The Blast (periodical)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Blast | |
---|---|
Categories | Political Philosophy |
Frequency | Bi-monthly |
Publisher | Alexander Berkman |
First issue | 1916 |
Final issue — Number |
June 1917 Vol 1 No 29 |
Country | United States of America |
Language | English |
The Blast was an anarchist newspaper published by Alexander Berkman from 1916 through 1917. Conceived of by Berkman more as "revolutionary labor paper" than a strictly anarchist paper, it focused on California and the national labor movement. When Berkman left his position as editor of Mother Earth, he moved to San Francisco and began work on his own publishing project. The magazine lasted 29 issues, and covered subjects such as Emma Goldman and Margaret Sanger's arrests for birth-control advocacy, Pancho Villa, and the trial of labor agitators Tom Mooney and Warren Billings. The magazine was shut down in June of 1917 when Berkman was arrested for encouraging resistance to the draft. In 2005, all 29 issues of The Blast were re-published in book form by AK Press.
[edit] Contributors
- Alexander Berkman, Aspirations of the Blast and Violence and Anarchism
- Josiah Warren, The Crimes of Government (reprint)
- Edward Carpenter, The Cry of the Nations (reprint)
- Indian National Party, The Growth of Revolution in India
[edit] References
The Blast: Complete Collection Of The Incendiary San Francisco Bi-Monthly Anarchist Newspaper From 1916-1917 (AK Press)
|