, Nestor Makhno: Anarchy's Cossack (AK Press, 2004)
Michael Palij, The Anarchism of Nestor Makhno (University of Washington Press, 1976)
Michael Malet, Nestor Makhno in the Russian Civil War (MacMillan Press, 1985)
Victor Peters, Nestor Makhno: The Life of an Anarchist (Echo Books, 1971)
Vyacheslav Azarov, Kontrrazvedka: The Story of the Makhnovist Intelligence Service (Black Cat Press, 2008)
Black Cat Press has also published on other specific anarchist movements such as Maria Nikiforova (independent anarchist that led a fighting battalion during the Russian Civil War,) and the Siberian anarchist movement during the revolution/civil war.
Another interesting book dealing with a very specific movement is Travis Tomchuk's Transnational Radicals: Italian Radicals in Canada and the US, 1915-1940. I haven't looked at it yet but there is also Dongyoun Hwang's Anarchism in Korea: Independence, Transnationalism, and the Question of National Development, 1919-1984. Finally you can find John Crump's The Anarchist Movement in Japan, 1906-1996 here: https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/john-crump-the-anarchist-movement-in-japan-1906-1996
There are a bunch of articles
There are a bunch of articles in the library here about various anarchist movements from various countries. Don't have time right now but for instance 'Anarcho-syndicalism in Peru, 1905-1930 - Steven Hirsch' is a good one and there are similar ones on Brazil, Chile, etc which are interesting.
Also: 'Seething with the ideal : Galleanisti and class struggle in late 19th century and early 20th-century USA' is interesting about US insurrectionary anarchists.
Two other short local
Two other short local histories I really like are Nick Heath's '“A small anarchist republic”: French anarchists in Fitzrovia' about French anarchist exiles in London who escaped repression following the fall of the Paris Commune, and 'Spanish anarchists in the Welsh valleys' about Spanish anarcho-syndicalists who found work in Wales' mining villages.