Anarchism and science fiction: G


Ganpat (pseud.: Martin Louis Gompertz): Harilek: A Romance of Modern Central Asia (1923)

? (Dan Clore)


Bert Garskof: The Canbe Collective Builds a Be-Hive (1977)

A book for older children, describing an anarchist community of the future (though the word itself isn’t used). It has apparently grown out of the sixties commune movement, and seems to be a sort of hippy utopia for kids. Though stateless, Canbe has a system of local, regional, continental and general planning groups, ‘the closest things the New Era had to what in the olden times were called governments’ (Dandelion edn: 58); their function is to co-ordinate the work of all the various communal associations and collectives.


William S. Gibson: Idoru (1997)

Idoru’s Walled City ‘presents us with a new model of anarchist politics, for it insists that truly radical activities cannot be carried out within the epistemological framework of modern spatial relations’ (Call: 105).


M. Gilliland: The Free (1986)

Described by its publisher as ‘A novel of love, hope and revolution, set in the very near future, on an island off the coast of Britain. From the underground to revolution, repression and resistance! Essential. The first great contemporary anarchist novel.’

   There is an online essay entitled 'What can M. Gilliland’s The Free contribute to an understanding of the conceptual structure of modern British class struggle anarchism?' here.


George Glendon: The Emperor of the Air (1910)

Confused and derivative story of Esperanto-speaking anarchists waging war on society from a marvellous new airship. Their leader proclaims himself Emperor of the Air and rapidly forgets any anarchist principles he may ever have had, whereupon ground-based anarchists collaborate with police forces in opposing him. The novel concludes when the airship impales itself on the summit of Mt Everest. Exceptionally silly.


Rex Gordon: Utopia 239 (1955)

One of the few explicitly anarchist sf novels. The plot is stock utopian: the protagonists escape via time machine into the future, encounter utopia, and decide to stay.

   The future society is anarchist to a pattern apparently of Gordon’s own devising. The only rules the community abide by are inscribed on a memorial stone to the instigator of the revolution:

‘THE GOSPEL OF THIS COMMUNITY . . .

THAT NO ONE SHALL HAVE THE POWER TO ISSUE ORDERS . . .

THAT A STATE OF ANARCHY SHALL PREVAIL . . .

THAT FREEDOM SHALL BE UNLIMITED . . . UNCIRCUMSCRIBED BY LAW . . . UNFETTERED BY TAXATION . . .’ (Consul pb edn: 194–5)

Within the anarchy, people are free to organise on non-anarchist lines if they so choose. The society has a form of scientific priesthood, which strenuously denies that it is a quasi-government.


Martin Harry Greenberg and Mark Tier, eds: Freedom! (2006)

Incorporates two volumes previously published separately: Give Me Liberty (2003) and Visions of Liberty (2004).

   Exceptionally disappointing anthology on the theme of societies without government, or with very little. Most stories are pedestrian and uninspiring, though a couple of genre classics are included: Russell's 'And Then There Were None', and van Vogt's 'The Weapon Shop'. Linaweaver's 'A Reception at the Anarchist Embassy' is irritating and juvenile.


George Griffith: The Angel of the Revolution: A Tale of the Coming Terror (1893), Olga Romanoff; or, The Syren of the Skies (1894), The Outlaws of the Air (1895)

'In Angel of the Revolution An anarchist invents the airplane and puts this at the disposal of Terrorists. They bomb the existing governments out of existence, and maintain the world's new socialist-anarchist society by coming out of hiding in Aëria, their African stronghold.' (Dan Clore)

   'In the sequel, Olga Romanoff, . . . which takes place in 2030, a hundred years after the events of the preceding novel, the descendant of the last Tsar manages to discover the secret behind advanced technology like airplanes and submarines. Just as she has nearly attained world domination, the Aërians receive news from Mars that a comet is about to strike earth. They go into hiding underground, and return to rebuild their anarchist society after the comet wipes out all life on the surface.' (Dan Clore)

   The Outlaws of the Air is Griffith's principal diatribe against anarchism, apparently written shortly after the assassination of Sadi Carnot, to which it repeatedly refers. The plot is predictable: anarchists - members of the 'sanguinary brotherhood of the knife and the bomb' (Tower edn: 4) gain control of revolutionary new airships and proceed to terrorise the world, until finally defeated by their own treachery. All the usual targets are bombed in London, with Scotland Yard being singled out for the first field trials of the new explosive anarchite. The anarchists, as so often in this sort of fiction, do not really even live up to their own principles, being 'really under the direction of a governing Group' (294). The body of the book is curiously bracketed by a sub-plot set in a south Pacific island utopia. Griffith seems to admire the Utopian society for doing away with government and politics, but doesn't seem to notice the irony this produces, given his hatred of the 'horrible creed' (214) of anarchism.



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

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