In Europe Throughout the 1890s, Tarrida and Mella continued their campaign for the adoption of a non-sectarian form of anarchism, eventually achieving some success. Many other anarchists, including
Anselmo Lorenzo and
Joan Montseny, began calling for an end to the dogmatic schism between communists and collectivists, with the adjectives themselves even taking on negative connotations among those who had tired of the split. Inspired by Tarrida and Mella, many other European anarchists began to eschew hyphenated labels and refer solely to anarchy as their end goal, rejecting prescriptions for a future society as inherently
authoritarian. Anarchism without adjectives was taken up by
Élisée Reclus and
Max Nettlau, the latter of whom called for a non-sectarian anarchism that accounted for both
communism and
individualism, without universalizing either, leaving room for experimentation in different possibilities of economic organization. , an Italian
anarchist socialist who advocated for anarchists of different schools of thought to cooperate within a single plural organization The position was also adopted by the Italian communist
Errico Malatesta, who likewise argued against dogmatism within the anarchist movement, declaring: "Let us do away with all exclusivism of schools of thinking." Malatesta warned that "one must beware, at the risk of certain disaster, of supposing that one's system is the only, and infallible, one [...] and that its success must be assured at all costs, by means other than those which depend on persuasion, which spring from the evidence of facts." Malatesta posited that as anarchism centres
spontaneity, it would be wrong for anarchists to impose economic prescriptions. He concluded that different anarchist tendencies should therefore unite within a single organization, which centred a shared anarchist method. Malatesta also began referring to himself as an "
anarchist socialist", in order to promote inclusivity of different anarchist schools. In the pages of
Le Révolté, Malatesta declared that "[i]t is not right for us, to say the least, to fall into strife over mere hypotheses". By the turn of the 20th century, anarchism without adjectives had spread beyond Europe to the
Americas, where many anarchists were increasingly migrating. In
Buenos Aires, Antoni Pellicer argued that Argentine workers ought to reject dogmatism and embrace anarchism without adjectives. It also found its way to the
United States, where American anarchists were brought over to the idea by the arguments of Tarrida.
In the United States In the United States, there was also an intense debate between
individualist anarchists around
Benjamin Tucker and the anarchist communists around
Johann Most, who dismissed each other's ideas as un-anarchistic. Troubled by the "bitter debates" between anarchists from divergent schools of economic thought, those who did not see a need to confine themselves to one particular school of thought called for more tolerance among anarchists, with some of them explicitly terming it "anarchism without adjectives". Starting in the 1880s, many American anarchists began to prioritize their commonly held
anti-statism over their differing economic methods, which they saw as of secondary importance and something to be left until the future. In 1893,
William and
Lizzie Holmes organized an international anarchist conference in
Chicago, where they attempted to formulate a common programme for anarchists to unite behind. They were joined by
Voltairine de Cleyre,
Honoré Jackson,
C. L. James,
Lucy Parsons and
William Henry van Ornum, but the conference was boycotted by Benjamin Tucker and Johann Most, who were still locked in an ideological conflict. Over the subsequent years, the Holmes couple and their circle continued attempting to reconcile the different anarchist factions, even going as far as to advocate for an anti-authoritarian
united front with
Georgists,
socialists and
nationalists. In 1895, the Jewish anarchist
J. A. Maryson began calling for a "pure and simple" anarchism that upheld freedom of opinion, arguing that diversity was an essential component of freedom. , an American anarchist whose advocacy of anarchism without adjectives has inspired sections of
contemporary anarchism By the 1900s, the most visible American exponent of anarchism without adjectives was Voltairine de Cleyre, who adopted the term from Tarrida, and likewise advocated for cooperation between different anarchist philosophies and strategies. She criticized economic dogmatism, believing that after the
state was abolished, different localities would be free to experiment in different economic forms of anarchism, ranging from
mutualism to
communism. During the last years of her life, de Cleyre argued passionately against anarchist sectarianism, declaring her desire to rid the anarchist movement of "those outrageous
excommunications which belong properly to the
Church of Rome, and which serve no purpose but to bring us into deserved contempt with outsiders." Skeptical of "high-sounding theories", which she considered to be indicative of
intellectual elitism, de Cleyre preferred to support
action in the present rather than indulge in debates over the future. She believed that a future free society could not be forecast, due to the uncertainty of how society might evolve, and thus upheld all experiments in the direction of greater freedom as intrinsically good. As she saw shortcomings in each anarchist school of thought, arguing for the best elements of each to be synthesized into a more
pragmatic philosophy, historian
Paul Avrich argued that de Cleyre "cannot be fitted into any single anarchist category". Until the end of her life, she insisted on labelling herself simply as an "anarchist", even as she personally moved from
American individualism towards the
anarchist communism advocated by
Emma Goldman. Herself inspired by
Max Stirner's
individualist anarchism, Goldman also came to reject visionary thinking of "blueprints for the future", instead declaring that anarchist methods must be adapted depending on the circumstances of different places and times. Anarchism without adjectives was later taken up by
Luigi Galleani and the
Galleanisti, who went so far as to reject formal organizational structures, claiming the end point of any organization was to move towards
conservatism and eventually become
reactionary. Other Italian-American anarchists, who were not followers of Galleani, also came to consider themselves anarchists without adjectives, rejecting specific currents and individual leaders. ==Contemporary developments==