Primitivism
From Infoshop OpenWiki
Primitivism or anarcho-primitivism is an analysis of the origins and progress of civilization. According to anarcho-primitivists the shift in the relationship to food from procurement by gathering and hunting to production through agriculture and the subsequent sedentary, surplus based life-way leads to an increase in the complexity of the society. Anthropology has given us a look at these changes over time. With increasing complexity of food production came increasing complexity of social organization characterized by more and more hierarchy and coercion.
For 99% of the existence of the Homo genus humans lived in small nomadic groups who depended on wild foods and natural materials like wood, bone, hide and stone for all of their needs. These band societies are politically, economically, and in gender relations egalitarian. They are organized without hierarchy or coercion. They are for lack of another term anarchistic.
Gradually and almost imperceptibly there was a change in the relationship between humans and their food. This was a shift from gathering and hunting, to horticulture, then to agriculture, and then to modern industrial agriculture. As these infrastructural changes took place they lead to changes in the political and economic structures of the societies. These changes were from effectively leaderless egalitarian bands, to groups lead by headmen, then by chiefs, and with the origin of the state by kings and in modern times by presidents, parliaments, and dictators.
Primitivists advocate for the destruction of civilization. They oppose all its aspects including specialization of tasks or division of labor and the technological system.
Many recognize that there is no "going back" and see their position as a honest assessment of our genetic, ecological heritage as one species among many and a desire to see that put into practice.
The primitivist movement has connections to radical environmentalism.
Primitivism has been notably advocated by John Zerzan, and to some extent by Theodore Kaczynski (the Unabomber) and Derrick Jensen.
During the 1990s the UK magazine Green Anarchist aligned itself with the primitivist movement, although there are many who would describe themselves as 'green anarchists' who would not see themselves as subscribing to this philosophy.
The magazine Green Anarchy was started by one of the founders of Green Anarchist. Green Anarchy is published in Eugene, Oregon. One of the editors is John Zerzan.
Primitivism can also refer to any philosophy which seeks to return to the roots of a larger movement, such as Muslims and Christians who seek to return to the first few centuries of Islam or Christianity.
[edit] See also
[edit] Suggested reading
- Against Civilization: Readings and Reflections by John Zerzan (Editor)
- Future Primitive by John Zerzan
- Running On Emptiness by John Zerzan
- Industrial Society and It's Future by Ted Kacysinski
- Ship of Fools by Ted Kacysinski
- My Name is Chellis and I'm In Recovery From Western Civilization by Chellis Glendinning
- The Technological Society by Jacques Ellul
- Against His-story, Against Leviathan by Fredy Perlman
- A Language Older Than Words by Derrick Jensen
- Culture of Make Believe by Derrick Jensen
- What Goes Up... (forthcoming) by Derrick Jensen
- Primitivism: A Primer by John Moore
- Ishmael by Daniel Quinn
- Green Anarchy An Anti-Civilization Journal of Theory and Action
- Species Traitor An Insurrectionary Anarcho-Primitivist Journal
- Disorderly Conduct
- Fifth Estate
