God and the State

God and the State

The cover of the first print in 1882.
Author Mikhail Bakunin
Original title Dieu et l'état
Translator Carlo Cafiero and Élisée Reclus
Country France
Language English, translated from French
Genre Politics
Publisher Dover
Publication date
1882
Published in English
1883
Media type Print (Paperback)
Pages 89 p. (Dover Paperback Edition)
ISBN 978-0-486-22483-1 (Dover Paperback Edition)
OCLC 192839
335/.83 19
LC Class HX833 .B313 1970
Preceded by Founding of the First International
Followed by The Immorality of the State

God and the State is the best-known literary work of the Russian anarchist Mikhail Bakunin.

Composition

God and the State was written between February and March 1871. It was originally written as Part II of a greater work that was going to be called The Knouto-Germanic Empire and the Social Revolution.[1] Part I was to deal with the background of the Franco-Prussian War and a general history of European resistance to imperialism. God and the State, like most of Bakunin's work, is unfinished and disjointed. When Bakunin was criticized on this he said, "My life is a fragment." God and the State is indeed a fragment; the book has paragraphs that drop out and pick up in mid-sentence, footnotes that are four or five paragraphs long, and the book itself stops abruptly in mid-sentence.

Discovery and publication history

God and the State was discovered by Carlo Cafiero and Élisée Reclus, two prominent anarchists at the time, and close friends of Bakunin around the time of his death. The two looked tirelessly for the missing parts of the book, but had no success. They translated the book into French and distributed it as a pamphlet in Geneva in 1882. Cafiero and Reclus titled the book Dieu et l'état (God and the State) although Bakunin originally titled the book The Historical Sophisms of the Doctrinaire School of Communism. The book's original title was not discovered in Bakunin's diary until after Cafiero and Reclus's deaths.

In 1883, the American anarchist Benjamin Tucker translated the book into English and distributed it in pamphlet form throughout Boston. He ran into many problems, however, because when Cafiero and Reclus translated the original manuscript into French, they sometimes changed words around to give the French a more literary quality, and often misread Bakunin's handwriting. The first number of The Anarchist published in 1885 in London by Henry Seymour held an announcement of a translation into English by Marie Le Compte.[2] The International Publishing Company announced that the profits would go to the Red Cross of the Russian Revolutionary Party.[3]

A correct French translation was released in 1908, and a new English edition was released in London in 1910. In 1916, the Lithuanian-born anarchist Emma Goldman released a re-print of the 1910 London edition for the radical journal Mother Earth. Since God and the State's first publication it has been one of Bakunin's greatest known works. It has been translated into many languages including English, German, Dutch, Italian, Spanish, Russian, Serbo-Croatian, Polish, Greek, Czech, Georgian Romanian, Turkish and Yiddish.

See also

References

Citations

  1. Leier, Mark (2006). Bakunin: The Creative Passion. Seven Stories Press. p. 306. ISBN 978-1-58322-894-4.
  2. On Picket Duty 1885, p. 47.
  3. An English anarchist 1885, p. 10.

Sources

External links

Wikisource has original text related to this article:
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, December 22, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.