Through the trade, which tended towards anti-industrialism and independence, Pellicer learned about anarchist thought, such as the philosophy of Mikhail Bakunin.
[4][5] In 1882, he attended the Seville Congress of the FTRE as a member of the federal commission, siding with the Catalan collectivist anarchists around his cousin Rafael Farga i Pellicer.
Historia liberal del siglo XIX and wrote Conferencias populares sobre sociología.
[7] From this publication, Pellicer formulated a perspective on anarchism that rejected any qualifying labels and respected a diversity of economic theories.
[9] In 1891, he emigrated to Buenos Aires, where he directed a professional magazine entitled Éxito Gráfico and was president of the Argentine Institute of Graphic Arts.