Anarchists and national identity: The case of German radicals in the United States and Brazil, 1880–1945
Abstract
How German were German anarchists in the United States and Brazil? Did the experience of exile and immigration preserve or even heighten a national identity among radicals who openly espoused revolutionary internationalism? Anarchists distinguished between nation and nationality on the one hand, and the state and nationalism on the other. This article examines expressions of nationality by a handful of German anarchist editors and writers from the 1880s to the end of World War II. They wanted to be stateless, but not nationless. This article argues that German exile anarchists in the United States and Brazil expressed a militant, countercultural, antistatist and anticlerical nationality. They were ‘rooted cosmopolitans’: They identified with the international revolutionary tradition and at the same time remained attached to Germany's heritage of radical politics, arts and humanities. There was a remarkable consistency in their commentary levelled against Bismarck, the Kaiser, the Weimar government and the Nazis either in Germany or in the host country. Anarchists advocated for a borderless global federation of free communities and, to that end, rejected nationalism and urged people to stop ‘seeing like a state’ by exposing the false promises and crimes of statism.
Faculty Members
- Tom Goyens - Salisbury University Salisbury MD USA
Themes
- Militant counterculture
- Anarchism
- Internationalism
- Critique of statism
- National identity
- Cultural heritage
- Exile and immigration
Categories
- Religion religious studies
- History
- Social sciences
- Sociology, demography, and population studies nec
- Humanities, other
- Ethnic studies
- Area, ethnic, cultural, gender, and group studies
- Philosophy and religious studies nec
- Philosophy
- Bible biblical studies
- Philosophy and religious studies
- Sociology, general
- Humanities and humanistic studies
- Sociology, demography, and population studies
- Humanities
- Theological and ministerial studies
- Area studies
- American history (United States)
- European history