Sidney Parker (anarchist)

Sidney Parker, also known as S. E. Parker, (born 1929 in Birmingham,[1] died 2012 in London) was a British egoist individualist anarchist who wrote articles and edited several journals from 1963-1993.

Life and work

Parker quitted school at the age of fourteen and then never entered formal studies. In the early 1950s he used to "soap-box" at Speaker's Corner in London's Hyde Park, normally just opening the Sunday afternoon meetings of the then London Anarchist Group.[2] He summarized his career as follows: "[He] has worked his way through the Young Communist League (1944-1946), the British Federation of Young Co-operators (1946-1947), and virtually all the different varieties of anarchism (1947-1982), to emerge as his own man, the penny of conscious egoism having finally dropped."[3]

In 1993 Parker looked back on his career by comparing his first editorial (1963) with a last statement (1993) on his position. In 1963, having arrived at individual anarchism, he had written: "If anarchism is not individualist, then it becomes hodge-podge, half-way house between socialist and democratic myths and the impulse to individual sovereignty." The name of his journal, Minus One, was derived from his statement: "Individualist anarchists are people who do not want to be just 'a plus one in the statistical millions.'" Slowly he emancipated himself from "the closed world of anarchists". The "emotional capital" he had invested in anarchism was such "that I did not finally renounce my adherence to it until almost twenty years later [around 1983]." The anarchism he had finally abandoned was "a creed of social transformation aiming at the ending of all domination and exploitation of man by man", with the "central tenet": "Dominating People Is Wrong". After Parker had changed from individualist anarchist to conscious egoist, and as such, he "can see no reason why I should not dominate others [...] Egoism leaves any way open to me for which I am empowered." Parker closed these final statements with a quotation, not by Max Stirner, but by Ragnar Redbeard.[4]

Parker worked from 1961 to 1994 for British Rail.

Editor and Author

Parker founded and edited a journal that appeared subsequently under three resp. four different titles:

Contributions to these journals were made by Parker himself and the following authors:
Max Stirner, Dora Marsden, Benjamin De Casseres, James J. Martin, Murray Rothbard, Donald Rooum, Laurance Labadie, Lyman Tower Sargent, Émile Armand, James L. Walker, Renzo Novatore, Francis Ellingham, Enzo Martucci a.o.

Reception

One early reaction to Parker's ideas was that of Lyman Tower Sargent, who later became one of the world's foremost scholars on utopian studies. He contributed to Parker's journal Minus One.[5] In the first edition of his book Contemporary political Ideologies (1969) he presented Parker as "one of the very few living theorists" of Individualist Anarchism.[6] In later revised editions Parker is no longer mentioned.

External links

Notes

  1. Notice about contributors in EGO, Nos. 16-17 (1994), p.2
  2. Notice by Parker in Minus One, No. 39 (1977), p. 6
  3. Notice about contributors in EGO, Nos. 16-17 (1994), p.2
  4. S. E. Parker: [statements without title]. In: Ego, number 15, 1993, pp.5–8
  5. Lyman Tower Sargent: Right Wing Individualism in the United States. A series of seven articles in Minus One, nos. 11 to 16, and 20 (1965–1967).
  6. Lyman Tower Sargent: Contemporary political Ideologies, The Dorsey Press, Homewood IL (USA) 1969. pp. 172f.
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