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Title: Anarchism in Norway
Author: Gabriel Kuhn
Date: 2009
Language: en
Topics: Norway, history
Source: Retrieved on 22nd November 2021 from https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/9781405198073.wbierp0067
Notes: Published in The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest.

Gabriel Kuhn

Anarchism in Norway

Three authors of the 1800s are widely regarded as predecessors of

Norway’s anarchist movement: Marcus Thrane (1817–90), who instigated the

“Thrane movement” by founding the Drammens Arbeiderforening (Drammen

Labor Union) in 1848 under the influence of Pierre Joseph Proudhon;

famed playwright Henrik Ibsen (1828–1906), who proclaimed a “no-state

theory”; and Hans Jæger (1854–1910), most prominent representative of

the Kristiania Bohème, a movement of the 1880s best known for

propagating sexual liberty and gender equality.

Arne Garborg (1851–1924) and Julius Mortensson-Egnund (1857–1934), who

founded the journal Fedraheimen (Home of the Forefathers) in 1877, are

commonly referenced as the country’s first self-declared anarchists.

Fedraheimen was published as an “anarchocommunist” journal by editor

Rasmus Steinsvik (1863–1913) until 1891. In the same year, the

anarchocommunist group Libertas was founded by German anarchists. Its

most prominent member became Kristofer Hansteen (1865–1906), who also

published a paper called Anarkisten (The Anarchist) (1898–9). In 1906

Hans Jæger published Anarkiets bibel (Anarchy’s Bible), one of the

best-known anarchist books published in Norwegian.

Radical Swedish workers – among them the prominent Swedish anarchist

Albert Jensen (1879–1957) – had a big influence on Norway’s anarchist

movement in the early twentieth century. They were involved both in the

foundation of Norges Ungsocialistiske Forbund (Norway’s Young Socialist

Alliance) (NUF) in 1909 (later Norges Social-Anarkistiske Forbund, or

Norway’s Social Anarchist Alliance), and the Norsk Syndikalistisk

Føderasjon (Norwegian Syndicalist Federation) (NSF) in 1916. The latter

had strong ties to Sveriges Arbetarers Centralorganisation (Central

Organization of Sweden’s Workers) (SAC). Notable NUF journals included

Storm (1909–12) and Direkte Aktion (1912–18). Of particular importance

for the anarchist movement was the NSF journal Alarm (1919–40).

In 1940 the Nazi Occupation all but put an end to the country’s

anarchist movement. However, in the 1950s Alarm reappeared under a new

name, Solidaritet, and some anarchosyndicalist organizations were

founded, most notably the Syndikalistiske Ungdomsforbund (Syndicalist

Youth Alliance), although all of them were shortlived. Solidaritet

ceased publication in 1960.

Various anarchist organizations emerged in the following decades. Among

the most popular were the Bodø Anarkistiske Liga (Bodø’s Anarchist

League) in the early 1970s and Folkemakt (People Power) in the late

1990s. In 1977 the Norsk Syndikalistisk Føderasjon was revived. The

influential ongoing anarchist journal Gateavisa (Street News) began

publishing in 1970.

Since the 1970s, anarchist ideals have also featured strongly in

practical attempts at egalitarian communal living. Projects have reached

from rural communes around Karlsøy (in the country’s far north) or

Farsund (in Norway’s southwest) to a relatively strong squatting scene

in Oslo and the occupied Svartlamon neighborhood in Trondheim. Current

focus points of the country’s anarchist counterculture are the community

centers Blitz, Hausmania, and Hjelmsgate (Oslo) and the bookstore Ivar

Matlaus (Trondheim).

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REFERENCES AND SUGGESTED READINGS

Bals, J. & Beyer-Arnesen, H. (2006) Utopi, revolusjon, sosialisme

(Utopia, Revolution, Socialism). Oslo: News From Nowhere.

Bull, E. et al., (Eds.) (198590) Arbeiderbevegelsens historie i Norge. 6

bind (History of the Workers’ Movement in Norway. 6 Vols.). Oslo: Tiden.

Fagerhus, H. (2004) Anarkismen og syndikalismen i Norge gjennom 150 ĂĄr

(150 Years of Anarchism and Syndicalism in Norway). Available at

www.home.no.net

. Accessed February 3, 2008.

Nettlau, M. (1996) A Short History of Anarchism. London: Freedom Press.