Introduction
....................................................................................................................v
Acknowledgments
........................................................................................................ix
Abbreviations
.................................................................................................................x
1. The Early Years:
The Mid-1950s to the Mid-1960s
Anarchism Before the
1950s .....................................................................................1
The
Deadening Consensus .......................................................................................4
The Legend of
Bill Dwyer and Student Provocateurs:Wellingtonian Anarchism ......................................................................8
Rationalism, Anthropology
and Free Speech Fights:Anarchism in Auckland ..........................................................................................16
Anarcho-Cynicalism................................................................................................20
Aftermath: Dwyer
the Anarchist Acid Freak .......................................................22
2. The Great Era of Radicalisation:
The Late 1960s and Early 1970s
................27
The Youthquake,
Protest Movement and Strike Wave .......................................27
The Later New Left and
Anarchism .....................................................................33
The Shock of the
New: The Progressive Youth Movement ...............................36
From Protest
to Resistance: The Resistance Bookshops and Anarchism .........49
Third Worldism
and Direct Action Maoism ........................................................56
The
Fun Revolution and Anarchist Groupings ...................................................60
3. New Social
Movements and Anarchism From the Early 1970sto the Early 1980s
The Rise of New
Social Movements and Muldoonism ......................................73
The Women’s Liberation
Movement, Anarchism and Anarcha-Feminism.....75
The Values Party and Libertarian
Socialism? ...................................................
Return
to the Land: Communes and Anarchism in the 1970s ..........................83
The
Peace Movement and Anarcho-PacifIsm ......................................................85
4. Anarchist and
Situationist Groups From 1973 to 1982
...................................89
Solidarity,
Anti-Racism and Lumpen Activism: Anarchism in Auckland ......93
Anarchism in
Christchurch Until the Late 1970s ..............................................107
Anarchism
in Other Centres and the Unconventions .......................................116
Situationist Activity
in Aotearoa .........................................................................121
The Springbok Tour,
Neil Roberts and the Early 1980s ...................................126
Conclusions
................................................................................................................132
References
..................................................................................................................140
Carnival and Class: Anarchism and Councilism