While anarchists I have worked with over the years have expressed a wide range of views on domination and oppression, I find that media-based anarchists (anarchist newspapers, anarchist historians, published theorists, etc), seem to fall back on a very class-determinist view of domination that often seems disturbingly familiar to the kind of analysis put forth by Trotskyists, except with a rejection of the state.
I find this a bit odd, since my reading of Bakunin is that he was not so reductionist and that he did see that numerous institutions (church, family, the state itself) were locations which historically produced domination. He was also not as much a fan of Marx's theories as many anarchists seem to believe, in some instances referring to Marx's historical materialism as pseudo-scince. I also find it a bit ironic that theoretical post-Marxism (Foucalt, Derrida) has, since the 1960s, rejected this kind of deterministic thinking, though anarchism, as a movement, has not. This is strange, since anarchism should, by definition, be a place where ideas are free from reification and dogma and that anarchism on "the street" does seem to be more wide open (I'm thinking here of the diverse kinds of actions anarchists have been involved in, from anti-globalization, anti-war, to Black Blocks, ELF, Earth First!, Food Not Bombs, radical queer/transgendered activism). Compare this to the Trotskyists, who basically show up at protests to sell their newspaper.
Just curious what other people think about this...cheers.