A previously unpublished essay by David Graeber:
In this short essay, David discusses how a very questionable idea, about the nature of human consciousness, shapes the academic world into a machine for producing "great minds" and, in the end, justifies social structures of inequality.
Fragments of an Anarchist Anthropology
An incredibly engaging, witty, and stimulating polemic on anarchism, the academy, and anthropology. What they all may (or may not) have in common, where they're at, what they mean, and where they might ought to be heading.
For David, anthropology and anarchism were conceptually linked – both posited a horizontal and open-ended commitment to common projects; like anarchism, anthropology depends on an effort to understand what the other thinks and feels; in other words, the method of anthropology is the spirit of anarchism. In this brief text, David traces the shared intellectual genealogy of both traditions to illuminate the way an anarchist social theory could reveal the endless variety of human societies.
by Andris Suvajevs
This book is translated to: Arabic, Catalan, Chinese, Czech, Danish, English, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Lithuanian, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Slovene, Spanish, Tagalog, Thai, Turkish
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