Pirate Utopias: Moorish Corsairs & European Renegadoes (New Autonomy)

by Peter Lamborn Wilson

Paperback, 1995

Status

Available

Call number

364.164

Collection

Publication

Autonomedia (1995), Paperback, 208 pages

Description

'Peter Lamborn Wilson shows why we cherish pirates - and why, for the sake of the future, we must continue to do so. Interesting and compelling...a rollicking, adventurous book.'Marcus Rediker, author, Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea'A chronicler, a historiographer, and a piratologist in the tradition of Defoe...with immense learning and interesting sympathies. His scholarship cuts through the seas of ignorance and prejudice with grace and power.'Peter Linebaugh, author, The London Hanged'One of those rare books which give historians new ideas to think about. It deals with 17th century European converts to Islam - usually but not always as pirates - whose numbers Wilson puts at thousands. His careful analysis of (the) renegadoes, their ideas, and political practice leads to a very tentative suggestion that some of them may have links with Rosicrucianism and the 18th-century Enlightenment...Historians will have to think about this book's novel theme and pursue its implications. Wilson really does turn the world upside down!'Christopher Hill, author, The World Turned Upside DownFrom the 16th to the 19th centuries, Muslim corsairs from the Barbary Coast ravaged European shipping and enslaved thousands of unlucky captives. During this same period, thousands more Europeans converted to Islam and joined the pirate holy war. Were these men (and women) the scum of the seas, apostates, traitors -- Renegadoes? Or did they abandon and betray Christendom as a praxis of social resistance?Peter Lamborn Wilson focuses on the corsairs' most impressive accomplishment, the independent Pirate Republic of SalĂ©, in Morocco, in the 17th century. Corsairs, Sufis, pederasts, "irresistible" Moorish women, slaves, adventures, Irish rebels, heretical Jews, British spies, a Moorish pirate in old New York, and radical working-class heroes all populate a book which intends to entertain and to make a point about insurrectionary communities.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member paperloverevolution
You always have to keep a watchful eye on Peter Lamborn Wilson. He is a trickster and a magician, and he is trying to sell you a beautiful dream. In exchange, he asks nothing more (or less) than that you take it into the core of your heart, make it your own dream, carry it with you while you build
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the future.

I'm not implying that he is just making shit up. He maybe embroiders here and there, highlights one thread of the tale over others - no more than any official historian does, really. Manifest Destiny. Survival of The Fittest. Better Living Through Chemistry. These are all myths, less artfully presented, that we've been told to accept as truth.

So when you are reading Pirate Utopias, bear all this in mind. It's well-researched, and clearly presented, and if he has an agenda, at least it's a gorgeous and tricky one. Here is a history of liberation, a legacy Wilson is telling us to embrace and reclaim. From his pirates we can learn how to build a future that actually works.
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Language

Physical description

208 p.; 6.85 inches

ISBN

1570270244 / 9781570270246
Page: 0.7379 seconds