3 ON DISCIPLINE: V.I. Lenin [,] Rosa Luxemburg [,] Michael Bakunin: Sraflet April 1971
Pamphlet produced by the Union Shop of the I.W
Pamphlet produced by the Union Shop of the I.W
Brief comic discussing science from a radical-left perspective,with the only authorial information being the name Bob Maier on final leaf.
Written by two former members of the Bay Area pro-situationist group Point-Blank!, posing an acrid critique of the group.
Article reprinted from THE NATION, January 4 1971.
Pamphlet from this Bay Area pro-situationist stalwart, printing several of his essays.
Short pamphlet by the Bay Area "pro-situ" author, showing considerable influence from Ken Knabb.
Excerpt of a book self-published by Shutes, an active participant in the Bay Area "pro-situ" scene.
A critique of the magazine DIVERSION (Brooklyn, 1973), which was edited by Jon Horelick.
First issue of this British situationist journal.
Five short essays on various topics, showing a strong situationist influence.
Written by a "pro-situ" group initially called Negation, the text deals with a defense of greed as the "only possible basis of a communist society" through a self-described "Marxist-Stirnerist" ideology.
First published 1974.
Slim pamphlet by the short-lived post-situationist group, who during June 1973 plastered public walls in San Francisco with the messages, "Do You Ever Feel Like Killing Your Boss?," Do You Want To Steal Everything?," "Is There Life Before Death?" and simliar slogans.
Poster designed by John Zerzan (though not credited here), the noted "anti-civilization" anarchist author.
Text in French.
Satirical leaflet issued by the BPL, comprising a list of "political euphemisms, pre-fabricated journalese, and 'sacred names' (respected persons and institutions)."
The Dutch Kabouters were a 1970s anarchist offshoot of the Provos.
Scarce North Vietnam propoganda published in the wake of the release of the Pentagon Papers.
Text in French.
Anthology of labor-themed poems.
A fierce (likely unpublished) diatribe against Judge Julius Hoffman, or as the "Panthers called him 'Adolph Hitler Hoffman,'" who presided over the "Chicago 8" trial of Yippies Abbie Hoffman, Jerry Rubin, David Dellinger, Tom Hayden, Rennie Davis, John Froines, Lee Weiner, and Bobby Seale — who were charged with various federal offenses in the wake of the 1968 Democratic Convention.