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020 _a0948984228
020 _a9780948984228
035 _a(AT-ABuAW)0001290
041 _aeng
100 _91289
_aPerlman, Fredy
_d1934 – 1985
240 _aAnything can happen
_leng
245 _aAnything can happen
260 _aLondon, UK
_bPhoenix Press
_c1992
300 _a126
_c21,5 x 13,5 x 0,9
_gcm
500 _aFredy Perlmans shorter writings, the most important of them collected here, chart an intellectual exploration from the student (and other) revolutions of 1968, in which Fredy took part in France and Italy, to the ecological concerns of today. The changes in Fredy's analyses, from Marxist economics to an anti-industrial perspective, produced contradictions which the reader will have to resolve because Fredy died in 1985. It seedms Fredy was too busy developing new ideas to go back and modify his earlier ones. Be that as it may, his insights into industrialism, the nation-state and imperialism, racism and genocide, the psychology of power and dependency, are some of the most important in recent libertarian thought. The title of this collection comes from one of Fredy's earlier essays in which he expresses his hopeful outlook on prospects for social change. In subsequent texts, to, he reminds us that the authority wielded by insitutions that opress us comes from our acquiescence. Witholding recognition of that authority would mean that Anything Could Happen.
563 _aFadenbindung
650 _2Progress
650 _2Fortschritt
650 _2Nuclear power
650 _2Nuklearenergie
650 _2Nationalism
650 _2Nationalismus
650 _2Anti-Semitism
650 _2Antisemitismus
650 _2Revolt in Socialist Yugoslavia
650 _2Revolte im sozialistischen Yugoslawien
650 _2Anarchism
650 _2Technology
650 _2Technologie
650 _2Anarchismus
942 _2z
_cBUCH
999 _c1083
_d1083