Anarchism and science fiction: F


S.F.: ‘Through the ‘A’ in Anarchism’ (1956)

This short tale was published in Freedom in 1956. The narrator day-dreams, at Speakers’ Corner, that he sails through the ‘A’ on an anarchist banner into the future anarchist world, which is fully described. Britain is now basically running on anarchist-communist lines. Curiously, though, there is still a need for a police force, though this is all right because they are all qualified in sociology, psychology, local history and orgone therapy.

   The story’s gently satiric humour has considerable charm; and the notion that the British only got round to having a revolution after their supply of tea ran out is perhaps as plausible as many another scenario for revolution here.


E. Douglas Fawcett: Hartmann the Anarchist (1893)

A terrorist destroys part of London from his airship. This is the first story of this kind to identify the terrorists as anarchists. Superior to most of its successors, it is still fresh, and probably the only one still worth reading.


Leslie Fish: The Weight ()

Fan-published anarchist-feminist Star Trek novel.


Homer Eon Flint: The Queen of Life (1919)

‘The feeble humanoid inhabitants of Venus have encased the planet in a glass sphere and live in a state of anarchy.’ (Dan Clore)


Gabriel de Foigny: The Southern Land, Known (1676)

Clore notes that ‘The hermaphroditic inhabitants of Australia have no state, no property, no religion, and no family’, but this fantastic voyage is no utopia and the polity no anarchy.


Charles Fourier

‘Usually considered the founder of the libertarian wing of socialism, Fourier deserves mention here because his writings often contain fantastic elements. Once Fourier’s socialism is established, men will grow to seven feet tall and live 144 years. The moon will be replaced by five new satellites, each a different color, and some Saturn-like rings, which will allow it to once again copulate with the other planets, which will all move closer to the earth in order to engage in this planetary orgy. The oceans will turn to lemonade. One idea frequently attributed to Fourier, however – that men will grow prehensile tails with an eye and a finger on the end – is apparently really the invention of a satirist. Fourier often uses a semi-fictional form to describe his ideal society.’ (Dan Clore)


George Foy: The Memory of Fire (2000)

‘Governments and corporations wage war against anarchist enclaves.’ (Dan Clore)


Anatole France: The White Stone (1905), Penguin Island (1908)

The White Stone ‘portrays a libertarian-socialist utopia.’ (Dan Clore)

Penguin Island is a satire involving evolution among penguins. Book Two presents an essentially anarchist view of the origin of property and government:

 

Do you see, my son, he exclaimed, that madman who with his teeth is biting the nose of the adversary he has overthrown and that other one who is pounding a woman's head with a huge stone?

I see them, said Bulloch. They are creating law; they are founding property; they are establishing the principles of civilization, the basis of society, and the foundations of the State. (Bantam Classic edn: 37)

 

The last book concerns the future destruction of civilization, initiated by anarchist bombers; although the author seems to have some sympathy for this, the book concludes with the cyclical return of the triumphant State. Unusually, we have a record of the views of Bartolomeo Vanzetti on this work: for him 'France masterly slaps, in this book, the pretentions, proudness, hypocracy, stupidity and ferocity of the humane, and shows the uselessness of religions, and the venom of the clergies.' (Frankfurter & Jackson, eds: 144)



Authors by surname: A B C D E F G H J K L M N O P R S T U V W Y Z


Bibliography


@sf home, Ben Beck's website home




This page was last revised on 2008-12-17.

© Benjamin S. Beck 2005-8