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The child of Spanish anarchist revolutionaries who fled to France in the aftermath of the Spanish Civil War, Tomas Ibanez was an influential participant in the Paris 1968 student uprising--being one of two people who created the famous ? symbol which is now so synonymous with anarchism. In the 1970s-80s he was also active in the rebirth of Spanish anarchism following the death of dictator Francisco Franco, and has since become a respected and prolific author on the subject. After a lifetime of struggle, Anarchism is Movement distills his thoughts on anarchism in times to come, considering the philosophy as a uniquely flexible political strand. In his foreword, Peter Gelderloos notes:
"Ibanez embraces change, he identifies the ideas that hold us back, without ever abandoning that which would constitute the spirit of anarchism, if he believed in such a thing: the hopeful, bold, utopian, practical struggle against domination."
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The child of Spanish anarchist revolutionaries who fled to France in the aftermath of the Spanish Civil War, Tomas Ibanez was an influential participant in the Paris 1968 student uprising--being one of two people who created the famous ? symbol which is now so synonymous with anarchism. In the 1970s-80s he was also active in the rebirth of Spanish anarchism following the death of dictator Francisco Franco, and has since become a respected and prolific author on the subject. After a lifetime of struggle, Anarchism is Movement distills his thoughts on anarchism in times to come, considering the philosophy as a uniquely flexible political strand. In his foreword, Peter Gelderloos notes:
"Ibanez embraces change, he identifies the ideas that hold us back, without ever abandoning that which would constitute the spirit of anarchism, if he believed in such a thing: the hopeful, bold, utopian, practical struggle against domination."