- Jean Grave
Jean Grave (
October 16 ,1854 -December 8 ,1939 ) was an important activist in the French anarchist movement. He was involved withÉlisée Reclus ' "Révolté ". Initially asocialist , he became an anarchist after 1880 and a popularizer ofPeter Kropotkin 's ideas.In 1892 Grave wrote "
La société mourante et l'anarchie ", prefaced byOctave Mirbeau , for which he was sentenced to two years in prison. Mirbeau, likeÉlisée Reclus ,Paul Adam , andBernard Lazare had testified on Grave's behalf, but to no avail.Grave was sentenced in the famous "
Trial of the thirty ".In 1895 he began publishing "
Les temps nouveaux ", which was influential in literary and artistic circles of the time. Many well-known artists (such asAristide Delannoy ,Maximilien Luce ,Paul Signac ,Alexandre Steinlen ,Théo van Rysselberghe ,Camille Pissarro ,Van Dongen ,George Willaume , etc.) illustrated and helped to finance the review.In 1914 Grave joined Kropotkin in
England , and incurred the wrath of anti-war anarchists by signing the "Proclamation of the 16 ", which supported the allies duringWorld War I .Grave also wrote "
Le Mouvement libertaire sous la IIIe république ".econdary Literature
* Louis Patsouras: "Anarchism of Jean Grave". Black Rose Books 2001.
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