Lifestyle anarchism

Anarchism
Missing image
Anarchy_symbol_neat.png



Schools of anarchism

Anarcho-Communism
Anarcho-syndicalism
Anarcha-feminism
Individualist anarchism
Post-left anarchy
Green anarchism
Anarcho-primitivism


Around the world

Anarchism in Spain
African anarchism
English-speaking world
Anarchist communities


Anarchism in culture

Anarchism and society
Anarchist economics
Anarchism and capitalism
Anarchism and Marxism
Anarchism and religion
Anarchism and the arts
Anarcho-punk
Anarchist symbolism
Anarchist law
Christian anarchism
Crypto-anarchism


Anarchism in history

Paris Commune
Haymarket Riot
Kronstadt rebellion
Narodnichestvo
Spanish Revolution
May 1968
WTO Meeting of 1999


Relevant lists

Anarchists
Communities
Concepts
Creative works
Musicians
Organizations


Related subjects

Anarchy
Anarcho-
Anarcho-capitalism
Anti-authoritarian
Anti-capitalism
Anti-globalization
Antifa
Antinomianism
Black Bloc
CrimethInc.
Eco-anarchism
Earth First!
Food Not Bombs
Industrial democracy
Indymedia
Participatory economics
Primitivism
Prison abolition
Libertarian municipalism
Libertarian socialism
Situationists
Social Ecology
Workers' self-management
Zapatistas

edit this box

Lifestyle anarchism is a term derived from anarchist author Murray Bookchin's Social Anarchism Or Lifestyle Anarchism: An Unbridgeable Chasm. He used it to criticise anarchists who he believed advocated individualism at the expense of class struggle. The term is now in general use as a description of positions that concentrate on changes to personal behaviour rather than wholesale reorganisation or abolition of class society.

In general, those described as lifestyle anarchists deny that they reject social or class struggle, sometimes by rejecting the distinction between individual and class behaviour.

See Also

See also: Lifestyle anarchism, African anarchism, Anarcha-feminism, Anarchism, Anarchism and Marxism, Anarchism and capitalism, Anarchism and religion, Anarchism and society, Anarchism and the arts