M. E. Lazarus

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Marx Edgeworth Lazarus (February 6, 1822 – 1895 or 1896) was an American individualist anarchist from Guntersville, AL where he owned a small farm. Lazarus wrote under the pseudonym "Edgeworth." He is the author of several essays and anarchist pamphlettes including Land Tenure: Anarchist View (1889). He was the first-born son of Rachel Mordecai Lazarus, who had an extensive correspondence with the Anglo-Irish novelist Maria Edgeworth.

A famous quote from Lazarus is "Every vote for a governing office is an instrument for enslaving me."[citation needed]

In 1834, Lazarus became the first self-identified Jewish student to enroll at Georgetown University, the nation's largest and oldest Catholic, Jesuit university.

Lazarus was also an intellectual contributor to Fourierism and the Free Love movement of the 1850s, a social reform group that called for, in its extreme form, the abolition of institutionalized marriage. Members of this movement, which included in its ranks the Oneida Society and its founder John Humphrey Noyes, Mary Gove Nichols, Victoria Woodhull, and Emma Goldman, called not for promiscuity or multiple partners, but for the right of people to marry in accordance with romantic desires and be free from state interference. In Lazarus' 1852 essay, Love vs Marriage, he argued that marriage as an institution was akin to "legalized prostitution," oppressing women and men by allowing loveless marriages contracted for economic or utilitarian reasons to take precedence over true love.[1][2][3]

Lazarus also published writings on homeopathy and Christianity, in which he advocates spiritual and physical treatments that appear to be precursors to modern day New-Age spirituality.[4][5]

References[]

  1. ^ Freedman, Estelle B., "Boston Marriage, Free Love, and Fictive Kin: Historical Alternatives to Mainstream Marriage." Organization of American Historians Newsletter, August 2004.
  2. ^ Guarneri, Carl J., The Utopian Alternative: Fourierism in Nineteenth-Century America. Ithaca: Cornell UP, 1991.
  3. ^ Stoehr, Taylor, ed., Free Love in America: A Documentary History. New York: AMS, 1979.
  4. ^ Lazarus, M. E., Trinity and Incarnation. New York: Fowler and Wells, 1851.
  5. ^ Lazarus, M. E., Homoeopathy : a theoretic demonstration, with social applications, Making of America Series.


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