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  1. Joseph Déjacque (French:; 27 December 1821 – 18 November 1865) was a French political journalist and poet. A house painter by trade, during the 1840s, he became involved in the French labour movement and taught himself how to write poetry.

  2. Joseph Déjacque (1821-1864) was one of the first self-proclaimed anarchists, and probably the first person to use the term “libertarian” as a synonym for “anarchist.” He may also have been the first person to describe anarchist alternatives to other political perspectives as “anarchism.”

  3. Apr 10, 2020 · Learn about Joseph Déjacque, the first person to use the term libertarian as an alternative to anarchist. He was a critic of Proudhon, a supporter of women's emancipation, and a theorist of anarchist community.

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  5. Joseph Déjacque ( French: [deʒak]; 1821– c. 1864) was a French political journalist and poet. A house painter by trade, during the 1840s, he became involved in the French labour movement and taught himself how to write poetry.

  6. Joseph Déjacque. On the Human Being, Male and Female. In the depths of Louisiana, whither I have been driven by the vicissitudes of my exile, I have read in a United States paper, “La Revue de l’Ouest,” a fragment of correspondence between you, P. J. Proudhon, and a Madam Hericourt.

  7. Dec 30, 2011 · Joseph Déjacque. (from Le Libertaire, No. 6, September 21, 1858) “Be then frankly an entire anarchist and not a quarter anarchist, an eighth anarchist, or one-sixteenth anarchist, as one is a one-fourth, one-eighth or one-sixteenth partner in trade.

  8. Mar 21, 2018 · A translation and introduction of Joseph Déjacque's philosophical book, a cry of a rebel slave and a contribution to radical internationalism. Learn about his life, his views on slavery and freedom, and his anarchist communism.

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