The last time I searched for this painting online there was no image this large of it. This version is still too small to convey what its like in person, but its an improvement.
Tag Archives | Industriels
Flowers on the Prairie Where the June Bugs Zoom
Im at the University of Oklahoma in Norman, speaking to the Society of Undergraduate Philosophers about Eudaimonistic Approaches to Libertarianism on Thursday, and to the Students for a Stateless Society about Robert Nozick, Class Struggle, and Free-Market Socialism on Friday.
Inspire the Ocean!
Josef Šima of Pragues CEVRO Institute interviews me.
The interviews in Czech, but you can read the Google Translate version (somewhat mangled, inevitably) here. (No, I have no idea what inspires the ocean means.)
The pictures are from my Honduras and Istanbul trips, not from any of my Prague trips.
Here are the slides from the Čapek/Kafka/Hašek talk discussed in the interview. For some reason the file for part 1 on my site has become defective; but part 2 is fine. Complementarily, the Mises website has part 1 but not part 2.
Part 1 (from Mises.org)
Part 2 (from Praxeology.net)
Tales of the Mighty Dead
This coming week Ill be lecturing on Mises vs. Friedman on Economic Method (old lecture) and Neglected Pioneers of Free-Market Thought (new lecture) at Mises University; then the week after that Ill be lecturing on Bastiat and French Liberalism, Anarchism in 19th-Century Europe, and Anarchism in 19th-Century America (all new lectures) at IHSs Revolutionaries, Reformers, and Radicals: Liberty Emerges seminar at Bryn Mawr.
iRad I.3 in Print, iRad I.2 Online
The third issue (Spring 2013) of The Industrial Radical will be back from the printers and on its way to subscribers shortly, featuring articles by Less Antman, Jason Lee Byas, Kevin Carson, Nathan Goodman, Anthony Gregory, Trevor Hultner, Charles Johnson, Joshua Katz, Thomas L. Knapp, Abby Martin, Chad Nelson, Sheldon Richman, Jeremy Weiland, and your humble correspondent, on topics ranging from NSA surveillance and whistleblowing, the Turkish revolt, the Boston lockdown, the Keystone XL pipeline, intellectual property, and the futility of gun control in an age of 3-D printing, to compulsory schooling, American militarism, conscription, worker exploitation, property rights, prison ethics, rape culture, the pros and cons of communism, and the dubious legacy of Margaret Thatcher.
With each new issue published, we post the immediately preceding issue online. Hence a free pdf file of our second issue (Winter 2013) is now available here. (See the first issue also.)
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French Liberalism Meets Boston Anarchism
… which is actually a pretty good description of my politics.
Anyway: In 1888, the Journal des Économistes the chief periodical of classical liberalism in France, at that time under the editorship of Gustave de Molinari himself published an article about individualist anarchism in America, with particular focus on the writers associated with Benjamin Tuckers periodical Liberty. The author was Sophie Raffalovich, about whom more below. Benjamin Tucker replied in the pages of Liberty a few months later. The Journal des Économistes would return to the subject of Tucker and Liberty in 1902, in a piece by Paul Ghio.
Ive now translated and posted the pieces by Raffalovich (The Boston Anarchists) and Ghio (An American Anarchist); Ive also posted Tuckers reply to Raffalovich (A French View of Boston Anarchists).
So who was Sophie Raffalovich? Most of the information Ive been able to find out about her (see especially here, here, and here) is really about her family. Her parents were the Russian Jewish banker Hermann Raffalovich and the anti-Bonapartist literary patron (and Spencer/Mill fan) Marie Raffalovich; her brothers were the economist Arthur and the poet Marc-André. In 1890 she married the Irish reformer William OBrien (he writes about her, with somewhat gag-inducing sentimentality, here), with whom she clashed on the issue of womens suffrage (he was for it, she was against her gay brother was also against gay rights, so I guess it figures), and published several books of essays as Mrs. William OBrien. The only picture Ive been able to find for her is from an announcement of their wedding (right); I dont know why her nationality is represented by what looks like an American flag. (His is the Irish naval jack.) After losing her fortune in World War I (it had been invested in Russia and Germany) and her husband in 1928, she moved to France, where she hid out during World War II and the German occupation not the safest spot in the world for a Jewish libertarian and managed to evade Nazi scrutiny. She spent her final years as an impoverished invalid in Picardy. When she was born (1860), Jules Verne had not yet published his first book; when she died (1960), Sputnik had already fallen from orbit.
Paul Ghio is much more of a cipher; Ive found no birth or death dates for him. He taught economics at the Collège Libre des Sciences Sociales in Paris. He would later write an entire book on American anarchism, as well as volume 1 of an economic treatise (but Ive seen no evidence of a volume 2). The latter work is dedicated to Molinari, and sings the praises of La Boétie to boot. Ghio also has an essay in the Journal des Économistes on the Chicago anarchists, which I may translate when I get a chance.