Forty years after his untimely death in 1985, Fredy Perlman’s last work has been published, a second volume of his novel, The Strait, which he left in handwritten form.
In 1986, the anarchist activist/historian (and FE contributor) David Porter commented in the journal Kairos on Perlman’s contribution to anarchist ideas, identifying a central, unifying concern in the work as “the obstacles, inhibitions, and illusions that prevent genuine social liberation.” Although Fredy had begun with a critique of capital as the “overall framework for domination and self-repression in the modern era,” he continued, “Fredy’s special talent was to demonstrate the variety of its political forms,” a dialectic he described in his essays and books, in which “accumulation of unequal power leads to the privilege of a few and the degradation of the others.” Moreover, resisting tended to produce its own feedback “Every major step toward apparent liberation produces further domination...”
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