Peter Kropotkin (1842–1921)
Author of The Conquest of Bread
About the Author
Image credit: Courtesy of the NYPL Digital Gallery (image use requires permission from the New York Public Library)
Series
Works by Peter Kropotkin
The Conquest of Bread and Other Writings (Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought) (1995) 89 copies, 1 review
Tekstboek bloemlezing uit zijn boeken, pamfletten, en brieven, almede een exact verslag van het gesprek tussen Lenin en Kropotkin (1972) 6 copies
Fijaos en la Naturaleza: Ética: Origen y evolución de la moral (Ensayo) (Spanish Edition) (2021) 5 copies
The commune of Paris 4 copies
Syndikalismus und Anarchismus 4 copies
Kropotkin : Selections from His Writings / Edited with an Introduction by Herbert Read (1942) 4 copies
Folletos revolucionarios II 3 copies
Al la Junuloj. Biografio (1982) 3 copies
Are We Good Enough? 3 copies
War! 3 copies
Communism and Anarchy 3 copies
Prisons: Universities of Crime 2 copies
The State - Its Historic Role: With an Excerpt from Comrade Kropotkin by Victor Robinson (2020) 2 copies
Kropotkin Escapes 2 copies
Den modärna staten 2 copies
Η Αναρχική οργάνωση της κοινωνίας 2 copies
Expropriation 2 copies
Folletos revolucionarios 1 copy
ÉTICA 1 copy
EL ANARQUISMO 1 copy
Der Wohlstand fu r Alle 1 copy
Kropotkin escapes : Peter Kropotkin's account of his escape from a Russian prison hospital in 1876 1 copy
Correspondencia con Lenin 1 copy
Communities that Abide 1 copy
Bir Devrimcinin Anıları-2 1 copy
Φυλακές και καταπίεση 1 copy
Η Αναρχία 1 copy
Laki ja esivalta 1 copy
L'entr'aide, un facteur de l'évolution: économie libre , coopération, altruisme, économie de don (French Edition) (2016) 1 copy
Endukto aden la socialismo 1 copy
The Effects of Persecution 1 copy
"Wars and Capitalism" 1 copy
"The Coming War" 1 copy
"Revolutionary Studies" 1 copy
"Brain Work and Manual Work" 1 copy
Internatsional’nyi sbornik posviashchennyi desiatoi godovshchine smerti P.A. Kropotkina = P.A. Kropotkin and his teachings (1931) 1 copy, 1 review
Russian Literature 1 copy
En upprorsmans ord 1 copy
Eröfringen af brödet 1 copy
Den anarkistiska kommunismen 1 copy
En anarkists lefnadsminnen 1 copy
Anarchistes en exil: Correspondance inédite de Pierre Kropotkine à Marie Goldsmith 1897-1917 (Cultures & sociétés de lEst) (1995) 1 copy
Anarchists and Unions 1 copy
Sur la littérature russe 1 copy
La società aperta 1 copy
Anarşist Etik 1 copy
Ideas and Realities in Russian Literature: With an Excerpt from Comrade Kropotkin by Victor Robinson (2020) 1 copy
Socialism and Politics 1 copy
Anarchist Communist’s appeal to the young.: Eight writings on libertarian communism (aka anarcho-communism) (2014) 1 copy
The Peter Kropotkin Anthology The Conquest of Bread & Mutual Aid A Factor of Evolution (2021) 1 copy
Over wetten en gevangenissen 1 copy
Wars and Capitalism 1 copy
Sistem nadnica 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Kropotkin, Pyotr Alexeyevich
- Other names
- Kropotkin, Petr Alekseevich, kni︠a︡zʹ
Кропоткин, Пётр Алексеевич
Кропо́ткин, Пётр Алексе́евич - Birthdate
- 1842-12-09
- Date of death
- 1921-02-08
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Corps of Pages
- Occupations
- editor
publisher
geographer
political theorist
zoologist
philosopher (show all 9)
philologist
economist
anarchist - Organizations
- International Workingmen's Association
Jura Federation
Russian Geographical Society
Amur Cossacks - Cause of death
- pneumonia
- Nationality
- Russia
- Birthplace
- Moscow, Russian Empire
- Places of residence
- Peter and Paul Fortress, St. Petersburg, Russia
London, Middlesex, England, UK
Moscow, Russia
St. Petersburg, Russia
Thonon-les-Bains, France
Geneva, Switzerland (show all 8)
Petrograd, Russia
Brighton, Sussex, England, UK - Place of death
- Dmitrov, Russia, USSR
- Burial location
- Novodevichy Cemetery, Moscow, Russian Federation
Members
Reviews
On the last page of The Conquest of Bread, Peter Kropotkin laments the state of humanity's response to new ideas.
Kropotkin's most famous work contains very few surprises. When you think about how nice it would be to provide everyone with enough to not just cover their needs but also satisfy many of their wants, all without having to deal with a big government, you've got to expect that Kropotkin didn't come up with a feasible plan to bring this about. Otherwise, it already would have happened. We'd have all stormed the White House with bayonets and shit a long time ago.
In his introduction to my Penguin Classics Edition, David Priestland lays out some very important questions that Kropotkin leaves unanswered.
Thankfully, Kroptkin's utility as a thinker comes independent of the revolution he failed to bring about. Name any modern political philosopher of note that would be willing to put both of these thoughts in the same book:
Now take those passages to heart, and imagine living like you believed them. If I recognize the debt I owe to both the people that came before me and the people that surround me, I'm going to be far likelier to support those around me who should be benefitting in the same way I do. And to avoid putting the burden of service on the state, which has earned its reputation as unhelpful and untrustworthy, I'm going to hold myself individually responsible for providing that assistance. No revolution required!
Is Kropotkin's view of human nature too optimistic? Perhaps. But rather than accept that he's wrong, why don't we try proving him right? We won't see the system of governance he hoped to see, but we can certainly be the species he believed us to be. show less
With our minds already narrowed in our youth and enslaved by the past in our mature age, we hardly dare to think. If a new idea is mentioned - before venturing on an opinion of our own, we consult musty books a hundred years old, to know what ancient masters thought on the subject.Well, Peter, when I first heard about anarcho-communism, I consulted an old book written by an old show more dude, which was you. I hope you don't take too much offense.
Kropotkin's most famous work contains very few surprises. When you think about how nice it would be to provide everyone with enough to not just cover their needs but also satisfy many of their wants, all without having to deal with a big government, you've got to expect that Kropotkin didn't come up with a feasible plan to bring this about. Otherwise, it already would have happened. We'd have all stormed the White House with bayonets and shit a long time ago.
In his introduction to my Penguin Classics Edition, David Priestland lays out some very important questions that Kropotkin leaves unanswered.
For instance, how easy would it be for the whole people to stage a revolution and expropriate the propertied classes without extensive conflict and violence? How can the sophisticated technological innovation he saw as so necessary for his society be assured in the absence of market incentives and modern finance? Can democratic assemblies really hope to run the economy smoothly and efficiently, and how will conflicts between different producer communities be resolved? Finally, how can people guard against the potential tyranny of the collective?Since The Conquest of Bread doesn't answer these questions, my guess is that the answers are, respectively, not easy at all, it can't, they shouldn't, they won't, and I don't know, a really big moat?
Thankfully, Kroptkin's utility as a thinker comes independent of the revolution he failed to bring about. Name any modern political philosopher of note that would be willing to put both of these thoughts in the same book:
The development of individualism during the last three centuries is explained by the efforts of the individual to protect himself from the tyranny of capital and of the state.
Science and industry, knowledge and application, discovery and practical realization leading to new discoveries, cunning of brain and of hand, toil of mind and muscle - all work together. Each discovery, each advance, each increase in the sum of human riches, owes its being to the physical and mental travail of the past and the present. By what right then can anyone whatever appropriate the least morsel of this immense whole and say - This is mine, not yours?Both are true! Isn't it refreshing to find a thinker with concerns about the power of the state who doesn't want to grind poor people into sausage?
Now take those passages to heart, and imagine living like you believed them. If I recognize the debt I owe to both the people that came before me and the people that surround me, I'm going to be far likelier to support those around me who should be benefitting in the same way I do. And to avoid putting the burden of service on the state, which has earned its reputation as unhelpful and untrustworthy, I'm going to hold myself individually responsible for providing that assistance. No revolution required!
Is Kropotkin's view of human nature too optimistic? Perhaps. But rather than accept that he's wrong, why don't we try proving him right? We won't see the system of governance he hoped to see, but we can certainly be the species he believed us to be. show less
This is a great portrait of Russia under late tsarist rule and parts of Europe in the earliest days of socialism. The first 3/4 are fairly riveting, while the ending falls kind of flat as happens in so many memoirs. Yes, it's the nature of the format. But he had a fascinating life and is a surprisingly engaging writer for having lived so long ago. There were several points where I wanted to hug him so much. And then others where I was really head-scratchy over his definition of Anarchism and show more how that has changed in modern context. I wonder if he would have felt the same toward a modern social democracy with a strong track record of justice and human rights.
Isn't it fascinating that that didn't exist yet on a large scale in the known western world? (WTF feudalism?)
gender politics tag because this was GORGEOUSLY feminist, even by modern standards, much less standards of the time. (WTF modern misogyny?) show less
Isn't it fascinating that that didn't exist yet on a large scale in the known western world? (WTF feudalism?)
gender politics tag because this was GORGEOUSLY feminist, even by modern standards, much less standards of the time. (WTF modern misogyny?) show less
Kropotkin certainly had an interesting life: quite apart from telling us about the complexities of anarchist politics, secret societies and being a political prisoner in several different countries, he gets to describe his experiences growing up in an aristocratic family in Moscow, serving as a page at Alexander II's court in St Petersburg, taking part in all sorts of exciting expeditions into unknown country as a young officer on the Amur river, and doing important scientific research (he show more was a physical geographer). So these are by no means dull memoirs! But they are sometimes a little bit frustrating. Kropotkin was writing from English exile in 1899, with the Russian revolutions still to come, and at a time when many of his friends and political associates were still in danger of reprisals from the Russian authorities. So there are plenty of important things in his life he doesn't tell us about because they haven't happened yet, and others that he's forced to leave rather vague. And others again that he's written about elsewhere and doesn't repeat - this isn't a work of political philosophy, although of course the whole text is informed by his political ideals.
And there are also a surprising number of normal, practical things in his life he simply seems to have forgotten to write about, so that, for example, his wife pops up in the text for the first time about three hundred pages in, as though she's always been there, but he in fact he has never told us her name or anything about when they married. (English Wikipedia doesn't mention her at all, but the German version tells us she was Sophie Ananiew, and they married in 1878, when he was living in Switzerland. From what Kropotkin tells us himself, we can deduce that she was a scientist and had studied at Geneva university.)
The book was written in English (he later made a Russian version as well), but it never feels like a book written in the author's second language. Especially in the earlier parts of the book, there's a lot that is moving, entertaining, exciting, and exotic, but it's never - at least once it gets out of the classroom - boastful. Kropotkin must have been a remarkable man, and he presumably knew it, but he doesn't want to be the one to say it. There's a lovely moment shortly after he has arrived in England for the first time, under a false name because he's on the run from the Russian police, and is doing some scientific journalism. The editor of Nature asks him to review a couple of new Russian books that have come into the office. Of course, they turn out to be publications of his own scientific work, written whilst he was in prison, and he is put into something of a quandary: should he blow his cover or infringe scientific ethics by reviewing his own work? He compromises by summarising the books without expressing an opinion on their merits (which would of course have got him anathematised here on LibraryThing...).
Worthwhile, definitely, but a bit patchy. The opening chapters are marvellous, and I can see how you might become a dedicated fan of this book, but it's probably not the book you should turn to first if you want to learn about anarchist political ideas or the history of the workers' movement. show less
And there are also a surprising number of normal, practical things in his life he simply seems to have forgotten to write about, so that, for example, his wife pops up in the text for the first time about three hundred pages in, as though she's always been there, but he in fact he has never told us her name or anything about when they married. (English Wikipedia doesn't mention her at all, but the German version tells us she was Sophie Ananiew, and they married in 1878, when he was living in Switzerland. From what Kropotkin tells us himself, we can deduce that she was a scientist and had studied at Geneva university.)
The book was written in English (he later made a Russian version as well), but it never feels like a book written in the author's second language. Especially in the earlier parts of the book, there's a lot that is moving, entertaining, exciting, and exotic, but it's never - at least once it gets out of the classroom - boastful. Kropotkin must have been a remarkable man, and he presumably knew it, but he doesn't want to be the one to say it. There's a lovely moment shortly after he has arrived in England for the first time, under a false name because he's on the run from the Russian police, and is doing some scientific journalism. The editor of Nature asks him to review a couple of new Russian books that have come into the office. Of course, they turn out to be publications of his own scientific work, written whilst he was in prison, and he is put into something of a quandary: should he blow his cover or infringe scientific ethics by reviewing his own work? He compromises by summarising the books without expressing an opinion on their merits (which would of course have got him anathematised here on LibraryThing...).
Worthwhile, definitely, but a bit patchy. The opening chapters are marvellous, and I can see how you might become a dedicated fan of this book, but it's probably not the book you should turn to first if you want to learn about anarchist political ideas or the history of the workers' movement. show less
I've read this every few years since I was ten (equals: I've read this a lot of times..). Ah dear me! The romance of czarist Russia! His walk with the serfs on the annual trek to his family's summer residence! (He is *Prince* Peter Kropotkin to you, and I'll thank you to remember it..:-) The whole work bedazzled me when I was young, and even now, the life of this anarchist saint is a wonderful read, full of drama and the fervour for a better world. To this day tour guides at the great prison show more fortress of St Peter still tell the story of Kropotkin's escape, but hear you can read it in the first person, but that story is only one of many treasures to be found here... show less
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