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Vivir la utopía

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Vivir la utopía. El anarquismo en espana. (Original 1997). Living Utopia (The Anarchists and the Spanish Revolution) Spanish with english subtitles. Around 95 minutes. This documentary-film by Juan Gamero consists of 30 interviews with survivors of the 1936-1939 Spanish Revolution, and is in our view one of the best documentaries dealing with the theme. The testimony of the anarchist militants are very moving indeed, and are showing the constructive work of the social revolution in Spain. This "Anarchy in Action" meant: on the land around 7 million peasants form collectives, in the city 3000 workplaces collectivised, 150 000 join the anarchist militias to fight fascism, as well as cultural activities and the movement of the Mujeres Libres to free the women from patriarchy.

Interviewed anarcho-syndicalists/anarchist militants: Miguel Alba, Ramon Álvarez, Frederico Arcos, Marcelino Bailo, Maria Batet, Severio Campos, Francisco Carrasquer, Miguel Celma, Valerio Chiné; José Espana, Jose Fortea, Juan Giménez, Antonio Lahuerta, Concha Liano, Fidel Miró, Aurora Molina, Heleno Molina, Conxa Pérez, Suceso Portales, Dolores Prat, Ximo Queirol, Maravilla Rodríguez, Juan Romero, Manuel Sanz, Liberto Sarrau, José Sauces, José Serra Estruch, Antonio Turón, José Urzáiz and Antonio Zapata.

Direct links to the film in spanish with english subtitles:

Eyewitness accounts about the Social Revolution in Spain

George Orwell in "Homage to Catalonia": "Above all, there was a belief in the revolution and the future, a feeling of having suddenly emerged into an era of equality and freedom. Human beings were trying to behave as human beings and not as cogs in the capitalist machine".

Gaston Leval comments in ‘The Anarchist Collectives’, Sam Dolgoff (ed.): "The various agrarian and industrial collectives immediately instituted economic equality in accordance with the essential principle of communism, 'From each according to his ability and to each according to his needs.' They coordinated their efforts through free association in whole regions, created new wealth, increased production (especially in agriculture), built more schools, and bettered public services. They instituted not bourgeois formal democracy but genuine grass roots functional libertarian democracy, where each individual participated directly in the revolutionary reorganization of social life. They replaced the war between men, 'survival of the fittest,' by the universal practice of mutual aid, and replaced rivalry by the principle of solidarity... This experience, in which about eight million people directly or indirectly participated, opened a new way of life to those who sought an alternative to anti-social capitalism on the one hand, and totalitarian state bogus socialism on the other".


Obituary

  • Miguel Alba (1900-1999) Lozano, [1]
  • Ramón Álvarez (1913-2003) Palomo [2]
  • Federico Arcos (1920- ) Martinez: Relentless Vision: The legacy of F. Arcos, Emma Goldman and the Spanish Revolution(Video)[3] and [4]
  • Maria Batet (1914-2009) [5]
  • Severino Campos (1905-2006) Campos [6] und [7]
  • Francisco Carrasquer (1917-2012), (Video in memoriam) [8]
  • Miguel Celma (1920-2007) Martín [9]
  • Valerio Chiné (1918-2007) Bagué [10]
  • José Fortea (1916- )Gracia [11]
  • Juan Giménez (1913-1998) Arenas [12]
  • Concha Liaño (1916-2014) [13] und hier: [14], (Video) Anarquista, Mujeres Libres 1936, Interview span. [15]
  • Fidel Miró (1910-1998) Last Interview [16]
  • Aurora Molina (1923-2014) Iturbe [17] kurzes Video: [18]
  • Concha Pérez (1915-2014) Collado [19], Video, Homenatge [20]
  • Maria Suceso Portales (1904-1999) [21]
  • Dolores Prat (1905-2001) Coll [22]
  • José "Pepe" Sauces (1911-2000) [23]
  • Liberto Sarrau(1920-2001) Royes [24]
  • Antonio Turón (1920-2003) Turón [25]
  • José Urzáiz (1918-1998) [26]
  • Antonio Zapata (1908-2000) Córdoba [27]


Bibliography

  • Sam Dolgoff (1974): The Anarchist Collectives: Workers' Self-Management in the Spanish Revolution, 1936–1939, Montreal.
  • Rudolf Rocker (1938): Anarcho-Syndicalism. Theory & Practice, London.
  • Colectivo Solidario, ed.,(2007): "El anarcosindicalismo español. Una historia en imágenes". Confederación Sindical Solidaridad Obrera, Madrid.
  • Jose Peirats (2011,2012): "The CNT in the Spanish Revolution", vol.1, vol.2, vol.3, PM Press, Oakland.
  • Stuart Christie (2010): We, the anarchists! A study of the Iberian Anarchist Federation (FAI) 1927–1937. London.
  • Vernon Richards (1953): Lessons of the Spanish Revolution. Freedom Press, London.
  • Iain McKay, Editor (2012): "An Anarchist FAQ" Vol 2, (esp. Section: I.8 Does revolutionary Spain show that libertarian socialism can work in practice? page 974-1005 [28]). AK Press, Oakland/Edinburgh.
  • "Spain 1936-1939: Social Revolution - Counter Revolution" (1990), (Selections from the anarchist fortnightly 'Spain & the World'), Freedom Press, London.

Websites

See also