The Conquest of Bread

Paperback, 164 pages

English language

Published Nov. 12, 2017 by Aziloth Books.

ISBN:
978-1-911405-42-9
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"Le titre du livre : La Conquête du Pain doit être pris dans le sens le plus large, car « l’homme ne vit pas de pain seulement. » À une époque où les généreux et les vaillants essaient de transformer leur idéal de justice sociale en réalité vivante, ce n’est point à conquérir le pain, même avec le vin et le sel, que se borne notre ambition. Il faut conquérir aussi tout ce qui est nécessaire ou même simplement utile au confort de la vie ; il faut que nous puissions assurer à tous la pleine satisfaction des besoins et des jouissances. Tant que nous n’aurons pas fait cette première « conquête », tant qu’il « y aura des pauvres avec nous », c’est une moquerie amère de donner le nom de « société » à cet ensemble d’êtres humains qui se haïssent et qui s’entre-détruisent, comme des animaux féroces …

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An aged, optimistic, steampunk, anarcho-communist manifesto

I received a printed copy from a friend after saying I hadn't read any classic anarchist literature.

Published in 1892, the book is as much a political commentary on that time as it is the conception for how things should change. The fact that clothing is a recurring issue, that the common people are often in rags and tatters, is unrelatable with the state of manufacturing today. In Kropotkin's time the machines where on the ascendant, but the outstanding demand was so great that people still went wanting. Much more relatable was the issue of rent. At one point he talks of people spending up to half of their income on rent, and I already know of cases where people pay more.

Thus it's interesting to see that a lot of the material want that Kropotkin was motivated by has been improved without an anarcho-communist revolution (his main …

Review of 'The conquest of bread' on 'Goodreads'

Required reading for anyone exchanging labor for wages.

I found the book quite sharp and still thought-provoking for something written a century ago. Its message is relevant as ever, as we're plunged into the dystopia of corporatism and decay by those at the top exploiting the labor force. It is radical and revolutionary and I would heartily recommend it for anyone interested in the actual meaning and nature of work and its dynamics and how societies organize and form around both labor and culture.

There's a reason this book is synonymous with anarchist communism

Sure, some parts are out of date. But so much of it remains true even today. There's a saying about lectures that say that the best questions a lecturer can get are the ones answered by the very next slide. Well, that is exactly what happened to me, again and again, with the chapters of this book. Most amazingly, a question a friend raised in a discussion we had about chapter 8 was answered by the very first sentence of chapter 9. Can't be better than that.

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