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Born of Struggle, Living in Hope by Nick Soulsby

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Born of Struggle, Living in Hope

The Anarcho-punk Lives of the Centro Iberico, 1971–1983

Nick Soulsby

PM Press · Print & ebook · January 16, 2026

Reading lane: Music History & Criticism

From the Spanish Civil War to postpunk London—this is the untold story of a legendary community space where anarchy meant action.

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At a Glance

Who It's For

Good for readers who enjoy MusicGood for readers interested in musicGood for readers who enjoy Music History & Criticism and Anarchism.

Book Details

Authors
Nick Soulsby
Publisher
PM Press
Published
January 16, 2026
Format
Print & ebook
Theme
Music History & Criticism · Anarchism
Reading lane
Music History & Criticism

Affinity

Publisher Categories

  • Music History & Criticism

  • Anarchism

About This Book

From the Spanish Civil War to postpunk London—this is the untold story of a legendary community space where anarchy meant action. For the first time, the tangled twelve-year history of the Centro Iberico is unraveled and laid bare—a story that begins in the trenches of antifascist resistance and ends in a squatted school echoing with experimental noise and uncompromising politics. At its heart is a Spanish anarchist who fought the Nazis, survived a death sentence under Franc...

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From the Spanish Civil War to postpunk London—this is the untold story of a legendary community space where anarchy meant action. For the first time, the tangled twelve-year history of the Centro Iberico is unraveled and laid bare—a story that begins in the trenches of antifascist resistance and ends in a squatted school echoing with experimental noise and uncompromising politics. At its heart is a Spanish anarchist who fought the Nazis, survived a death sentence under Franco, and spent his final years keeping the flame of resistance alive from exile in London. His survival and the inauguration of the Centro Iberico were thanks to London's anarchist underground, which maintained a foothold and kept the torches burning before finding new life amid punk’s co-optation of “anarchy” as a youth culture phenomenon. Around him gathered an intergenerational network of political anarchists, punks, squatters, and artists—keeping the Centro Iberia alive through state harassment, shifting countercultural tides, and one of the most absurd antiterror trials in British history. A sanctuary for radical organizing and a crucible for underground sounds, the Centro Iberico was the UK’s only enduring anarchist center of the 1980s. It served as a vital hub that connected international political prisoner support efforts led by the Anarchist Black Cross to anarchist movements abroad, while sustaining its own activities in support of the cause. This is its definitive story—a vivid, deeply researched account of a space where ideology, art, and defiance collided.

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