God and the State
Mikhail Bakunin
Read by Carl Manchester





Bakunin's most famous work, published in various lengths, this version is the most complete form of the work published hitherto.
Originally titled "Dieu et l'Γ©tat", Bakunin intended it to be part of the second portion to a larger work named "The Knouto-Germanic Empire and the Social Revolution" (Knouto-Germanic Empire is in reference to a treaty betwixt Russia and Germany at the time), but the work was never completed. (from book introduction) (3 hr 13 min)
Chapters
Chapter 00 | 2:52 | Read by Carl Manchester |
Chapter 01 | 33:38 | Read by Carl Manchester |
Chapter 02 | 49:24 | Read by Carl Manchester |
Chapter 03 | 33:24 | Read by Carl Manchester |
Chapter 04 | 49:23 | Read by Carl Manchester |
Chapter 05 | 24:49 | Read by Carl Manchester |
Reviews
A Stone Classic!





Bobby Maxwell
In a truly free democracy this book would be read by eighth graders! Aye, the true history of America (and the world), is the struggle between the few, self-righteous, ruthless haves and the have nots seeking a sane world in which their needs and wants can be realized, i.e., A People's History to be read by 4th graders! We need a cultural renaissance! A news media which speaks truth to power. An entertainment media which eschews senseless violence and psy-ops in favor of educational material which uplifts the community and encourages the pursuit of knowledge! I love this book, the wonderful reader, and the marvelous Librivox! I must toss you ducats! I'll also volunteer because I love to read and share! Cheers!
Very radical and very well read!





Philippe Horak
An anarchist and radical text for generations, this book makes one of the clearest statements of the anarchist philosophy of history: religion by its nature is an impoverishment, enslavement, and annihilation of humanity. Many thanks to CarlManchester for his sedate and meticulous reading of Bakuninβs radical ideas with which not everybody will agree. Very well worth listening to.
No gods no masters





A LibriVox Listener
I find it ironic that the atheists of today apologize and hold up a hobbesian type of secularism as an alternative to the deism and Christianity of the past. I feel as though bakunin would be the first to put them in their place.
Significant





NSA
These ideas represent the rejection of tradition common at the time and are worth a listen. The recording is alright, but it's very quiet.
JHVH-1 and the Conspiracy





Mike Buuganus-Wiesel
"The Canaanites made a major contribution to world culture by developing a linear alphabet. It was transmitted to Greece and became the basis of Western writing systems. The Semitic language of the Canaanites, of which Hebrew was a dialect, was the dominant tongue spoken in the region; it reflected a sophisticated, literate culture existing at the time the Jews appeared. As one scholar put it, "the dominant pre-Israelite population was in race and language not different from Israel itself." What then, were the factors that gave Israel its feeling of distinctiveness? It stemmed from the Jews' belief that their God, Yahweh, had chosen them to be His people, superior to and separate from all other peoples. This belief in Yahweh as a single god evolved into monotheism, the idea that one god, their God, was the lord of the universe and that no other gods existed.'" -Charles D. Smith, ππ’ππ¦π΄π΅πͺπ―π¦ π’π―π₯ π΅π©π¦ ππ³π’π£-ππ΄π³π’π¦ππͺ ππ°π―π§ππͺπ€π΅ THANK YOU to Mr. Manchester and all LV volunteers
Thanks for reading





JV
Very well read. A point of view I've almost never heard in our schools. And our readings of Marx were very short on anarchism and critiques of these other philosophers.





alexander
a bit disjointed and i wanted some more state and less science from this text, but interesting passages nonetheless. also has (sadly) the amount of antisemitism one would expect from bakunin
My first introduction to anarchism





A LibriVox Listener
Though there are a few instances that feel a little dense, very well crafted argument and a pleasure to read.