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  • Published: 2 February 2015
  • ISBN: 9781612194196
  • Imprint: Melville House
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 560
  • RRP: $44.99
Categories:

Debt

The First 5,000 Years,Updated and Expanded





A revised and updated edition of the international bestseller, to be launched with major advertising push -- just months before the launch of Graeber's new book with Melville House

The groundbreaking international best-seller that turns everything you think about money, debt, and society on its head—from the “brilliant, deeply original political thinker” David Graeber (Rebecca Solnit, author of Men Explain Things to Me)
 
Before there was money, there was debt. For more than 5,000 years, since the beginnings of the first agrarian empires, humans have used elaborate credit systems to buy and sell goods—that is, long before the invention of coins or cash. It is in this era that we also first encounter a society divided into debtors and creditors—which lives on in full force to this day.

So says anthropologist David Graeber in a stunning reversal of conventional wisdom. He shows that arguments about debt and debt forgiveness have been at the center of political debates from Renaissance Italy to Imperial China, as well as sparking innumerable insurrections. He also brilliantly demonstrates that the language of the ancient works of law and religion (words like “guilt,” “sin,” and “redemption”) derive in large part from ancient debates about debt, and shape even our most basic ideas of right and wrong.
 
We are still fighting these battles today.

  • Published: 2 February 2015
  • ISBN: 9781612194196
  • Imprint: Melville House
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 560
  • RRP: $44.99
Categories:

About the author

David Graeber

David Graeber was a professor of anthropology at the London School of Economics. He is the author of Debt: The First 5,000 Years and Bullshit Jobs: A Theory, and was a contributor to Harper's Magazine, The Guardian, and The Baffler. An iconic thinker and renowned activist, his early efforts helped to make Occupy Wall Street an era-defining movement. He died on 2 September 2020.

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Praise for Debt

"The book is more readable and entertaining than I can indicate... It is a meditation on debt, tribute, gifts, religion and the false history of money. Graeber is a scholarly researcher, an activist and a public intellectual. His field is the whole history of social and economic transactions." --Peter Carey, The Observer
"An alternate history of the rise of money and markets, a sprawling, erudite, provocative work."
--Drake Bennett, Bloomberg Businessweek