Content area
Full text
At the most basic level, anarchism is fundamentally opposed to the existence of the state and the authority relations that the state codifies, legitimates, or represents.1 Although anarchism has been associated primarily with political and social movements of the nineteenth century, it has recently moved to the center of attention for both activists and theorists alike.2 Embracing domains beyond its time-honored focus on the state, contemporary anarchism constitutes a political culture manifesting itself in common forms of organization and political action, common ideological discourses, and common elements of material culture. 3 Through it all, anarchism has retained its opposition to the presence of coercion and hierarchy in human affairs, its "negation of authority over anyone by anyone."4
In this essay, my aim is to explore one aspect of this political culture, namely, the theory and practice of "ontological anarchism"-a stance that regards anarchism less as a political program and more as an artistic practice. Drawing on the works of Hakim Bey, I examine ontological anarchism's principles as well as its critiques of other strains of political theory and practice. The focus will be on what problems ontological anarchism has confronted and on what apparent solutions it has offered. Tracing affinities between ontological anarchism and other energetic radicalisms, as well as addressing debates among various advocates for anarchism, I seek to understand the merits of the sort of ideological position that proclaims "the triumph of life over dogma."5
Contemporary anarchists often express disdain for abstract or academic theory. As an action-based creed rather than an intellectual dogma, there is no shortage of people who can offer a definition or account of what anarchism is (and is not).6 It seems as though a person cannot be an anarchist without having to explain the nature of anarchism and of anarchists. Though there is no universal understanding of or single approach to anarchism, my aim here is not to forge one. Instead, my project rests upon the claim that, despite some distaste for academic theory among anarchists, there is nevertheless a significant role for reflexive thought. As Saul Newman notes, "Given the decline of Marxism as both a political and theoretical project-and given the desire for a politics that avoids statism, authoritarianism, class essentialism and economism-perhaps it is...





