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Once referred to by the press as ‘Britain’s Most Famous Anarchist’, the late Stuart Christie sadly left us last year. We are working with his friends and family to establish a memorial archive in his name. We will be posting updates with materials from the archive as they arrive with us, and are catalogued and scanned over the coming months.
Due to the new lockdown regulations we will no longer be open for archive visits or room bookings. We hope you’re all staying well in this time and look forward to seeing people back in the building as soon as it is safe to do so. If you’re in need of an archival fix while we are closed you can browse our digital collection at https://leftove.rs and read our Archive Log.
Once referred to by the press as ‘Britain’s Most Famous Anarchist’, the late Stuart Christie sadly left us last year. We are working with his friends and family to establish […]
Thanks to everyone that sent audio and written contributions to Pandemic Notes. We have now collected over 30 contributions and given that a second lockdown is coming we are inviting you to send more!
It’s been a great couple of months having our building open and being able to let visitors look at the archives. Unfortunately, given the new lockdown measures, we will have […]
by John Barker I only got to know Stuart Christie in A Wing HMP Brixton, the Victorian prison on Jebb Avenue in 1971-2. We were both on remand for the […]
We were very sorry to learn of the death of our friend David Graeber last week. David had become a big name in the last decade, writing books that popularised anarchist, anti-authoritarian, and anti-bureaucratic thinking around the world, in the wake of the financial crisis a decade ago, and the Occupy Movement in which he played a significant part.
MDR will be open to the public again but in order to ensure the safety of our visitors and the people working from the building there will be a few changes in terms of room bookings and archive visits.
We were also very sorry to learn of the death of Stuart Christie, who deposited a collection of books to our archive two years ago. Stuart was a giant of British anarchism: not only an insurrectionary, but a writer, publisher, researcher, and archivist.
Stuart Christie, 10 July 1946-15 August 2020. The death of Stuart Christie on 15 August 2020 has already led to an outpour of touching tributes and obituaries. With his untimely […]