David Graeber's influential thinking was always at odds with the liberal and left-wing
mainstream. Drawing on his huge theoretical and practical experience as an ethnologist and
anthropologist activist and anarchist Graeber and his interlocutors develop a ramified
genealogy of anarchist thought and possible perspectives for 21st-century politics. Diverging
from the familiar lines of historical anarchism and against the background of movements such
as Occupy Wall Street and the Gilets jaunes the aim is to provide new political impulses that
go beyond the usual schemata of unavoidableness. The spontaneous and swift-moving polylogue
shows Graeber as a spirited unorthodox thinker and radical activist for whom the group can
always achieve more than the individual.