Here is the thing about anarchism. Often slated as anti-intellectual, or lacking a rigorous account of political economy, anarchism isn’t essentially about the theorisation of abstractions but the reflection on and elaboration of a diversity of tactics. Ideological discontinuities among anarchists more often than not, although not at all times, comes down to a disagreement over tactics and the deployment of forms. This even counts for the debates around building specific assemblages. Looking at the accelerationist manifesto, I’m sure you could read a large swathe of it as if it were written by a federalist anarchist (and perhaps this is why Mark Fisher exempts the UK’s Solidarity Federation from his critique of neoanarchism, and why the Anarchist Federation should also be considered exempt).
interesting have they been doing something akin to case-studies to compare & contrast differing attempts that they have made at re-assembling?
Damn, you asked that a long time ago. There have been case-studies in the sense of reports back on successful actions. As far as I get it, the AFED and SOLFED have come closer together over the years to the point where it has become a running joke as to when they will fuse into one organisation. The distinction essentially seems to boil down to SOLFED having a workplace emphasis in most of its organising (as an anarchosyndicalist organisation) and AFED a more community oriented focus (as an anarcho-communist organisation). The lolz here is that anarchosyndicalists also tend to think of themselves as communists and anarcho-communists often say they’re syndicalists in the workplace. At any rate I don’t think that work of re-assembling is going on in institutional terms but that it is constantly going on in terms of membership of these groups being cross-collaborative on extra-organisational campaigns and in sharing tactics.
no rush to these things, glad to hear people are gearing in and grinding it out much harder with 3D flesh and blood people than on the page/screen, would be nice to have an ethnographer or two in the mix to come up with something like open-source platforms from the tactics and even thick accounts of the failures so we don’t keep starting over from scratch.
Here is the thing about anarchism. Often slated as anti-intellectual, or lacking a rigorous account of political economy, anarchism isn’t essentially about the theorisation of abstractions but the reflection on and elaboration of a diversity of tactics. Ideological discontinuities among anarchists more often than not, although not at all times, comes down to a disagreement over tactics and the deployment of forms. This even counts for the debates around building specific assemblages. Looking at the accelerationist manifesto, I’m sure you could read a large swathe of it as if it were written by a federalist anarchist (and perhaps this is why Mark Fisher exempts the UK’s Solidarity Federation from his critique of neoanarchism, and why the Anarchist Federation should also be considered exempt).
interesting have they been doing something akin to case-studies to compare & contrast differing attempts that they have made at re-assembling?
Damn, you asked that a long time ago. There have been case-studies in the sense of reports back on successful actions. As far as I get it, the AFED and SOLFED have come closer together over the years to the point where it has become a running joke as to when they will fuse into one organisation. The distinction essentially seems to boil down to SOLFED having a workplace emphasis in most of its organising (as an anarchosyndicalist organisation) and AFED a more community oriented focus (as an anarcho-communist organisation). The lolz here is that anarchosyndicalists also tend to think of themselves as communists and anarcho-communists often say they’re syndicalists in the workplace. At any rate I don’t think that work of re-assembling is going on in institutional terms but that it is constantly going on in terms of membership of these groups being cross-collaborative on extra-organisational campaigns and in sharing tactics.
no rush to these things, glad to hear people are gearing in and grinding it out much harder with 3D flesh and blood people than on the page/screen, would be nice to have an ethnographer or two in the mix to come up with something like open-source platforms from the tactics and even thick accounts of the failures so we don’t keep starting over from scratch.