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John Zerzan

John Zerzan
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John Zerzan

John Zerzan (born 1943) is an American anarchist and primitivist philosopher and author. His works critique civilization as inherently oppressive, and advocate drawing upon the ways of life of prehistoric humans as an inspiration for what a free society should look like. Some of his criticism has extended as far as challenging domestication, language, symbolic thought (such as mathematics) and the concept of time. His four major books are Elements of Refusal (1988), Future Primitive (1994), (1998) and Running on Emptiness (2002).

Zerzan was born in 1943 in Oregon, the son of Eastern-European immigrants. He studied as an undergraduate at Stanford University and later recieved a Master's degree in Philosophy from San Francisco State University. He briefly worked towards a Ph.D at the University of Southern California but dropped out before completing his dissertation.

He was arrested in 1966 while performing civil disobedience at a Berkeley anti-Vietnam War march and spent two weeks in the Alameda County Jail. He vowed after his release to never again be willingly arrested. He was friends with Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters and was involved with the psychedelic drug and music scene in San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury neighborhood.

In the early 1970s he worked as a social worker for the state of California. Becoming frustrated with the mundane life of a low-wage government worker he helped organize a social worker's union which he was elected president of several years in a row. He became progressively more radical as he was exposed to what he considered to be the counter-revolutionary role of his and other unions. He was also a voracious reader of the Situationists, being particularly influenced by Guy Debord.

At the time that this was happening Zerzan's younger sister, Kathy, was a member of the Weather Underground, a Maoist group that had grown out of the radical Students for a Democratic Society. Throughout the 1970s, the underground group planted bombs in dozens of buildings including the Pentagon, the U.S. Capitol, and the California Department of Corrections . This is regarded as a major influence on John Zerzan's growing radicalism.

In 1974 Zerzan wrote a pamphlet with G. Munis called Unions Against Revolution. It was published by Black and Red Press . During this time he was also drifting into alcoholism, something that would afflict him for most of the decade. Over the next twenty years, Zerzan became intimately involved with the Fifth Estate, Anarchy: A Journal of Desire Armed(of which he is still an associate editor), Demolition Derby and other anarchist periodicals. He slowly came to the conclusion, along with many other anarchist theorists, that civilization itself was at the root of the problem's of the world and that a hunter-gatherer form of society presented the most egalitarian model for human relations with themselves and the natural world.

In the mid-1990s Zerzan became a confidant to Theodore Kaczynski, the Unabomber, after he read Industrial Society and Its Future, the so-called Unabomber Manifesto. Zerzan became an outspoken supporter, arguing that while the taking of human life was certainly objectionable one could hardly portray Kaczynski's manifesto as insanity, saying that it was rather a highly cogent and insightful critique of Civilization. Zerzan sat through the Unabomber trial and often conversed with Kaczynski during the proceedings. It was after becoming known as a friend of the Unabomber that the mainstream-media became interested in Zerzan and his ideas.

In 1997 a full-page interview with Zerzan was featured in the New York Times.

Another significant event that shot Zerzan to activist celebrity status was his association with members of the Eugene, Oregon anarchist scene that later were the driving force behind the Black Bloc at the 1999 anti-World Trade Organization protests in Seattle, Washington. The Black Bloc was chiefly responsible for the property destruction committed at numerous high-end chain stores after Seattle police began brutalizing and arresting peaceful protestors.

News media coverage started a firestorm of controversy after the riots and Zerzan was one of the those that they turned to to explain the actions that some had taken at the demonstrations. After gaining this public notoriety, John Zerzan began accepting speaking engagements and giving interviews around the world explaining anarcho-primitivism and the more general Global Justice Movement. Recently Zerzan has been involved with the so-called Post-Left Anarchist trend, which argues that anarchists should break with the Left, which they believe is mostly concerned with seizing state power and crushing individual freedom.

Zerzan is currently one of the editors of Green Anarchy, a quarterly magazine of anarcho-primitivist and insurrectionary anarchist thought. He is also the host of Anarchy Radio in Eugene. He is a frequent contributor to Anarchy Magazine and Adbusters. He does extensive speaking tours around the world. Zerzan is married to an archivist for the University of Oregon and resides in the Whitaker neighborhood of Eugene, Oregon.

External links

  • Insurgent Desire http://www.insurgentdesire.org.uk , where around 40 of his writings and three interviews can be read online
  • Green Anarchy web site http://www.greenanarchy.org
  • A short autobiography http://www.blackandgreen.org/jz/bio.html


Last updated: 02-07-2005 03:10:42
Last updated: 05-03-2005 17:50:55