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About the Author

Image credit: Courtesy of the NYPL Digital Gallery
(image use requires permission from the New York Public Library)

Works by Élisée Reclus

The History Of A Mountain (1998) 32 copies
Histoire d'un ruisseau (1995) 32 copies, 1 review
An anarchist on anarchy (2006) 18 copies
Evolución y revolución (1901) 16 copies, 1 review
L'homme et la terre (1982) 14 copies
Les grands textes (2014) 13 copies
L' Homme des bois (2012) 3 copies
Colombia (1983) 3 copies
A mon Frère le paysan (2016) 3 copies, 1 review
Les Alpes (2015) 3 copies
La Joie d'apprendre (2018) 2 copies
Écrits sociaux (2012) 2 copies
les arméniens (2006) 2 copies
Vegan ve Anarsi (2016) 2 copies
La montaña (1998) 2 copies
Australasia 1 copy
Ecrits cartographiques (2016) 1 copy
Et vandløbs historie (2022) 1 copy
Libre nature 1 copy

Associated Works

God and the State (1882) — Preface, some editions — 958 copies, 8 reviews

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Reclus, Élisée
Legal name
Reclus, Jean Jacques Élisée
Birthdate
1830-03-15
Date of death
1905-07-04
Gender
male
Occupations
geographer
anarchist
Nationality
France
Birthplace
Sainte-Foy-la-Grande, France
Places of residence
Paris, France
Clarens, Switzerland
Place of death
Torhout, Belgium
Associated Place (for map)
France

Members

Reviews

22 reviews
If you like poetic nature writing, this is a must--not least because it may well be a first, at least by an actual scientist. Reclus was a geographer, pedagogue, and anarchist social activist and writer. He was imprisoned for taking part in the Paris Commune, then exiled. He died in Belgium. Kupka (from the post above) was a devoted friend and comrade and provided illustrations for Reclus' magnum opus, L'homme et la terre.

This short book follows a stream from its source to its various ends, show more describing features and episodes in its "life" with care and intelligence but above all love. And this love isn't just for nature, but extends to everything living. Every chapter encapsulates some insight of anarchist philosophy, to offer to people.

The last few sentences (my translation):

People mix with people like streams with streams and rivers with rivers; sooner or later, they will form a single nation, just like all the waters from one basin end with merging together in a single river. The time when all these human currents will join each other still hasn't come: different races and nations, still attached to native soil, don't see each other as sisters; but they are approaching each other more and more; every day they love each other more and, together, they are beginning to gaze toward a common ideal of justice and liberty. People, having become intelligent, will surely learn to associate in a free federation: humanity, until now divided in distinct currents, will become a single river, and, united in a single wave, we shall descend together to the great sea where all the lives are dissolved and renewed.
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Comprised of articles, essays and excerpts from works originally published between 1866 and 1907. Reclus was a geographer, and he referenced lessons from science and history in support of anti-authoritarian ideals. Throughout Anarchy, Geography, Modernity, Reclus gives good advice: learn how to remain silent, study with discretion and perseverance, side neither with nations nor with parties, avoid idolatry.

Anarchism is as old as humanity, Reclus writes. In all ages there have been free men, show more living without any master and ‘in accordance with the primordial law of their own existence and their own thought.’ Over time, man’s thinking has become more acute and profound and his understanding of the wider world has expanded, but the evolution of human civilization includes periods of progression and periods of regression (ref. Vico’s model of corsi and recorsi). As Reclus saw it, though, each moment of regression was a kind of preparation for future progress, as the number of men who desire good and work toward its realization continued to increase; humanity travels along an unending spiral, evolving upon itself in a continuous motion. The principles governing this back-and-forth motion are imprecisely understood, he says, but we need not accept the paradoxical view that the material progress of humanity is merely evidence of its decline. Modernity is a mixed bag.

For Reclus, progress depended upon the extension of knowledge through study and scientific research. Geological studies had uncovered a natural evolutionary process that gradually refines life by means of increasingly complex organisms. Evidence from comparative ethnographic studies showed that so-called ‘savage’ societies, though they possessed little scientific knowledge and only rudimentary crafts, were able to attain levels of coherence, mutual justice, equitable well-being and happiness greatly surpassing those of our modern societies. Modern society can lay claim to a particular superiority over the societies that preceded it only through the greater complexity of the elements that enter into its formation. More complex societies set in motion a vast diversity of forces and sweep along through discoveries and partial progressions in a continual momentum of renewal that blends in various ways with all the factors from the past; all past civilizations offer us a glimpse of the treasure of their secrets—

If we look back on the succession of epochs as one synoptic scene, then we cease to live solely in the fleeting moment and instead embrace the whole series of past ages and can free ourselves from the strict line of development determined by the environment that we inhabit and the by the specific lineage of our race…before us lies an infinite network of parallel, diverging and intersecting roads that other segments of humanity have followed…we find examples to imitate, we find increasing number of models demanding understanding…

Self-conscious progress, analogous to the growth of an animal or plant, is not a normal function of society, writes Reclus. Progress must be understood as a collective act of social will that attains consciousness of the unified interests of humanity and satisfies them successively and methodically. This social will becomes stronger as it surrounds itself with new achievements. Ignorance decreases, but obstacles (prejudice, habit, custom) remain. The ‘brutal fact of authority’ endures because men are guided less by reason than by their individual circumstances and personal sympathies, and by the nature of the stories they hear. Though public opinion wavers indecisively between a mania for authority and various conceptions of human rights, Reclus insisted that we keep our sights on the ‘promise of humanity’ and the ideal—that each individuality has the same right to its integral development, without interference from any power that supervises, reprimands or castigates it.

We as anarchists know that this morality of perfect justice, liberty and equality is surely the true one, whereas our adversaries are uncertain. They are unsure of being right. At bottom, they are even convinced that they are wrong.
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Milano, Vallardi, 1892, 8vo grande brossura originale, pp. 992 con 162 carte e 91 illustrazioni xilografiche nel testo setta carte litografiche a colori ripiegate in fine (mancanti)
Milano, Vallardi, 1896, 8vo grande brossura originale, intonso, pp. 922 con 190 carte e 74 illustrazioni xilografiche nel testo una grande carta litografica a colori ripiegata in fine "Seconda edizione della nuova carta dei domini e protettorati italiani nell'Eritrea e regioni limitrofe (Sudan - Abissinia - Harrar).

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Works
174
Also by
1
Members
505
Popularity
#49,062
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
19
ISBNs
120
Languages
7

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