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Topic: Luigi Galleani


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In the News (Thu 16 Feb 12)

  
  Luigi Galleani - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Luigi Galleani (1861—November 4, 1931) was a major 20th century anarchist and advocate of violent overthrow of the U.S. government.
Galleani next moved to Switzerland, where he attended the University of Geneva before again being expelled as a dangerous agitator, this time for arranging a celebration in honor of the Haymarket rioters.
Luigi Galleani and eight of his adherents were deported in June of 1919, three weeks after the June 2nd wave of bombings.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Luigi_Galleani   (1260 words)

  
 Luigi Galleani Page from the Daily Bleed's Antiauthoritarian Encyclopedia: A Gallery of Saints & Sinners; Labor, ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Galleani died of a heart attack on November 4, 1931, at the age of 70.
Luigi Galleani was a major figure in the anarchist movement, specifically among Italian anarchists, known as an unflinching advocate of propaganda by the deed.
Galleani was an influential Italian anarchist of the early 20th century.
recollectionbooks.com /bleed/Encyclopedia/GalleaniLuigi.htm   (421 words)

  
 Italian Anarchists   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Galleani was tried in 1907 for his role in the 1902 strike, but the trial ended in a hung jury and he was set free.
Galleani's handbook was characterized as accurate and practical by the New York City bomb squad, but this turned out not to be the case, as several unfortunate anarchists soon discovered--there was an error in the formula to nitroglycerine that had to be emended.
Galleani himself was deported in 1919, along with a number of his comrades, forced to leave his wife and children behind.
www.cat.org.au /a4a/galleani.html   (1751 words)

  
 Bulletin of the KSL - No. 15
Galleani’s on the contrary, spread over most of twenty years and was marked by the continuous progress of his mind and of the revolutionary movement as well.
Galleani’s was the kind of leadership that marks the crusader and scares the job-seekers.
Galleani barely escaped with his life after having received a slash on his forehead and a gun shot on his upper lip.
flag.blackened.net /ksl/bullet15.htm   (5421 words)

  
 ANTICOMMUNISM, AMERICANIZATION, AND ETHNIC IDENTITY: ITALIAN AMERICANS AND THE 1948 PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS IN ITALY. - ...
Luigi Galleani, Arturo Giovannitti, Nicola Sacco, Bartolomeo Vanzetti, Carlo Tresca, and Louis C. Fraina were only the most outstanding figures of much larger Anarchist, Socialist, and Communist Italian American networks.
Luigi Antonini, the general secretary of ILGWU Local 89, was instrumental in his organization providing the Social Democratic Party with more than $200,000 for its election campaign.
Along with him, Luigi DePasquale was a member of the American Italian Congress, a nationwide organization that vainly endeavored to let Italy retain Eritrea, Somaliland, and Lybia, the African colonies that she had acquired before Mussolini's rise to power.
www.highbeam.com /library/doc0.asp?DOCID=1G1:60578630   (6144 words)

  
 Library of Congress Information Bulletin - September 18, 1995
Like thousands of other manual laborers, they were followers of Luigi Galleani, the leading Italian anarchist in America during the first two decades of the 20th century.
Wrote Galleani: "We do not argue about whether property is greedy or not, if masters are good or bad, if the State is paternal or despotic, if laws are just or unjust, if courts are fair or unfair, if police are merciful or brutal.
Galleani published his opinion in the Cronaca Sovversiva, the foremost Italian anarchist periodical, which he edited.
www.loc.gov /loc/lcib/9517/sacco.html   (749 words)

  
 Anarchy Will Be!: Selected Writings Of Luigi Galleani :: AK Press
The Italian immigrant communities at the dawn of the twentieth century were seething with "the ideal" (the dream of a free humanity).
Through newly translated materials from Cronaca Sovversiva, we are offered a new window into the movement which spawned the cherished anarchist idealism of Sacco and Vanzetti, fought wage slavery, and violently defended the rights of immigrants during the government's criminal Palmer Raids.
Luigi Galleani (1861–1931) devoted his life to the anarchist ideal.
www.akpress.org /2004/items/anarchywillbe   (300 words)

  
 Bibliography International Review of Social History vol. 47 part 3 (2002)
Ranging from early modern Italy to modern Asia and the United States, the contributions deal with, among others, voluntary associations as indicators of citizen readiness for civic engagement and the question as to whether accumulation and diminution of social capital is a cyclical process, or whether societal deterioration has occurred in our modern age.
This is a biography of Luce Fabbri (1908-2000), the daughter of the well-known Italian anarchist Luigi Fabbri, in whose footsteps she followed.
This is a new edition of an anthology by Luigi Galleani (1861-1931), which was first published in 1914 by the Gruppo Autonomo di East Boston.
www.iisg.nl /irsh/47-3-bib.php   (9613 words)

  
 Election 2001: What else is there?
The Italian Luigi Galleani said: Abstentionism strips the state of the constitutional fraud with which it presents itself.
A significant minority of libertarian Britons have been skipping ballots and spoiling papers for many years and statisticians admit they are unsure how many of the eligible twelve million people who failed to vote in 1997's general election did so out of apathy or in protest.
The Italian anarchist Luigi Galleani felt: Abstentionism strips the state of the constitutional fraud with which it presents itself.
www.urban75.org /election2001/003.html   (2658 words)

  
 About the Sacco-Vanzetti Case
Their purpose was not merely to avoid military service or imprisonment for draft resistance; they wanted to remain at liberty so they could join the revolution they expected to erupt in Italy in the wake of the March revolution in Russia.
While neither Sacco nor Vanzetti had any previous criminal record, they were long recognized by the authorities and their communities as anarchist militants who had been extensively involved in labor strikes, political agitation, and anti-war propaganda and who had had several serious confrontations with the law.
They were also known to be dedicated supporters of Luigi Galleani's Italian-language journal Cronaca Sovversiva, the most influential anarchist journal in America, feared by the authorities for its militancy and its acceptance of revolutionary violence.
www.english.uiuc.edu /MAPS/poets/m_r/millay/sacco.htm   (4501 words)

  
 Luigi Galleani Biography
(The End of Anarchism?) in which Galleani asserts that Anarchy is far from dead, but in fact is a force to be reckoned with.
See a timeline of important events in Galleani's lifetime.
- A section devoted to Galleani in the "Bulletin of the Kate Sharpley Library 6/1998 ~ No. 15".
dwardmac.pitzer.edu /Anarchist_Archives/bright/galleani/biography.html   (161 words)

  
 Life & Arts 2 -- The Daily Cougar Online   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
It's unknown what time period Mario and Luigi lived, but if it was during the 1920s, it's no wonder the Italian brothers warped to another world.
The fact they were Italian, involved in labor strikes, political agitation and anti-war propaganda, and had several serious confrontations with the law because of such actions had more to do with the public's support of their conviction than any conclusive evidence.
They were also known to be dedicated supporters of another famous Luigi -- Luigi Galleani -- whose Italian-language journal Cronaca Sovversiva was the most influential anarchist journal in America, and was feared by authorities for its radical political messages and its acceptance of revolutionary violence.
www.stp.uh.edu /vol71/120/arts/arts2.html   (816 words)

  
 Insurrectionary anarchism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Instead, insurrectionary anarchists advocate informal organization, including small affinity groups and mass organizations which include non-anarchist individuals of the exploited or excluded class.
Many anarchist communists, such as the publishers of Barricada magazine in the United States and immigrants to the US such as Luigi Galleani and Johann Most have been insurrectionary anarchists.
Another Italian insurrectionary with great impact on anarchists was Luigi Galleani, and a well known German insurrectionary anarchist was Johann Most.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Insurrectionary_anarchism   (510 words)

  
 Amazon.fr :  Anarchy Will Be!: The Selected Writings of Luigi Galleani : Livres en anglais   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Tous les livres en anglais de Luigi Galleani
de Luigi Galleani, Paul Sharkey, Barry Pateman (Sous la direction de)
Editeur : découvrez comment les clients peuvent effectuer des recherches sur le contenu de ce livre.
www.amazon.fr /exec/obidos/ASIN/1904859399   (367 words)

  
 A Journal for MultiMedia History review of a radio program, "Sacco and Vanzetti" (produced as part of the series, "The ...
Asked by his interviewer how such idealism soon degenerated into terrorism against the innocent, Pernicone responds that, first of all, to the anarchists, few of their targeted victims were "innocent"; second, terrorism was a result of the decline of the movement after 1881, and of the inability of anarchists to precipitate collective revolt.
His assertion that the April 1919 bombing campaign may have been a response to the deportation of Galleani is quite plausible, given the timing of the two events.
Toward the end of the program, the question of guilt is addressed by Luigi Quintilliano, a comrade of Sacco and Vanzetti, who recorded his reminiscences in 1967.
www.albany.edu /history_journals/jmmh/vol2no1/saccovanzetti.html   (2321 words)

  
 RAT: Archive: Summer Conference 2000 ... page 2
As the publisher and chief writer, Luigi Galleani produced Cronnaca Sowersiva from 1903_1917, the first nine years of which he operated from Barre, Vermont.
Galleani was a talented, fiery editorialist, advocating a communo-anarchist philosophy.
Since most of Galleani's work remains untranslated, and that which is translated is only sporadically available, this presentation has the dual purpose of enlightening participants to the overall philosophy and work of Galleani while reexamining his ideas in light of the modern condition of anarchist thought and practice.
www.homemadejam.org /renew/archive/2000/2000(2).html   (956 words)

  
 Good Times and Bad Times in Lost America: Luigi Galleani "The End of Anarchism?" transcription project part 1
The context for understanding this discussion is that Galleani is arguing against socialists who already believe that everything should be socialized and things pretty much equally distributed.
So Galleani isn't making the case for socialism in the abstract, he already assumes that the reader buys into the idea of a socialist society.
Galleani is not urging people to be lazy or excusing them from work.
leftthought.blogspot.com /2004/10/luigi-galleani-end-of-anarchism.html   (1739 words)

  
 Amazon.ca: Anarchy Will Be!: The Selected Writings of Luigi Galleani: Books: Luigi Galleani,Paul Sharkey,Barry Pateman   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Amazon.ca: Anarchy Will Be!: The Selected Writings of Luigi Galleani: Books: Luigi Galleani,Paul Sharkey,Barry Pateman
Luigi Galleani was the most vocal and militant voice among the Italian anarchist communities at the dawn of the twentieth century.
Comprised of newly translated texts from his paper Cronaca Sovversiva (1903–1918), this volume offers a new window into the movement that spawned the cherished anarchist idealism of Sacco and Vanzetti, which fought wage slavery and violently defended the rights of immigrants during the government's criminal Palmer Raids.
www.amazon.ca /exec/obidos/ASIN/1904859399   (215 words)

  
 Voluntaryism In The European Anarchist Tradition
Both Galleani and Malatesta rejected the use of protest candidates because they took away the unity of the struggle which constituted the characteristic opposition of anarchism to politics.
Such a course was not surprising in the context of Spanish history, but the real tragedy of the anarchists was that they were pulled further and further into the mire of compromise." The December 1936 Vanguard carried remarks on the Spanish situation, translated from a French anarchist journal.
The author, Luigi Bertoni, wrote, partly in justification and partly in recognition of the anarchists departure from principle.
members.aol.com /vlntryst/6nbnb.html   (9837 words)

  
 September 26: Emma Goldman, Luigi Galleani, Salvatore Palavicini, Nestor Makhno, Man Ray, Domenech, Fabregas & Garcia ...
India: The FEAST OF LAMPS, memorial to the dead in which every lamp is lighted, a harvest feast is eaten, cakes are placed at crossroads for evil spirits to eat.
Prevented from delivering her lecture, "Authority versus Liberty," on Jan. 31, Goldman's comrades print & distribute 5,000 copies of a manifesto containing the text of her barred speech.
While in Barre, Emma Goldman meets Luigi Galleani, editor of the anarchist journal
www.eskimo.com /~recall/bleed/0926.htm   (2013 words)

  
 FAQs of Libertarian Socialism/Anarchism
However, for the past millenia it has been a general concensus that anarchy is disorder and chaos.
Thanks largely in part to Luigi Galleani(1861-1931), Anarchists have been thought of as bomb toting terroists.
The fact is Anarchism can be, and usually is, rational and orderly.
www.angelfire.com /id/anarchismpg2   (270 words)

  
 Sacco & Vanzetti Trial: Biographies
He began to subscribe to Cronaca Sovversiva (Subversive Chronicle), an anarchist newspaper published by Luigi Galleani.
Sacco became a devotee of Galleani and spent the next several years writing for the paper, donating and soliciting funds for anarchist activities, as well as caring for his family.
In 1917, Sacco met Vanzetti shortly before the two, along with several other anarchists, moved to Mexico to avoid conscription for World War I. While living incognito south of the border, the anarchists took pseudonyms.
www.law.umkc.edu /faculty/projects/ftrials/SaccoV/biographies.html   (2285 words)

  
 American History (Library of Congress Rare Books and Special Collections: An Illustrated Guide)
The Italian pamphlets, the largest single grouping, originated in cities like Lynn, Massachusetts; Patterson, New Jersey; Barre, Vermont; and Newark, New Jersey.
Luigi Galleani, Petro Gori, Carlo Tresca, and Errico Malatesta are among the Italian anarchists represented.
The extremist German formulation of anarchism can be studied in the pamphlets by writers like Johann Most, Max Nettlau, and Rudolf Rocker.
www.loc.gov /rr/rarebook/guide/amerhis.html   (3677 words)

  
 Anarchism And Communism | NEFAC   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
At least, it is so difficult to reconcile them, and so demanding of the sacrifice of all human freedom and dignity, that one can surmise that it is impossible when today the spirit of revolt, autonomy and initiative is so widespread among the masses, hungering not only for bread, but also for freedom.
Although very little is known of Luigi Fabbri outside of Italian anarchist circles, he was one of leading theorists and propagandists among the second wave of Italian anarcho-communists (which included Luigi Galleani, Camillo Berneri and Pietro Gori, amongst others), active from the late 1890s through the duration of his life.
He co-edited the influential Italian anarchist journal 'Il Pensiero', and wrote regularly for other publications such as 'Lotta Umana' and the daily 'Umanita Nova'.
nefac.net /?q=node/93   (1217 words)

  
 The Sacco and Vanzetti Trial
This document was traced to a small print shop in Brooklyn.
The print shop was owned by two anarchists, Andrea Salsedo and Robert Elia, who were affiliated with Luigi Galleani, one the largest anarchist leaders in America before he was deported in the raids to attack communist under M. Palmer.
Both Salsedo and Elia were taken into custody for their apparent involvement in the bombings.
www.angelfire.com /co/pscst/sandv.html   (771 words)

  
 Digital History
Anti-immigrant, anti-radical sentiment led the police to focus on local anarchists.
Sacco and Vanzetti were followers of Luigi Galleani, a radical Italian anarchist who had instigated a wave of bombings against public officials just after World War I. An Italian anarchist had blown himself up while trying to plan a bomb at Attorney General Palmer's house.
Sacco and Vanzetti acted nervously and the arresting officer testified that Sacco and Vanzetti were reaching for weapons when they were apprehended.
www.digitalhistory.uh.edu /database/article_display.cfm?HHID=445   (623 words)

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