5/24/2023 0 Comments History of debt david graeber![]() ![]() After sharing some lines over text message from a piece he was writing for this publication about the upcoming election, his last and final note to me read: “No idea of time, time is being reinvented.” ![]() It turned out to be a trip from which he would never return. He told me he was going to Venice, and that he’d be there until September 7, but that we’d make time. And delay I did until last week, the end of August, when David and I finally decided to set a date. I was supposed to talk to David this past week, the beginning of September, and record a conversation for this magazine. We were going to reflect on a few recurring themes of our friendship: the still-evolving legacy of Occupy Wall Street, the politics of debt (especially given the current economic calamity), how leftists should engage with and push beyond electoral politics, and the prospects of small-d democracy. The conversation was something I’d been looking forward to and meaning to arrange for months, but the pandemic gave me plenty of reasons to delay. The New York Review, to which he began contributing last year, is collecting tributes from his friends and colleagues. David Graeber, the anthropologist and activist, died aged fifty-nine on September 2, 2020. ![]()
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