Kevin Tucker is an anarcho-primitivist writer and speaker who lives in rural Pennsylvania. He is the founding editor of Wild Resistance: A Journal of Primal Anarchy,, was the editor of Species Traitor, an insurrectionary anarcho-primitivist journal, an editor and contributor to Green Anarchy magazine, and co-founder of the Black and Green Network. He is the co-host of the Primal Anarchy podcast with his wife, the writer Natasha Tucker. Black and Green Press and FC Press put out a book of Tucker's writings in April 2010 called For Wildness and Anarchy A second, revised and expanded edition came out on Black and Green Press in 2019. He is also the author of Gathered Remains which was published by Black and Green Press in 2018 and The Cull of Personality which was published by Black and Green Press in 2019. He is also the guitarist/vocalist for anarcho-primitivist death metal band Peregrine.
Kevin Tucker is an anarcho-primitivist. His primary contributions to this ideology have been the expansion of anthropological understanding, focusing on the importance of spirituality and domestication, a deep critique of revolution, and the act of rewilding. A common theme among Tucker's writings have been the consequences of domestication and sedentism among nomadic gather-hunters. The central argument being that human nature has been shaped by evolution in accordance with wildness, what Tucker calls "primal anarchy". That "primal anarchy" is exemplified by nomadic gatherer-hunter life. By focusing on the changes brought about by various levels of domestication one can see the impacts of domestication and ultimately civilization. Tucker has written extensively regarding the impacts and plausibility of revolution. Concluding that revolution will always be political in nature and therefore has no relevance to the destruction of civilization or further aid in its collapse. Focus has instead been turned towards what Tucker calls 'Primal War': a notion based on rewilding and undermining domestication rather than hope for liberation through a historical event. Tucker is a colleague of fellow anarcho-primitivist John Zerzan and the two have engaged on multiple speaking tours focusing on the origins of civilization and the consequences of domestication. As of 2019, Tucker has openly spoken about moving on from the term "anarcho-primitivist" in lieu of "primal anarchy." Stating:
It’s felt increasingly apparent that the name is a limitation, attaching itself to two different lineages—anarchism and primitivism—neither of which is necessarily fitting in its own right. Anarcho-primitivism becomes the square peg, tethered to sets of rules that are neither applicable nor useful. I’ve increasingly used another phrase: primal anarchy. As both anarchism and primitivism seem to quickly wither and decay on their own, I’m only finding more reasons to embrace that term entirely.
Court hearing
Tucker received some attention in the media after being subpoenaed to a Grand Jury, as a part of the Green Scareround up of Earth Liberation Front and Animal Liberation Front activists; a move Tucker called "harassment". Even though he was not a suspect of committing any crime, he was questioned because the FBI believed he might have had some information on the actions of these organizations. He has stated that he has no knowledge of the ELF and the ALF, other than what is publicly known.
Peregrine
Tucker's band Peregrine released its debut albumThe Agrarian Curse in 2008 and a split with Pittsburgh band Auryn the next year. Proceeds from the split with Auryn went to "folks facing jail time and courts in the Green Scare." Both were released on Andy Hurley's record labelFuck City. In 2011, they released a split 7" with Sweden's Seeds in Barren Fields which was released by Crimethinc CZ.