Dies at 85
Murray Bookchin, visionary writer and
activist, died at his home in Burlington,
Please
visit http://www.akpress.org/bookchinobit
for a full obituary by
Brian Tokar at the Institute for Social Ecology in
This is the obituary:
During the 1950s and '60s, Bookchin built upon the
legacies of utopian social philosophy and critical theory, challenging the
primacy of Marxism on the left and linking contemporary ecological and urban
crises to problems of capital and social hierarchy in general. Beginning in the
mid-sixties, he pioneered a new political and philosophical synthesis-termed
social ecology-that sought to reclaim local political power, by means of direct
popular democracy, against the consolidation and increasing centralization of
the nation state.
From the 1960s to the present, the utopian dimension of Bookchin's
social ecology inspired several generations of social and ecological activists,
from the pioneering urban ecology movements of the sixties, to the 1970s'
back-to-the-land, antinuclear, and sustainable technology movements, the
beginnings of Green politics and organic agriculture in the early 1980s, and
the anti-authoritarian global justice movement that came of age in 1999 in the
streets of Seattle. His influence was often cited by prominent political and
social activists throughout the
Even as numerous social movements drew on his ideas, however, Bookchin remained a relentless critic of the currents in
those movements that he found deeply disturbing, including the New Left's drift
toward Marxism-Leninism in the late 1960s, tendencies toward mysticism and
misanthropy in the radical environmental movement, and the growing focus on
individualism and personal lifestyles among 1990s anarchists. In the late
1990s, Bookchin broke with anarchism, the political
tradition he had been most identified with for over 30 years and articulated a
new political vision that he called communalism.
Bookchin was raised in a leftist family in the
During the 1960s–80s, Bookchin emphasized his
fundamental theoretical break with Marxism, arguing that Marx's central focus
on economics and class obscured the more profound role of social hierarchy in
the shaping of human history. His anthropological studies affirmed the role of
domination by age, gender and other manifestations of social power as the
antecedents of modern-day economic exploitation. In The Ecology of Freedom(1982), he examined the parallel legacies of domination
and freedom in human societies, from prehistoric times to the present, and he
later published a four-volume work, The Third Revolution, exploring
anti-authoritarian currents throughout the Western revolutionary tradition.
At the same time, he criticized the lack of philosophical rigor that has often
plagued the anarchist tradition, and drew theoretical sustenance from
dialectical philosophy-particularly the works of Aristotle and Hegel; the
Frankfurt School-of which he became increasingly critical in later years-and
even the works of Marx and Lenin. During the past year, even while terminally
ill in
—Brian Tokar,