Recorded by librivox.org
Helena Glory, as the daughter of a major industrial power's president, is a woman on a mission. She faces the island factory of Rossum's Universal Robots, the world's leading company in robotic engineering. She is convinced that these new creations called robots they make are deserving of rights like humans do. Everyone else is convinced robots are nothing more than tools for human use. Is it so, or is a robot rebellion becoming a more likely prospect as the robots start to seem more intelligent than first thought?
First performed in English in 1922, R.U.R. is most notable for being the play that introduced the word "robot" into the English language and one of the popular early examples of the science fiction genre onstage. (Mary Kay)
The Anarchist Revolution by Nestor Makhno
The Anarchists of the Russian Revolution, by Paul Avrich
Anarchism in Korea by Dongyoun Hwang
Work, a pamphlet by Red and Black Leeds and the Anarchist Federation
Deregulating Drug Use by the Boston Anarchist Drinking Brigade
Sober Spaces in the Punk and Anarchist Scenes by Mo Karnage
Green Scared Lessons from the FBI Crackdown on Eco-Activists
Where I Stand by Mikhail Bakunin
Basic Bakunin by the Anarchist Federation
Anarchism in Argentina by Chuck Morse
Anarchism in Chile by Larry Gambone
Affinity, by Alfredo M Bonanno
Between Peasants, a Dialogue on Anarchy by Errico Malatesta
The Right to be Greedy, by For Ourselves - Appendix
The Right to be Greedy, by For Ourselves - Revolution
The Right to be Greedy, by For Ourselves - Morality
The Right to be Greedy, by For Ourselves - Authority
The Right to be Greedy, by For Ourselves - Sexuality
The Right to be Greedy, by For Ourselves - Pleasure
The Right to be Greedy, by For Ourselves - Radical Subjectivity
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