Late 70s London-based communist magazine which attempted to satirise the anarchist/communist milieu of the day- with mixed results.
Late 70s London-based communist magazine which attempted to satirise the anarchist/communist milieu of the day- with mixed results.
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I've mainly uploaded this
I've mainly uploaded this because I'm curious about the first issue (I think only two were published) but have never managed to track one down...
(Yes, I have been in my loft).
Fozzie wrote: I've mainly
Fozzie
Thanks for doing this.
I actually used to have a copy of Authority #1. No idea it where it went, though. It was before I started scanning stuff. Probably around 2003.
Don't remember all of the content, but I did think it was kind of rubbish. Had some stuff slagging off Albert Meltzer, and some quite bad cartoons depicting anarchist riot police after the anarchist revolution. I seem to recall it having a very anti-organisational vibe…
Thanks Steven, it's of
Thanks Steven, it's of interest in a general trainspottery way I guess but perhaps is the sort of thing that is funnier when talked about than actually read. :)
The bits about middle class people in Islington and the militant workers' enquiry into the police force in issue 2 are quite amusing ideas...
In a similar vein, I seem to
In a similar vein, I seem to recall a spoof Black Flag in the early 80s called Black Frog. I'm wondering if it was the same people.
Didn't Subversion do a
Didn't Subversion do a Spoofversion once as well?
Yes that's
Yes that's here:
http://libcom.org/library/spoofversion-incorporating-subversion-24
I do quite like all this stuff but it is obviously very insular.
Yeah, although I suppose a
Yeah, although I suppose a useful corrective to how it's easy to think of "social media echo chambers" and so on as a newfangled phenomena, nice to be reminded that back in the day there were people putting pen (or at least typewriter) to paper to make jokes as incomprehensible and insular as any of today's memes.
Another one for the "funnier as an idea" file: I'm sure I remember the old US Green Anarchy had a column by Statler and Waldorf, which was a great idea but fatally undermined by the fact that it was in Green Anarchy and so written by people with utterly woeful politics, and a correspondingly warped sense of what is and isn't inherently funny.
I have a PDF of Authority…
I have a PDF of Authority no1. Will go up on Splits&Fusions at some point but I was waiting whilst I gathered a few copies of the International Discussion Bulletin which the Authority collective motivated in the early 1980s.
Fozzie wrote: ...it is…
From AUTHORITY No.2, summer 1979:
And,