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Memoirs of a Revolutionist

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Memoirs of a Revolutionist
AuthorPeter Kropotkin
SubjectAutobiography
Published1899 (Houghton Mifflin)

Memoirs of a Revolutionist is Peter Kropotkin's autobiography and his most famous work.[1]

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  • Memoirs of a Revolutionist, Vol 1 Full Audiobook by Peter KROPOTKIN
  • Memoirs of a Revolutionist, Vol 2 Full Audiobook by Peter KROPOTKIN
  • Memoirs of a Revolutionist, Vol. 1 - by Peter Kropotkin

Transcription

Summary

Kropotkin, c. 1900

Kropotkin's Memoirs address the arc of his life, the development of his anarchist philosophy, and his activism for socialist causes. It covers his childhood, cadet corps schooling, geographical work, political awakening, international travel, and Chaykovsky Circle work. He discusses his exile and activism in Western Europe after escaping from a Russian jail.[1]

Publication history

Elements of what would become Kropotkin's Memoirs of a Revolutionist were first published in The Atlantic Monthly between 1898 and 1899 in English, the same year it received its first publication from Houghton Mifflin with an introduction by Georg Brandes. Later editions of this original 1899 release include those edited and introduced by James Allen Rodgers (Doubleday, 1962) and Nicolas Walter (Dover Publications, 1971). Both use endnotes to address Kropotkin's subsequent Russian-language additions in the translation of his Memoirs.[1]

After its initial release, Kropotkin continued to revise his Memoirs with Russian-language additions in a translation of the 1902 English release. These were published in multiple editions between 1906 and 1929. The canonical 1933 Soviet Academia edition derived from Kropotkin's Russian manuscript and became the basis for Soviet reprints.[1]

A reviewer of the English editions in The Slavonic and East European Review remarked that the memoirs remained readable and interesting in the present day. While he praised the editors' extensive notes and sufficient indices, he felt that ready footnotes would have been more appropriate than endnotes for putting Kropotkin's additions in context, and that the 1933 Russian edition's illustrations would have been worthwhile imports.[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Knowles, A. V. (1973). "Review of Memoirs of a Revolutionist". The Slavonic and East European Review. 51 (122): 140–141. ISSN 0037-6795. JSTOR 4206687.

Further reading

This page was last edited on 7 August 2023, at 07:01
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