Portal:Anarchism/Selected image

The Selected image box on the portal chooses one of the following at random when displaying the page. To add or nominate a new image to the list, see instructions below.

Usage

Anarchism-related Featured pictures from Wikipedia or Commons can be added directly to this list without nomination. All other images should be nominated first to ensure that only the best anarchism images are selected for use in the portal. To nominate an image for selection, see the centralized portal maintenance page for a list of current nominations and discussions.

Template

{{Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/Layout
  |image=
  |size=
  |caption=
  |text=
  |credit=
  |link=
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Note that the prefix Image: is not required when using this template. The template will also auto-wikilink the article entered in the link= field. Further information on this template can be found at Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/Layout.

To add a new image

  1. Click on the next successive empty entry or red link on this page.
  2. Paste the above layout template if it isn't already there.
  3. Add a free image and caption.
  4. Add the credit line for the author with a wikilink or external link to their profile if possible.
  5. Write two or three sentences in the text field describing both the image and its subject. You may find it useful to examine the existing entries for an idea of the description required.
  6. Ensure the main subject of the image is in bold and add this same article to the link field.
  7. Save the page, after previewing.
  8. Go to the main Portal:Anarchism page.
  9. Click on edit page.
  10. Update "max=" to its new total for the {{Random portal component}} in the Selected image section on the portal page. The line which is edited is this one: {{Random portal component|max=4|header=Selected image|subpage=Selected image}} Make sure that "max=" is the same numerical value as the image entry added above (i.e. if you added image 43, then max=43)

Selected images list

Selected image 1

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/1

 
Oscar Wilde, famed Irish playwright, poet, and anarchist. c. 1882
Credit: Napoleon Sarony

Oscar Wilde, novelist, poet and playwright, was so enchanted by the work of Peter Kropotkin that he converted to anarchism and wrote the essay The Soul of Man under Socialism.

Selected image 2

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/2

 
Opus 217. Against the Enamel of a Background Rhythmic with Beats and Angles, Tones, and Tints, Portrait of M. Félix Fénéon in 1890, by Paul Signac (1890). 73.5 × 92.5 cm.
Credit: Paul Signac

A portrait of Félix Fénéon, by Paul Signac. Fénéon and Signac were both prominent Perisian artists and anarchists, influential in the neo-impressionist art movements. Many anarchists have expressed anarchist philosophy through art. Art styles and mediums which have been influenced by anarchism include French Symbolism, Surrealism, Punk rock, poetry, and film.

Selected image 3

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/3

 
Protest outside a Mercadona store in Barcelona, Spain
Credit: Scott Ehardt, June 13, 2006

Members of the Spanish anarcho-syndicalist union the Confederación Nacional del Trabajo (National Confederation of Labour) taking part in strike action at Spanish supermarket chain Mercadona on 13 June 2006. July of 2006 marked the 70th anniversary of the Spanish Revolution, and in commemoration the CNT and FAI organized commemorative celebrations.

Selected image 4

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/4

 
Black Bloc demonstrators taunting liberal protesters at a 2005 protest
Credit: Ben Schumin

Black Bloc demonstrators taunting liberal protesters at Malcolm X Park during the January 20, 2005 counter-inaugural protest. The tactic of black bloc affinity groups advocating direct action instead of nonviolent resistance was pioneered by European autonomes in the 1980s.

Selected image 5

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/5

 
Graffito from a 2004 CrimethInc. campaign.
Credit: Mark Strandquist, November 4, 2005.

Stenciled graffito in Washington D.C. bearing the slogan of CrimethInc.'s 2004 Don't Just Vote campaign, which exhorted voters to expand their political advocacy beyond voting to direct action. Image courtesy of the Brian MacKenzie Infoshop.

CrimethInc. argued that "[v]oting for people to represent your interests is the least efficient and effective means of applying political power. The alternative, broadly speaking, is acting directly to represent your interests yourself." This posture is typical of anarchism's historical anti-electoralism.

Selected image 6

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/6

 
Anti-anarchist propaganda
Credit: Memphis Commercial Appeal (Alley), July 5, 1919

A cartoon published in 1919 in the Memphis Commercial Appeal which depicts a monstrous "European Anarchist" seeking to blow up the Statue of Liberty. The caption ironically reads "COME UNTO ME YE OPPREST", a welcoming slogan to immigrants from less free nations. Anti-anarchist sentiment was high during the turn of the century, and was legislated into US law as the Anarchist Exclusion Act in 1901 and again in 1918. Each barred European anarchists from entering the country.

Selected image 7

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/7

 
A 19th century depiction of a meeting of the Alþingi at Þingvellir.
Credit: W. G. Collingwood

19th century interpretation of the Althing in the Icelandic Commonwealth by W.G. Collingwood. Anarcho-capitalists such as David Friedman and Roderick Long consider Medieval Iceland to exemplify some features of an anarchist society.

Selected image 8

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/8

 
Members of the anti-fascist Maquis in La Tresorerie, 14 September 1944, Boulogne, France.
Credit: Donald I. Grant

Members of the anti-fascist Maquis in La Tresorerie, 14 September 1944, Boulogne, France. The Maquis resisted Nazi and Francoist rule in Europe in the mid-20th century; In south-west France, some Maqui cells were composed entirely of veterans of the Spanish Civil War, many of whom were anarchists.

Selected image 9

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/9

 
Katie Sierra in the Land of the Free by Carlos Latuff
Credit: Carlos Latuff

Katie Sierra in the Land of the Free by political cartoonist Carlos Latuff. The Katie Sierra suspension controversy occurred in 2001 when anarcho-pacifist Sierra faced harassment for opposing the 2001 War in Afghanistan; anarcho-pacifists reject violence and militarism, and seek non-violent social revolution.

Selected image 10

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/10

 
Radical cheerleaders the Resistin Radicatz in performance
Credit: Ben Schumin

The Resistin Radicatz, a radical cheerleading group, perform in front of AFL–CIO headquarters in Washington, D.C., on October 17, 2004.

Selected image 11

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/11

 
Protester in Copenhagen, Denmark hurling a molotov cocktail at police
Credit: w:User:Silkepølse

A protester in the anarchist community of Freetown Christiania, Denmark hurls a molotov cocktail in the direction of a police van in May 2007. Violent resistance is a form of direct action opposed by pacifist anarchists but espoused by illegalists and insurrectionary anarchists.

Selected image 12

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/12

 
An upmarket Audi automobile with the license plate "ANRCHST"
Credit: Vards Uzvards

An upmarket Audi automobile with the license plate "ANRCHST". Anti-capitalist anarchists consider anarchism and anarcho-capitalism to be mutually exclusive, rejecting anarcho-capitalism's acceptance of consumerism and hierarchical labor as fundamentally unanarchistic.

Selected image 13

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/13

 
Radicals in Ellis Island awaiting deportation
Credit: Corbis Images for Education database

Anarchists and other radicals awaiting deportation from Ellis Island on January 3, 1920, after being rounded up in raids the previous night in New York City. The passage of Anarchist Exclusion Acts by the United States Congress resulted in the deportation of dozens of illegal immigrants from the United States as a result of their political beliefs.

Selected image 14

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/14

 
Engraving of the seven Haymarket Martyrs sentenced to death after the Haymarket Riot in Chicago, 1886
Credit: Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper

Engraving of the seven anarchists sentenced to death in the aftermath of the Haymarket affair, a bombing in Chicago, United States in 1886. The event was a significant milestone in the history of anarchism and of anarchism in the United States, and marked the beginning of the annual tradition of May Day labor movement protests.

Selected image 15

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/15

 
James Northcote, painting entitled William Godwin, oil on canvas, 1802, the National Portrait Gallery
Credit: James Northcote,

James Northcote, William Godwin, oil on canvas, 1802, the National Portrait Gallery. William Godwin (1756-1836) was one of the first modern proponents of philosophical anarchism

Selected image 16

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/16

 
Photograph of the Italian American anarchists Sacco and Vanzetti prior to their execution
Credit: Boston Public Library

Photograph of Italian American anarchists Ferdinando Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti in handcuffs shortly before their execution for armed robbery in 1923.

Selected image 17

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/17

 
Voltairine de Cleyre (1866-1912)

Voltairine de Cleyre (1866-1912), photographed in Philadelphia, United States in 1901. De Cleyre was a noted anarchist without adjectives, literary figure and public speaker.

Selected image 18

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/18

 
Drawing of Cuban anarchist Enrique Roig San Martin
Credit: El Productor

Drawing of Enrique Roig San Martin from an 1889 issue of El Productor, a Cuban anarchist magazine, which was published to commemorate Roig San Martin's death. Roig San Martín was an important figure in the early Cuban anarchist movement, and founded the Centro de Instrucción y Recreo de Santiago de las Vegas in 1882 with the primary goal of advocating trade unionism and collectivist anarchism.

Selected image 19

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/19

 
Ross Winn, circa 1901

Photograph of Ross Winn (1871–1912), American anarchist writer and publisher, circa 1901. Winn is best remembered for publishing several anarchist periodicals and trying to promote anarchism in the historically conservative southern United States.

Selected image 20

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/20

 
Anarchist comic book writer Alan Moore
Credit: Fimb

Alan Moore is among many artists influenced by anarchism. A comic book writer, his work has expressed sex-positive, anti-nuclear, environmentalist, and anarchist themes. His celebrated graphic novel V for Vendetta pits an anarchist vigilante against a fascist dictatorship. He decried the film version of the story for its substitution of anarchist themes with American liberal values.

Selected image 21

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/21

 
Portrait of French anarcho-syndicalist and free lover Benoit Broutchoux

Portrait of Benoît Broutchoux, French anarcho-syndicalist. Broutchoux was active in the French trade union movement and was among the Parisian bohemians arguing for free love at the turn of the 20th century.

Selected image 22

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/22

 
IWW union poster
Credit: Michael B.

Industrial Workers of the World poster calling on workers to organise for a general strike. "Wage slavery" is a term used by critics of capitalism to equate the conditions of wage labour with slavery.

Selected image 23

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/23

 
Ricardo and Enrique Flores Magon

Brothers Ricardo (left) and Enrique Flores Magón (right) at the Los Angeles County Jail, 1917. The Flores Magón brothers were noted Mexican anarchists and their philosophy of Magonismo was a leading inspiration of the Mexican Revolution (1910).

Selected image 24

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/24

 
Exterior of DIRA infoshop, Montreal, Canada
Credit: Zach Alexander

Documentations, Informations, Références et Archives (DIRA)/L'Insoumise, Montreal's anarchist infoshop/bookstore, boulevard St Laurent, March 2007. DIRA serves as a free community lending library and archive of material relevant to anarchism.

Selected image 25

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/25

 
Interior of Left Bank Books, Seattle
Credit: Adam

Interior of Left Bank Books, a Seattle-based worker-owned co-operative bookstore. Infoshops such as Left Bank Books are social centers that serve as a node for the distribution of anarchist information and as meeting spaces and resource hubs for local activist groups.

Selected image 26

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/26

 
Caricature of Émile Pouget.
Credit: Aristide Delannoy.

Émile Pouget (1860–1931), as portrayed by Aristide Delannoy. Pouget was a French anarchist and trade unionist who was elected to the position of Vice-Secretary of the Confédération générale du travail. He narrowly escaped French persecution in the Trial of the thirty by escaping to exile in England.

Selected image 27

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/27

 
Portrait of Russian author and philosopher, Leo Tolstoy.
Credit: Ilya Repin

Portrait of Leo Tolstoy by Ilya Repin, 1887. Tolstoy was a towering figure in Russian literary and philosophical history, and one of the chief influences on Christian and pacifist anarchism.

Selected image 28

Portal:Anarchism/Selected image/28

 
Oscar Wilde, famed Irish playwright, poet, and anarchist. c. 1882
Credit: Napoleon Sarony

Oscar Wilde, novelist, poet and playwright, was so enchanted by the work of Peter Kropotkin that he converted to anarchism and wrote the essay The Soul of Man under Socialism.