Luigi Fabbri
Luigi Fabbri (23 December 1877 – 24 June 1935) was an Italian anarchist, writer, agitator and propagandist who was charged with defeatism during the World War I. He was the father of Luce Fabbri.
Life and death
Born in Fabriano (Ancona), Italy in 1877, Fabbri was first sentenced for anarchist activities at the age of 16 in Ancona, and spent many years in and out of Italian prisons. Fabbri was a long time supporter of to the anarchist press in Europe and later South America, including co-editing, with Errico Malatesta, the paper L'Agitazione. He helped edit the paper "Università popolare" in Milan.Fabbri was a delegate to the International Anarchist Congress held in Amsterdam in 1907. He died in Montevideo, Uruguay in 1935.
Works
- Life of Malatesta Archived 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine, translated by Adam Wight (originally published 1936).
- Malatesta: L'Uomo e il Pensiero
- Bourgeoise Influences on Anarchism
- Letters to a Woman on Anarchy, 1905
- Workers' Organisation and Anarchy, 1906 pamphlet
- The School and the Revolution, 1912
- Letters to a Socialist, 1913
- The Aware Generation, 1913
- Dictatorship and Revolution, 1921
- Preventive Counter-revolution, 1922
- Editor of L'Agitazione
- Founded Il Pensiero ("The Think"), Lotta Umana (Uman Fight), Studi Sociale (Social Study)
- Contributed to La Question Sociale (Social Question), Pensiero e Volonta, Fede Libero Accordo, L'Avvenire Sociale