During the early interwar years, individualist anarchism reached its point ofmaximum intellectual sophistication. One locus of such high intellectual complexitywas the weekly Der Einzige , which appeared in 1919 and was edited by twooriginal German thinkers, Anselm Ruest (Ernst Salomon) and Salomo Friedlaender/Mynona. Because of the unpopularity of individualist anarchist ideas in thetwentieth century there are few books that have examined it, and even fewer havegrasped its intellectual richness. Little has been written on Der Einzige. So far,the journal has been discussed by two authors, only briefly and only historically, and not for the sake of uncovering its relevance within the individualist anarchistmovement. In Left-Wing Nietzscheans, Seth Taylor reads Der Einzige , as the titleof his book suggests, as part of an effort to reveal the way Nietzsche’s conceptsfertilized those of the Left. Mainly a Striner scholar, Taylor develops ideas similarto those articulated by Der Einzige around the concept of postanarchism.
Though Dieter Lehner’s Individualanarchismus und Dadaismus (Individualist anarchismand Dadaism) is thoroughly documented, it is not concerned with drawing a profile of the publication. To a certain extent, the book does aim to emphasizethe post-World War I transformations of individualist anarchism, but Lehner’smajor concern is to highlight the way in which Anselm Ruest and Friedlaender/Mynona provided the Dada movement with philosophical and literary models.
—The Individualist Anarchism of Early Interwar Germany, C. Parvulescu
Prospectus
Etc.
Masthead
Subtitle: none
Editors: Anselm Ruest, Salomo Friedlaender
Index
January 19 No. 1
January 26 No. 2
February 2 No. 3
February 9 No. 4
February 16 No. 5
February 23 No. 6
March 2 No. 7
March 9 No. 8
March 16 No. 9
March 23 No. 10
March 30 No. 11
April 6 No. 12
April 13 No. 13
April 20 No. 14
May 4 No. 15/16
May 18 No. 18
May 25 No. 19
June 1 No. 20
June 15 No. 21/22
June 29 No. 23/24
October 15 No. 25/26
November 1 No. 27/28