Bookchin's thesis has been seen as a form of anarchism more radical than that of
Noam Chomsky; while both concur that
information technology, being controlled by the
bourgeoisie, is not necessarily liberatory, Bookchin does not refrain from countering this control by developing new, innovative and radical technologies of the self.
Postanarchist scholar
Lewis Call compares Bookchin's language to that of
Marcel Mauss,
Georges Bataille and
Herbert Marcuse, and notes that Bookchin anticipates the importance of
cybernetic technology to the development of human potential over a decade before the origin of
cyberpunk. and as "an insightful analysis" and "a discussion of revolutionary potential in a technological society" by
Peggy Kornegger in her essay "Anarchism: The Feminist Connection". == See also ==