Misplaced Pages

Juan Serrano Oteiza

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Spanish anarchist writer (1837–1886)

Juan Serrano Oteiza
(date unknown)
Part of a series on
Anarchism
"Circle-A" anarchy symbol
Schools of thought
Methodology
  • Anarchy
  • Anarchist Black Cross
  • Anarchist criminology
  • Anationalism
  • Anti-authoritarianism
  • Anti-capitalism
  • Anti-militarism
  • Affinity group
  • Autonomous social center
  • Black bloc
  • Classless society
  • Class struggle
  • Consensus decision-making
  • Conscientious objector
  • Critique of work
  • Decentralization
  • Deep ecology
  • Direct action
  • Free love
  • Freethought
  • Horizontalidad
  • Individualism
  • Law
  • Mutual aid
  • Participatory politics
  • Permanent autonomous zone
  • Prefigurative politics
  • Proletarian internationalism
  • Propaganda of the deed
  • Refusal of work
  • Revolution
  • Rewilding
  • Sabotage
  • Security culture
  • Self-ownership
  • Social ecology
  • Sociocracy
  • Somatherapy
  • Spontaneous order
  • Squatting
  • Temporary autonomous zone
  • Union of egoists
  • Voluntary association
  • Workers' council
  • People
    Issues
    History
    Culture
    Economics
    By region
    Lists
    Related topics

    Juan Serrano Oteiza, or Juan Serrano y Oteyza (6 May 1837, in Madrid – 26 March 1886, in Madrid) was a Spanish jurist, writer and politician; one of the most prominent anarchists in 19th century Spain.

    Life and career

    His father taught him the craft of fan making, but he devoted his life to political activism. It is not known if he received any formal legal training. He may have been a notary, but this has not been firmly established.

    He began his political involvement with the Federal Democratic Republican Party. Later, he joined "Fomento de las Artes", a center for popular education, becoming its First Secretary and one of its most influential members.

    In 1869, under the influence of Giuseppe Fanelli, he became one of the first members of the new provisional section of the First International (AIT) in Madrid, Following the dissolution of that organization in 1873, he and Tomás González Morago established El Orden [es] (The Command), a clandestine journal that was published from 1875 to 1878.

    In 1881, the "Federación de Trabajadores de la Región Española" (FTRE), a legal organization, was established. It operated until 1888. Serrano represented Madrid at the group's meetings from 1882 to 1885. From 1881 to 1884, he was also the manager of the Revista Social; considered to be the voice of the FTRE.

    In addition to his journalistic work, he was a prolific writer on social and legal issues. His best work is generally considered to be the utopian novel Pensativo (roughly, "Thinkable") which was widely distributed and, in 1885, won first prize at the "Primer Certamen Socialista"; a promotion of the FTRE in Reus. Its narrative involves a group of people who explore and settle an inhospitable valley; transforming it into the "promised paradise" by employing collectivist principles.

    References

    1. "Los dos anarquismos. Legalismo e ilegalismo libertarios a finales del siglo XIX" by Miguel Amorós @ Portal Libertario Oaca.
    2. Max Nettlau, La anarquía a través de los tiempos, Antalbe, 1977 ISBN 84-3651-445-9
    3. ^ Paco Zugasti, La clase obrera hace historia. Raíces históricas (1840-1910), Kadmos, 2008 ISBN 978-84-96611-45-0
    4. Josep Termes, Anarquismo y sindicalismo en España: La Primera Internacional(1864-1881), Crítica, 2000 ISBN 84-8432-058-8
    5. Miguel Iñiguez, Esbozo de una enciclopedia histórica del anarquismo español, Fundación de Estudios Libertarios Anselmo Lorenzo, 2001
    6. "Orígenes del Sindicalismo en Madrid (X). La ’Revista Social’" @ the Confederación General del Trabajo

    External links

    Categories: