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Bookchin and several
Aside from Murray Bookchin, several other anarchist critiques of Zerzan's primitivist philosophies exist.

Bookchin and including
Social anarchists, including Murray Bookchin, anarcho-communists such as Peter Kropotkin and anarcho-collectivists such as Mikhail Bakunin, are sometimes called left-libertarian.
Freedom Press have published titles by Clifford Harper, Vernon Richards, Dennis Gould, Nicolas Walter, Colin Ward, Murray Bookchin, Gaston Leval, William Blake, Errico Malatesta, Harold Barclay and many others, including 118 issues of the journals Anarchy, edited by Colin Ward and 43 issues of The Raven.
Notable contemporary writers espousing green anarchism include those critical of technology such as Derrick Jensen, George Draffan, and John Zerzan ; the techno-positive Murray Bookchin ; and others including Alan Carter.
Black Rose was the title of a respected journal of anarchist ideas published in the Boston area during the 1970s, as well as the name of an anarchist lecture series addressed by notable anarchist and libertarian socialists ( including Murray Bookchin and Noam Chomsky ) into the 1990s.
It has given grants to over 40 writers, including Lorenzo Komboa Ervin, Peter Lamborn Wilson, Murray Bookchin and Saul Newman in addition to many lesser known authors.
Her work has been strongly criticised by anarchist academics including Bryan Caplan and Murray Bookchin for the allegedly poor quality of its research and presentation.
In a broad sense, people who may share with " traditional socialism a distrust of the market, of private investment, and of the achievement ethic, and a commitment to expansion of the welfare state " might sometimes be described as “ left-libertarians .” More narrowly, some social anarchists and libertarian socialists, including Murray Bookchin, are sometimes characterized as “ left-libertarian .”, and Noam Chomsky, who identifies as a “ libertarian socialist ,” applies the “ left-libertarian ” label to himself.

Bookchin and by
Murray Bookchin has put it this way " what of the syndicalist ideal of " collectivized " self-managed enterprises that are coordinated by like occupations on a national level and coordinated geographically by " collectives " on a local level ?... Here, the traditional socialist criticism of this syndicalist form of economic management is not without its point: the corporate or private capitalist, " worker-controlled " or not "” ironically, a technique in the repertoire of industrial management that is coming very much into vogue today as " workplace democracy " and " employee ownership " and constitutes no threat whatever to private property and capitalism ... In any case, " economic democracy " has not simply meant " workplace democracy " and " employee ownership.
Murray BookchinSocial ecology is closely related to the work and ideas of Murray Bookchin and influenced by anarchist Peter Kropotkin.
*" Bookchin Breaks with Anarchism " by Janet Biehl ( 2007 )
* My Graphics About Murray Bookchin: blog and archive of comic strip stories about Bookchin's life maintained by Janet Biehl.
An account of Bookchin as a revolutionist, written by a former student and collaborator.
Social ecology is a philosophy founded by radical Green author and activist Murray Bookchin.
In autumn of 1987, the Utne Reader published a letter by Murray Bookchin which claimed that Abbey, Garrett Hardin, and the members of Earth First!
*" Death of a Small Planet " by Murray Bookchin
Social Anarchism or Lifestyle Anarchism: An Unbridgeable Chasm is a polemical essay written by Murray Bookchin and published as a book in 1995.
Bookchin sets his social anarchism in opposition to individualist, primitivist and post-modern forms of anarchism ( represented, he maintains, by such anarchist philosophers as John Zerzan and Hakim Bey ).< Ref > It has provoked criticism from anarchist writers like Bob Black and John Clark, who view Bookchin's polemic as misguided.
Category: Works by Murray Bookchin
Libertarian municipalism is a political program developed by libertarian socialist theorist Murray Bookchin, to create democratic citizens ' assemblies in towns and urban neighborhoods.
Bookchin became an advocate of face-to-face or assembly democracy in the 1950s, inspired by writings on the ancient Athenian polis by H. D. F. Kitto and Alfred Zimmern.
In Burlington, Vermont, Bookchin attempted to put these ideas into practice by working with the Northern Vermont Greens, the Vermont Council for Democracy, and the Burlington Greens, retiring from politics in 1990.
Another strong influence on the organization was the " Free Society " collective which was influenced by the social ecology theories of Murray Bookchin.
It was first characterized as a glycoprotein by Bookchin and Gallop in 1968.
Yet when it has come to the use of the term " post-left anarchism ," Munson has been an open supporter, though that term was created and popularized by Bob Black in polemical response to Bookchin for writing " Social Anarchism or Lifestyle Anarchism.
Beginning in 1997, Bob Black became involved in a debate sparked by the work of anarchist and founder of the Institute for Social Ecology Murray Bookchin, an outspoken critic of the post-left anarchist tendency.
He criticizes Bookchin's appropriation of the anarchist tradition, arguing against his dismissal of authors such as Stirner and Paul Goodman, rebuking Bookchin for implicitly identifying such authors with anarcho-capitalism, and defending what he calls an " epistemic break " made by the likes of Stirner and Nietzsche.

Bookchin and placed
While Bookchin long placed libertarian municipalism within the framework of political Anarchism, in the late 1990s he broke with anarchism and in his final essay, " The Communalist Project " ( 2003 ), identified libertarian municipalism as the main component of Communalism.

Bookchin and on
In addition to his political writings, Bookchin wrote extensively on philosophy, calling his ideas dialectical naturalism.
Although Hegel " exercised a considerable influence " on Bookchin, he was not, in any sense, a Hegelian.
Bookchin died of congestive heart failure on July 30, 2006, at his home in Burlington at the age of 85.
* Bookchin on Bookchin ( http :// www. indiegogo. com / Bookchin? c = home & a = 528160 )
Social ecology is associated with the ideas and works of Murray Bookchin, who had written on such matters from the 1950s until his death, and, from the 1960s, had combined these issues with revolutionary social anarchism.
It was through Read's writings on anarchism that Murray Bookchin was inspired in the mid-1960s to explore the connections between anarchism and ecology.
Although the expression " on the left " covers a range of politics, many well-known figures " on the left " have been of Jews, for instance, Karl Marx, Moses Hess, Herbert Marcuse, Murray Bookchin, Saul Alinsky, Tristan Tzara, Leon Trotsky, Leon Blum, Judith Butler, Noam Chomsky, Eric Hobsbawm, Harold Laski, Betty Friedan, Abbie Hoffman, or Howard Zinn, who were born into Jewish families and have various degrees of connection to Jewish communities, Jewish culture, Jewish tradition or the Jewish religion in its many variants.
* Murray Bookchin, " Thoughts on Libertarian Municipalism " ( 1999 )
Black accuses Bookchin of moralism, which in post-left anarchism, refers to the imposition of abstract categories on reality in ways which twist and repress desires ( as distinct from " ethics ", which is an ethos of living similar to Friedrich Nietzsche's call for an ethic " beyond good and evil "), and of " puritanism ", a variant of this.
Murray Bookchin was a widely read anarchist thinker whose books on the environment were influential on the environmental movement.

Bookchin and /
Murray Bookchin ( January 14, 1921 – July 30, 2006 ) was an American anarchist, political and social philosopher, environmentalist / conservationist, atheist, speaker, and writer.

Bookchin and 1993
* Murray Bookchin, Urbanization Against Cities ( 1993 ), lecture series at Concordia University,

Bookchin and title
The unbridgeable chasm of the book's title is between individual " autonomy "-which for Bookchin is a bourgeois illusion-and social " freedom ", which implies direct democracy, municipalism, and leftist concerns with social opportunities.

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