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A Russian geographer and revolutionary, Peter Kropotkin published a large body of work promoting anarchism, though he was ultimately disappointed in the economic and social outcomes of Russia's 1917 revolution.

Born in Moscow to a noble family, Kropotkin held the title of prince. When he turned 15, he joined the elite Corps des Pages of St. Petersburg so that upon graduation he could become a page to Czar Alexander II. In the 1860s he chose to work in Siberia helping implement Alexander's social reforms. In 1867 he studied the geography of Eastern Siberia and was offered the position of secretary of the Imperial Geographical Society. Kropotkin turned down the job, renounced his aristocratic heritage, and devoted himself to instigating Russian revolution.

Kropotkin developed a theory of anarchist communism, a system in which goods and services could be distributed freely and equally with the cooperation of every member of society. Kropotkin was also a proponent of “propaganda by deed,” a theory of Mikhail Bakunin that argued individuals should undertake violent actions in order to inspire revolutionary fervor in the general population. In the early 1870s, Kropotkin joined the revolutionary First International Workingmen's Association.

He was arrested for openly criticizing the Russian government but then managed to escape to Switzerland. His extreme socialist views made him unpopular in Switzerland as well, and in 1881 he moved to France. The French authorities arrested Kropotkin in 1883 for sedition. While in prison, he wrote a book on his anarchist views called Paroles d'un revolte (Words of a Rebel, 1885), in which he often explained his views from a scientific standpoint. After he was released and had moved to England, he wrote another book called In Russian and French Prisons (1887). In this work, he called for more humane treatment of prisoners. Over the next few years, he was an active participant in the international socialist movement and authored many more books, including Conquest of Bread (1892), Fields, Factories, and Workshops (1899), Mutual Aid (1902), and The Great French Revolution 17891793 (1909).

Now known around the world for his political views, Kropotkin returned home to Russia after the revolution took place in 1917. He soon became dismayed with the authoritarian regime of the Bolsheviks, however, and he felt that the revolution ultimately failed. He remained in Russia until his death on February 8, 1921. He left Ethics, Origin and Development unfinished, but it was published after his death.

HarveyKushner

Further Readings

CahmCarolineKropotkin and the Rise of
Revolutionary Anarchism, 1872–1886. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1989.
KropotkinPeterThe Black Flag: Peter Kropotkin on Anarchism. St. Petersburg, FL: Red and Black Publishers, 2010.
MarshallPeterDemanding the Impossible: A History of Anarchism. Oakland, CA: PM Press, 2010.
McKayIain“Mutual Aid: An Introduction &Evaluation.” Anarcho-Syndicalist Review52 (Summer 2009): 25.
MillerMartin Alan. Kropotkin. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1976.
WoodcockGeorge, and, IvanAvakumovic.Peter Kropotkin: From Prince to Rebel. Montreal: Black Rose Books, 1990.
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