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PeaceNews #2446: Review -
Unexpected angles
Andrew Bradstock (ed), Winstanley and the Diggers, 1649 - 1999 (Frank Cass, 2000. ISBN 0 7146 8157 1, 173pp)
Reviewed by: SIMON DIXON
Gerrard Winstanley famously once
wrote that "words and writings
were all nothing, and must die, for
action is the life of all, and if thou
dost not act, thou dost nothing".
He was that unusual individual, a
utopian thinker who not only committed
his vision of a better world to
print, but acted to turn his vision
into a reality. That he failed, and the
patch of land upon which the Diggers
first established their commune
is now one of the most exclusive
private estates in England, is
one of historys sad ironies.
This collection of academic
essays seeks to shed new light on
aspects of Winstanleys life and
thought. The twelve articles can be
divided into two groups, historical
studies and literary analyses. Among
the first group are essays on The
Diggers in their own time and Winstanley,
women and family. This
last contribution, by Elaine Hobby,
highlights the often overlooked point
that Digger arguments for equality
were never fully extended to
women, and that Winstanleys vision
of society is broadly patriarchal.
The second group of literary
studies are probably less accessible
than the historical articles, with
pieces on Jewishness in the Digger
writings, and comparisons of Winstanley
with Milton, the Levellers
and William Blake. James Holstun,
in an entertaining and provocative
article, finds links between Winstanley
and Marx, and argues that the
agrarian communism proposed by
Winstanley is not wholly removed
from the Russian peasant commune,
or mir, which Marx saw as a
potential medium for the transition
to advanced communism. He also
draws parallels with twentieth-century
movements, notably the Zapatistas.
This volume does not provide a
general introduction to the life and
work of Gerrard Winstanley. For the
interested general reader there are
far more accessible books, particularly
David Boultons Gerrard
Winstanley and the Republic of Heaven
(Dale, 1999) [Reviewed in PN2440].
However, rather than covering old
ground, these essays offer fresh
perspectives on Winstanley and the
Diggers from often unexpected
angles. I would therefore recommend
them to anyone wishing to expand
their knowledge of the subject.
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