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The Complete Works of Malatesta Vol. III. Errico MalatestaЧитать онлайн книгу.

The Complete Works of Malatesta Vol. III - Errico Malatesta


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by the bread riots and the ensuing convictions that dispersed such a significant part of the libertarian movement.

      As you may have seen [Felicioli wrote to one militant in the spring of 1897] our organization has already given results: the publication of the newspaper and the splendid demonstration, recently held, during the election period.

      The driver behind the organization is the newspaper… The program advocated by L’Agitazione aims at the union of all our forces, so that we may then agree to implement, wherever and as best we may, the more interesting part of our program, which is the struggle… on the economic terrain.

      3 Roberto Giulianelli is associate professor in Economic History with the Università Politecnica delle Marche. His publications on the history of the workers’ and anarchist movements include: Pier Carlo Masini, storico e giornalista 1945–1957 (Bergamo, 2004); ed. Luigi Fabbri. Studi e documenti sull’anarchismo fra Otto e Novecento (Pisa, 2005); ed. Epistolario. Ai corrispondenti italiani ed esteri (1900–1935), by Luigi Fabbri (Pisa, 2005); ed. (with M. Antonioli) Da Fabriano a Montevideo. Luigi Fabbri: vita e idee di un intellettuale anarchico e antifascista (Pisa, 2006); ed. (with M. Papini) Dizionario biografico del movimento sindacale nelle Marche, 1900–1970 (Rome, 2006); Un eretico in paradiso. Ottorino Manni: anticlericalismo e anarchismo nella Senigallia del primo Novecento (Pisa, 2007); L’industria carceraria in Italia. Lavoro e produzione nelle prigioni da Giolitti a Mussolini (Milan, 2008).

      4 P. C. Masini, Gli internazionalisti. La Banda del Matese (1876–1878) (Milan–Rome: Edizioni Avanti!, 1958), 128. [Editor’s note: the “Matese band” was a group of Internationalists, led by Malatesta and Carlo Cafiero, who, in April 1877, roamed the countryside around the Matese mountain range, near Benevento, trying to spark a peasant uprising. At the trial of August 1878 they were acquitted.]

      5 For an outline of the life of Francesco Saverio Merlino, see the entry under his name by G. Berti in Dizionario biografico degli anarchici italiani (hereafter DBAI), eds. M. Antonioli, G. Berti, P. Iuso, and S. Fedele, vol. 2 (Pisa: BFS, 2004).

      6 G. Berti, Errico Malatesta e il movimento anarchico italiano e internazionale, 1872–1932 (Milan: Franco Angeli, 2003), 90–99.

      7 An anarchist communist organ, La Questione Sociale was published from December 1883 until February 1884. Then, after a short suspension, the weekly resumed publication until August 1884 under Malatesta’s editorship.

      8 G. Berti, “Malatesta, Errico,” in DBAI, vol. 2, 59.

      9 With respect to political terrorism, Malatesta expressed opinions that were on occasion ambiguous, as in the case of Ravachol. Cf., in particular, his letter to Luisa Pezzi of 29 April 1892 (L. Gestri, “Dieci lettere inedite di Cipriani, Malatesta e Merlino,” Movimento Operaio e Socialista, no 4. [1971]: 325­–28, which can also be found in R. Bertolucci [ed.], Errico Malatesta. Espistolario: lettere edite ed inedite, 1873–1932 [Avenza: Centro Studi Sociali, 1984], 65–68) and the interview that Malatesta gave to Le Figaro reporter Jules Huret in 1893 (cited and commented upon in A. Borghi, Errico Malatesta in 60 anni di lotte anarchiche. Storia-critica-ricordi [Pescara: Samizdat 1999; originally published in 1933], 64–66). For a more comprehensive consideration of this aspect of Malatesta’s thinking, see G. Berti, Il pensiero anarchico dal Settecento al Novecento (Manduria–Bari–Rome: Lacaita 1998), 402–7.

      10 G. Cerrito, Andrea Costa nel socialismo italiano (Rome: La Goliardica, 1982), 442–43.

      11 P. C. Masini, Storia degli anarchici italiani. Da Bakunin a Malatesta (1862–1892) (Milan: Rizzoli, 1969), 241. On Galleani, on whom much has been written, see M. Scavino’s biographical entry in DBAI, vol. 1 (Pisa: BFS 2003), 654–57.

      12 Berti, Errico Malatesta e il movimento anarchico, 169.

      13 E. Santarelli, Il socialismo anarchico in Italia (Milan: Feltrinelli, 1973), 79–80.

      14 Berti, Errico Malatesta e il movimento anarchico, 159.

      15 M. Antonioli, Vieni o maggio. Aspetti del Primo maggio in Italia tra Otto e Novecento (Milan: Franco Angeli, 1988), 49.

      16 Cf. L. Cafagna, “Anarchismo e socialismo a Roma negli anni della ‘febbre edilizia’ e della crisi, 1882–1891,” Movimento Operaio, no. 5 (1952): 729–88.

      17 Masini, Storia degli anarchici italiani. Da Bakunin a Malatesta, 259.

      18 Berti, Errico Malatesta e il movimento anarchico, 177.

      19 Ibid., 206.

      20 The relationship between anarchism and violence in the late 19th century has been studied by many historians. For Italy in particular, see P. C. Masini, Storia degli anarchici italiani nell’epoca degli attentati (Milan: Rizzoli, 1981) and M. Antonioli, “L’individualismo anarchico,” in M. Antonioli and P. C. Masini, Il Sol dell’avvenire. L’anarchismo in Italia dalle origini alla prima guerra mondiale (Pisa: BFS, 1999). For a geographically wider focus see, among others, P. Adamo (ed.) Pensiero e dinamite. Gli anarchici e la violenza, 1892–1894 (Milan: M&B Publishing, 2004).

      21 On Gori, see M. Antonioli’s biographical entry in DBAI, vol. 1, 745–51, and references therein.

      22 N. Dell’Erba, Giornali e gruppi anarchici in Italia (1892–1900) (Milan: Franco Angeli, 1983), 35.

      23 On June 5, 1893 Gori spoke at the Politeama Goldoni in Ancona, expounding anarchism’s theoretical postulates (Scritti scelti di Pietro Gori, vol. 1 [Cesena: Antistato, 1968], 105–25).

      24 L. Bettini, Bibliografia dell’anarchismo, vol. 1, part 1, Periodici e numeri unici anarchici in lingua italiana pubblicati in Italia (1872–1971) (Florence: CP, 1972), 120.

      25 Nine issues of L’Art 248 appeared between January and


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