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Average rating4
From the author of the international bestseller Debt: The First 5,000 Years comes a revelatory account of the way bureaucracy rules our lives Where does the desire for endless rules, regulations, and bureaucracy come from? How did we come to spend so much of our time filling out forms? And is it really a cipher for state violence? To answer these questions, the anthropologist David Graeber—one of our most important and provocative thinkers—traces the peculiar and unexpected ways we relate to bureaucracy today, and reveals how it shapes our lives in ways we may not even notice…though he also suggests that there may be something perversely appealing—even romantic—about bureaucracy. Leaping from the ascendance of right-wing economics to the hidden meanings behind Sherlock Holmes and Batman, The Utopia of Rules is at once a powerful work of social theory in the tradition of Foucault and Marx, and an entertaining reckoning with popular culture that calls to mind Slavoj Zizek at his most accessible. An essential book for our times, The Utopia of Rules is sure to start a million conversations about the institutions that rule over us—and the better, freer world we should, perhaps, begin to imagine for ourselves.
Reviews with the most likes.
Freedom [..] really is the tension of the free play of human creativity against the rules it is constantly generating.
A fascinating look at the bureaucracies and structures in our world, that are simultaneously stifling yet also upholding the societal systems in our world.
We send the most successful and innovative academics in their fields higher in the hierarchies towards dull tasks of administration. We write books with grammar rules and monitor their correct usage, despite language being a perfect examples of slow and continuous adaptation. We've created bureaucratic systems of ‘fairness' that have turned oppressive. If we don't send the needy through an obstacle course of forms, how will we tell which of them is the most in need of help?
Graeber perfectly documents the hate-love affair we have with rules and the bureaucracies that uphold them. Games are perfect utopian systems of everyone adhering to the same rules. Play is free of rules, and potentially poses danger. Until children free-play and create their own rules. Even the fantastic escapist utopias we create for entertainment are full of celestial and magical hierarchies.
Super thought-provoking.