Along with Libertad, contributors to the journal included Émile Armand, André Lorulot, Émilie Lamotte, Raymond Callemin, and Victor Serge).
Libertad was a more militant anarchist, urging individuals to rebel, instead of the more common idea of a social revolution.
L'Anarchie was against Anarcho-syndicalism and the traditional anarchism of Kropotkin or Bakunin, believing in the act of rebelling as individuals rather than the utopian egalitarian society most Anarcho-Syndicalists fight for.
[3] Émile Armand said in an interview that "[Libertad] knew of Stirner and Nietzsche.
One was not concerned with a future society always promised and which never came; the economic and social point of view was put to the side.