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A
Primitivist Primer
John
Moore
AUTHOR'S
NOTE: This is not a
definitive statement, merely a personal account, and seeks in general
terms to explain what is meant by anarcho-primitivism. It does not wish to
limit or exclude, but provide a general introduction to the topic.
Apologies for inaccuracies, misinterpretations, or (inevitable)
overgeneralizations.
What
is anarcho-primitivism?
Anarcho-primitivism (a.k.a. radical primitivism, anti-authoritarian
primitivism, the anti-civilization movement, or just, primitivism) is a
shorthand term for a radical current that critiques the totality of
civilization from an anarchist perspective, and seeks to initiate a
comprehensive transformation of human life. Strictly speaking, there is no
such thing as anarcho-primitivism or anarcho-primitivists. Fredy Perlman,
a major voice in this current, once said, "The only -ist name I
respond to is "cellist".' Individuals associated with this
current do not wish to be adherents of an ideology, merely people who seek
to become free individuals in free communities in harmony with one another
and with the biosphere, and may therefore refuse to be limited by the term
'anarcho-primitivist' or any other ideological tagging. At best, then,
anarcho-primitivism is a convenient label used to characterise diverse
individuals with a common project: the abolition of all power relations -
e.g., structures of control, coercion, domination, and exploitation - and
the creation of a form of community that excludes all such relations. So
why is the term anarcho-primitivist used to characterise this current? In
1986, the circle around the Detroit paper Fifth Estate indicated that they
were engaged in developing a 'critical analysis of the technological
structure of western civilization[,] combined with a reappraisal of the
indigenous world and the character of primitive and original communities.
In this sense we are primitivists ...' The Fifth Estate group sought to
complement a critique of civilization as a project of control with a
reappraisal of the primitive, which they regarded as a source of renewal
and anti-authoritarian inspiration. This reappraisal of the primitive
takes place from an anarchist perspective, a perspective concerned with
eliminating power relations. Pointing to 'an emerging synthesis of
post-modern anarchy and the primitive (in the sense of original),
Earth-based ecstatic vision,' the Fifth Estate circle indicated: We are
not anarchists per se, but pro-anarchy, which is for us a living, integral
experience, incommensurate with Power and refusing all ideology ... Our
work on the FE as a project explores possibilities for our own
participation in this movement, but also works to rediscover the primitive
roots of anarchy as well as to document its present expression.
Simultaneously, we examine the evolution of Power in our midst in order to
suggest new terrains for contestations and critique in order to undermine
the present tyranny of the modern totalitarian discourse - that
hyper-reality that destroys human meaning, and hence solidarity, by
simulating it with technology. Underlying all struggles for freedom is
this central necessity: to regain a truly human discourse grounded in
autonomous, intersubjective mutuality and closely associated with the
natural world. The aim is to develop a synthesis of primal and
contemporary anarchy, a synthesis of the ecologically-focussed, non-statist,
anti-authoritarian aspects of primitive lifeways with the most advanced
forms of anarchist analysis of power relations. The aim is not to
replicate or return to the primitive, merely to see the primitive as a
source of inspiration, as exemplifying forms of anarchy. For
anarcho-primitivists, civilization is the overarching context within which
the multiplicity of power relations develop. Some basic power relations
are present in primitive societies - and this is one reason why
anarcho-primitivists do not seek to replicate these societies - but it is
in civilization that power relations become pervasive and entrenched in
practically all aspects of human life and human relations with the
biosphere. Civilization - also referred to as the megamachine or Leviathan
- becomes a huge machine which gains its own momentum and becomes beyond
the control of even its supposed rulers. Powered by the routines of daily
life which are defined and managed by internalized patterns of obedience,
people become slaves to the machine, the system of civilization itself.
Only widespread refusal of this system and its various forms of control,
revolt against power itself, can abolish civilization, and pose a radical
alternative. Ideologies such as Marxism, classical anarchism and feminism
oppose aspects of civilization; only anarcho-primitivism opposes
civilization, the context within which the various forms of oppression
proliferate and become pervasive - and, indeed, possible. Anarcho-primitivism
incorporates elements from various oppositional currents - ecological
consciousness, anarchist anti-authoritarianism, feminist critiques,
Situationist ideas, zero-work theories, technological criticism - but goes
beyond opposition to single forms of power to refuse them all and pose a
radical alternative.
How
does anarcho-primitivism differ from anarchism, or other radical
ideologies?
From the perspective of anarcho-primitivism, all other forms of radicalism
appear as reformist, whether or not they regard themselves as
revolutionary. Marxism and classical anarchism, for example, want to take
over civilization, rework its structures to some degree, and remove its
worst abuses and oppressions. However, 99% of life in civilization remains
unchanged in their future scenarios, precisely because the aspects of
civilization they question are minimal. Although both want to abolish
capitalism, and classical anarchism would abolish the State too, overall
life patterns wouldn't change too much. Although there might be some
changes in socioeconomic relations, such as worker control of industry and
neighbourhood councils in place of the State, and even an ecological
focus, basic patterns would remain unchanged. The Western model of
progress would merely be amended and would still act as an ideal. Mass
society would essentially continue, with most people working, living in
artificial, technologised environments, and subject to forms of coercion
and control. Radical ideologies on the Left seek to capture power, not
abolish it. Hence, they develop various kinds of exclusive groups -
cadres, political parties, consciousness-raising groups - in order to win
converts and plan strategies for gaining control. Organizations, for
anarcho-primitivists, are just rackets, gangs for putting a particular
ideology in power. Politics, 'the art and science of government,' is not
part of the primitivist project; only a politics of desire, pleasure,
mutuality and radical freedom.
Where,
according to anarcho-primitivism, does power originate?
Again, a source of some debate among anarcho-primitivists. Perlman sees
the creation of impersonal institutions or abstract power relations as the
defining moment at which primitive anarchy begins to be dismantled by
civilized social relations. In contrast, John Zerzan locates the
development of symbolic mediation - in its various forms of number,
language, time, art and later, agriculture - as the means of transition
from human freedom to a state of domestication. The focus on origin is
important in anarcho-primitivism because primitivism seeks, in exponential
fashion, to expose, challenge and abolish all the multiple forms of power
that structure the individual, social relations, and interrelations with
the natural world. Locating origins is a way of identifying what can be
safely salvaged from the wreck of civilization, and what it is essential
to eradicate if power relations are not to recommence after civilization's
collapse. What kind of future is envisaged by anarcho-primitivists?
Anarcho-primitivist journal "Anarchy; A Journal of Desire Armed"
envisions a future that is 'radically cooperative & communitarian,
ecological and feminist, spontaneous and wild,' and this might be the
closest you'll get to a description! There's no blueprint, no proscriptive
pattern, although it's important to stress that the envisioned future is
not 'primitive' in any stereotypical sense. As the Fifth Estate said in
1979: 'Let us anticipate the critics who would accuse us of wanting to go
"back to the caves" or of mere posturing on our part - i.e.,
enjoying the comforts of civilization all the while being its hardiest
critics. We are not posing the Stone Age as a model for our Utopia[,] nor
are we suggesting a return to gathering and hunting as a means for our
livelihood.' As a corrective to this common misconception, it's important
to stress that that the future envisioned by anarcho-primitivism is sui
generis - it is without precedent. Although primitive cultures provide
intimations of the future, and that future may well incorporate elements
derived from those cultures, an anarcho-primitivist world would likely be
quite different from previous forms of anarchy.
How
does anarcho-primitivism view technology?
John Zerzan defines technology as 'the ensemble of division of
labor/production/industrialism and its impact on us and on nature.
Technology is the sum of mediations between us and the natural world and
the sum of those separations mediating us from each other. It is all the
drudgery and toxicity required to produce and reproduce the stage of
hyper-alienation we languish in. It is the texture and the form of
domination at any given stage of hierarchy and domination.' Opposition to
technology thus plays an important role in anarcho-primitivist practice.
However, Fredy Perlman says that 'technology is nothing but the
Leviathan's armory,' its 'claws and fangs.' Anarcho-primitivists are thus
opposed to technology, but there is some debate over how central
technology is to domination in civilization. A distinction should be drawn
between tools (or implements) and technology. Perlman shows that primitive
peoples develop all kinds of tools and implements, but not technologies:
'The material objects, the canes and canoes, the digging sticks and walls,
were things a single individual could make, or they were things, like a
wall, that required the cooperation of many on a single occasion .... Most
of the implements are ancient, and the [material] surpluses [these
implements supposedly made possible] have been ripe since the first dawn,
but they did not give rise to impersonal institutions. People, living
beings, give rise to both.' Tools are creations on a localised,
small-scale, the products of either individuals or small groups on
specific occasions. As such, they do not give rise to systems of control
and coercion. Technology, on the other hand, is the product of large-scale
interlocking systems of extraction, production, distribution and
consumption, and such systems gain their own momentum and dynamic. As
such, they demand structures of control and obedience on a mass scale -
what Perlman calls impersonal institutions. As the Fifth Estate pointed
out in 1981: 'Technology is not a simple tool which can be used in any way
we like. It is a form of social organization, a set of social relations.
It has its own laws. If we are to engage in its use, we must accept its
authority. The enormous size, complex interconnections and stratification
of tasks which make up modern technological systems make authoritarian
command necessary and independent, individual decision-making impossible.'
Anarcho-primitivism is an anti-systemic current: it opposes all systems,
institutions, abstractions, the artificial, the synthetic, and the
machine, because they embody power relations. Anarcho-primitivists thus
oppose technology or the technological system, but not the use of tools
and implements in the senses indicated here. As to whether any
technological forms will be appropriate in an anarcho-primitivist world,
there is debate over this issue. The Fifth Estate remarked in 1979 that:
'Reduced to its most basic elements, discussions about the future sensibly
should be predicated on what we desire socially and from that determine
what technology is possible. All of us desire central heating, flush
toilets, and electric lighting, but not at the expense of our humanity.
Maybe they are all possible together, but maybe not.' What about medicine?
Ultimately, anarcho-primitivism is all about healing - healing the rifts
that have opened up within individuals, between people, and between people
and nature, the rifts that have opened up through civilization, through
power, including the State, Capital, and technology. The German
philosopher Nietzsche said that pain, and the way it is dealt with, should
be at the heart of any free society, and in this respect, he is right.
Individuals, communities and the Earth itself have been maimed to one
degree or another by the power relations characteristic of civilization.
People have been psychologically maimed but also physically assaulted by
illness and disease. This isn't to suggest that anarcho-primitivism can
abolish pain, illness and disease! However, research has revealed that
many diseases are the results of civilized living conditions, and if these
conditions were abolished, then certain types of pain, illness and disease
could disappear. As for the remainder, a world which places pain at its
centre would be vigorous in its pursuit of assuaging it by finding ways of
curing illness and disease. In this sense, anarcho-primitivism is very
concerned with medicine. However, the alienating high-tech,
pharmaceutical-centred form of medicine practised in the West is not the
only form of medicine possible. The question of what medicine might
consist of in an anarcho-primitivist future depends, as in the Fifth
Estate comment on technology above, on what is possible and what people
desire, without compromising the lifeways of free individuals in
ecologically-centred free communities. As on all other questions, there is
no dogmatic answer to this issue.
What
about population?
A controversial issue, largely because there isn't a consensus among
anarcho-primitivists on this topic. Some people argue that population
reduction wouldn't be necessary; others argue that it would on ecological
grounds and/or to sustain the kind of lifeways envisaged by
anarcho-primitivists. George Bradford, in How Deep is Deep Ecology?,
argues that women's control over reproduction would lead to a fall in
population rate. The personal view of the present writer is that
population would need to be reduced, but this would occur through natural
wastage - i.e., when people died, not all of them would be replaced, and
thus the overall population rate would fall and eventually stabilise.
Anarchists have long argued that in a free world, social, economic and
psychological pressures toward excessive reproduction would be removed.
There would just be too many other interesting things going on to engage
people's time! Feminists have argued that women, freed of gender
constraints and the family structure, would not be defined by their
reproductive capacities as in patriarchal societies, and this would result
in lower population levels too. So population would be likely to fall,
willy-nilly. After all, as Perlman makes plain, population growth is
purely a product of civilization: 'a steady increase in human numbers [is]
as persistent as the Leviathan itself. This phenomenon seems to exist only
among Leviathanized human beings. Animals as well as human communities in
the state of nature do not proliferate their own kind to the point of
pushing all others off the field.' So there's really no reason to suppose
that human population shouldn't stabilise once Leviathanic social
relations are abolished and communitarian harmony is restored. Ignore the
weird fantasies spread by some commentators hostile to anarcho-primitivism
who suggest that the population levels envisaged by anarcho-primitivists
would have to be achieved by mass die-offs or nazi-style death camps.
These are just smear tactics. The commitment of anarcho-primitivists to
the abolition of all power relations, including the State with all its
administrative and military apparatus, and any kind of party or
organization, means that such orchestrated slaughter remains an
impossibility as well as just plain horrendous.
How
might an anarcho-primitivist future be brought about?
The sixty-four thousand dollar question! (to use a thoroughly suspect
metaphor!) There are no hard-and-fast rules here, no blueprint. The glib
answer - seen by some as a cop-out - is that forms of struggle emerge in
the course of insurgency. This is true, but not necessarily very helpful!
The fact is that anarcho-primitivism is not a power-seeking ideology. It
doesn't seek to capture the State, take over factories, win converts,
create political organizations, or order people about. Instead, it wants
people to become free individuals living in free communities which are
interdependent with one another and with the biosphere they inhabit. It
wants, then, a total transformation, a transformation of identity, ways of
life, ways of being, and ways of communicating. This means that the tried
and tested means of power-seeking ideologies just aren't relevant to the
anarcho-primitivist project, which seeks to abolish all forms of power. So
new forms of action and being, forms appropriate to and commensurate with
the anarcho-primitivist project, need to be developed. This is an ongoing
process and so there's no easy answer to the question: What is to be done?
At present, many agree that communities of resistance are an important
element in the anarcho-primitivist project. The word 'community' is
bandied about these days in all kinds of absurd ways (e.g., the business
community), precisely because most genuine communities have been destroyed
by Capital and the State. Some think that if traditional communities,
frequently sources of resistance to power, have been destroyed, then the
creation of communities of resistance - communities formed by individuals
with resistance as their common focus - are a way to recreate bases for
action. An old anarchist idea is that the new world must be created within
the shell of the old. This means that when civilization collapses -
through its own volition, through our efforts, or a combination of the two
- there will be an alternative waiting to take its place. This is really
necessary as, in the absence of positive alternatives, the social
disruption caused by collapse could easily create the psychological
insecurity and social vacuum in which fascism and other totalitarian
dictatorships could flourish. For the present writer, this means that
anarcho-primitivists need to develop communities of resistance -
microcosms (as much as they can be) of the future to come - both in cities
and outside. These need to act as bases for action (particularly direct
action), but also as sites for the creation of new ways of thinking,
behaving, communicating, being, and so on, as well as new sets of ethics -
in short, a whole new liberatory culture. They need to become places where
people can discover their true desires and pleasures, and through the good
old anarchist idea of the exemplary deed, show others by example that
alternative ways of life are possible. However, there are many other
possibilities that need exploring. The kind of world envisaged by anarcho-primitivism
is one unprecedented in human experience in terms of the degree and types
of freedom anticipated ... so there can't be any limits on the forms of
resistance and insurgency that might develop. The kind of vast
transformations envisaged will need all kinds of innovative thought and
activity.
How
can I find out more about anarcho-primitivism?
The Primitivist Network (PO Box 252, Ampthill, Beds MK45 2QZ) can provide
you with a reading list. Check out copies of the British paper Green
Anarchist and the US zines Anarchy: A Journal of Desire Armed and Fifth
Estate. Read Fredy Perlman's Against His-story, Against Leviathan!
(Detroit: Black & Red, 1983), the most important anarcho-primitivist
text, and John Zerzan's Elements of Refusal (Seattle: Left Bank, 1988) and
Future Primitive (New York: Autonomedia, 1994). How do I get involved in
anarcho-primitivism? One way is to contact the Primitivist Network. If you
send two 1st class postage stamps, you will receive a copy of the PN
contact list and be entered on it yourself. This will put you in contact
with other anarcho-primitivists. Some people involved in Earth First! also
see themselves as anarcho-primitivists, and they are worth seeking out
too.

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