IN THIS INTERVIEW, THE FOUNDER OF EDMONTON’S ANARCHIST PUBLISHING HOUSE LOOKS
BACK ON ITS LEGACY
~ Sean Patterson ~
For the past five decades, Black Cat Press (BCP) in Edmonton, Canada, has served
as a local hub for the city’s radical community and as an important publisher of
anarchist material. Over the years, BCP has produced many notable titles,
including the first English translations of the collected works of the Ukrainian
anarchist Nestor Makhno in five volumes. Other stand-out works from BCP include
The Dossier of Subject No. 1218, the translated memoirs of Bulgarian anarchist
Alexander Nakov; Lazar Lipotkin’s The Russian Anarchist Movement in North
America, a previously unpublished manuscript held at Amsterdam’s International
Institute of Social History; and Kronstadt Diary, a selection of Alexander
Berkman’s original diary entries from 1921.
Amongst reprints of classic works by the likes of Kropotkin, Bakunin, and
William Morris, BCP has also highlighted the work of anarchist researchers from
around the globe, including Alexey Ivanov’s Kropotkin and Canada, Vadim Damier’s
Anarcho-Syndicalism in the 20th Century, Ronald Tabor’s The Tyranny of Theory,
and Archibald’s own work Atamansha: The Story of Maria Nikiforova, the Anarchist
Joan of Arc.
Sadly, Black Cat Press closed its doors in 2022, an economic victim of the Covid
pandemic. Any future hopes to revive the press were subsequently shattered in
the wake of a second tragedy. On June 26, 2024, an early morning house fire
started by arsonists destroyed BCP’s remaining equipment and inventory. The loss
of BCP is painful not only locally for Edmonton but nationally as one of
Canada’s few anarchist publishers. Sharing BCP’s five-decade-long story will
hopefully inspire others to follow in the steps of BCP’s legacy and the broader
tradition of small anarchist publishing houses.
This month, BCP founder Malcolm Archibald sat down with Freedom News to reflect
on a lifetime of publishing and his personal journey through anarchism over the
years.
—
You have been involved with the anarchist community for many years. Can you tell
us a little about your background and how you first became interested in
anarchism?
Growing up in Halifax, Nova Scotia, during the Cold War, I certainly had no
exposure to anarchism. Nor did my family have any predilection for left-wing
politics. The only book on socialism in the public library was G. D. H. Cole’s
History of Socialist Thought, which I devoured. In 1958, at age 15, I attended a
provincial convention of the CCF (Cooperative Commonwealth Federation) as a
youth delegate. The CCF in Nova Scotia was a proletarian party with a strong
base in the coal mining districts. After that, I was hooked on left-wing
politics.
I became interested in anarchism by reading books about the Spanish Civil War.
The first real anarchist I met was Murray Bookchin at a conference in Ann Arbor
in 1969. Bookchin understood that many student radicals were anarchists in
practice, even if they called themselves Marxists, so he emphasised the
libertarian elements of Marx in his propaganda.
What anarchist organisations/groups have you been involved with over the years?
As a graduate student at the University of Illinois in Champaign-Urbana, I was
on the staff of underground newspapers, including an anarchist tabloid, The
Walrus. Later, I helped start an anarchist magazine in Edmonton called News from
Nowhere (printed by Black Cat Press). In Edmonton in the 1970s we had a branch
of the Social-Revolutionary Anarchist Federation (SRAF), but most anarchist
activity was centred around the IWW, Black Cat Press, and Erewhon Books.
Anarchists were also involved in the newspapers Poundmaker (circulation 19,000!)
and Prairie Star. In 1979, the North American Anarchist Communist Federation
(NAACF, later simplified to ACF) started up, and I was active in two of their
branches for a number of years but was unable to get much traction for the
organisation in Edmonton.
When did you start Black Cat Press, and how did it evolve over time? What are
some key moments in its history you’d like to share with our readers?
Black Cat Press started when I purchased an offset press and copy camera in
1972. The previous owner had tried to earn a living with this equipment and
ended up in a mental institution, which was not auspicious. BCP became a
“printer to the movement” in Edmonton, used by almost all the left groups and
causes. In 1979 BCP became the unofficial printer of the ACF and printed a
number of pamphlets for that organisation.
From 1989 to 2001, BCP shared space with the Boyle McCauley News, the monthly
newspaper of Edmonton’s inner city, with an all-volunteer staff. The newspaper
generally tried to print positive news about the community, but an exception was
the issue of juvenile prostitution, a terrible blight until we started printing
stories about it and the authorities finally took action.
In 1994, the government printing plant where I worked was shut down, and BCP
began to operate full-time with three partners who had been laid off at the same
time. Our customer base included social agencies close to our shop in Edmonton’s
inner city plus various unions. In 2003, I purchased a perfect binding machine
and was able to start printing books. Our first book was Kropotkin’s Anarchist
Morality, a perennial favourite. Eventually, about 30 titles were printed, which
were distributed by AK Press, independent bookstores, and literature tables at
anarchist book fairs.
How did you come to translate Russian-language radical and anarchist texts?
I studied Russian at university and later took night courses in German, French,
Ukrainian, and Polish. I first became aware of Nestor Makhno in the 1960s from a
book by the British historian David Footman. Ending up in Edmonton, it turned
out that the University of Alberta Library held four books by Nestor Makhno,
bibliographical rarities.
I’m constantly amazed at the richness of the anarchist tradition in the Russian
Empire and the USSR. For many years, The Russian Anarchists by Paul Avrich was
the only survey work on the subject, but recently, two histories have appeared
in Russia and one in Ukraine. It is a measure of the depth of the movement that
these histories are practically independent of one another and pay hardly any
attention to Avrich.
My first works of translation from Russian were physics articles, which don’t
give much scope for originality. In translating historical texts, most of the
effort goes not into the actual translation, but research on the names of
places, persons, etc. and preparing annotations. I try to provide the reader
with maps, graphics, and indexes, which make it easier to understand the text.
Although I generally do not work with literary texts, I did translate some poems
by Nestor Makhno. He wrote a poem called “The Summons” while in prison in 1912.
A search of his cell in 1914 discovered this poem, for which he was given one
week in a punishment cell. While in this cell, he composed another poem, which
he wrote down as soon as he was allowed back to his regular cell. But another
search discovered the second poem (more bloodthirsty than the first one), and he
ended up in the punishment cell again. So, it wasn’t easy being an anarchist
poet!
Some of your major contributions to anarchist studies are the translations of
Russian and Ukrainian primary sources. In particular, you translated and
published the first English edition of Nestor Makhno’s three-volume memoirs. Can
you describe this translation project?
The University of Alberta library holds copies of Makhno’s memoirs, including
both the French and Russian versions of the first volume. I started translating
these memoirs as early as 1979 when BCP published a pamphlet entitled My Visit
to the Kremlin, a translation of two chapters in the second volume. This
pamphlet was eventually published in many other languages.
Most of the work involved in preparing translations of Makhno’s works went into
research about the people and places he mentions. An effort was made to provide
enough material in the form of notes and maps to make the narrative intelligible
to the reader.
Black Cat Press recently closed its doors after fifty years in business. The
economic environment for publishing is increasingly difficult in general, and
especially so for small anarchist presses. What are your thoughts on the current
prospects for anarchist publishing, and what changes might have to be made to
maintain its long-term viability?
Most anarchist publishers have to order a substantial press run up front and
then hope to sell the books over a (hopefully) not-too-long period. BCP was
ahead of its time in using a print-on-demand model where inventories were kept
low so that capital wouldn’t be tied up in stock that wasn’t moving. The
publishing arm of BCP was not much affected by the pandemic; rather, it was the
job printing that suffered, forcing the business to close.
How have you seen anarchism (particularly in Canada) change over the decades?
Canada has rarely seen an organized anarchist movement in the same way as some
groups in Europe or the United States. Why do you think this is so, and do you
see any hope for an organized Canadian movement in the future?
When I became active in the anarchist movement in Canada in the 1970s, the
anarchists were all poverty-stricken, trying to survive in minimum-wage jobs.
The next generation was much better off and had a lot of money to throw around.
Now, the current generation is back to being dirt poor again, lacking the
resources to make an impact. But I think the prospects for the future are good
because (a) the old left (communists, Trotskyists, i.e., the alphabet soup
brigade) are intellectually and morally bankrupt, and (b) the New Democratic
Party (in Alberta, at least) is environmentally irresponsible. This leaves a lot
of room on the left for anarchists to stake out their territory and attract
young people into the movement.
Malcolm Archibald at the Edmonton Anarchist Bookfair, 2013.
Thanks to Kandis Friesen for sharing previously collected interview material.
The post Malcolm Archibald: 50 years of Black Cat Press appeared first on
Freedom News.