The Utopia of Rules: On Technology, Stupidity, and the Secret Joys of Bureaucracy

English language

ISBN:
978-1-61219-374-8
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4 stars (6 reviews)

5 editions

Bureaucracy, Games, Capitalism, and Batman

5 stars

What an incredible book. A poignant look at how and why bureaucracies are created and maintained, how they are a form of game that’s opposed to actual play, how each of us has a responsibility to actively imagine a better world and create the conditions under which it can come into existence, and a surprise analysis of Christopher Nolan’s film “The Dark Knight Rises” which (trust me) makes sense in this context.

A clear recommendation for anyone who wants to look critically at how we as a society run the world. It’s also not too dense (as opposed to some other political philosophy works) and written in a very approachable way.

Sadly, a slog to get through.

3 stars

A collection of essays with an almost-clever title but too many detours.

Far too often, I found myself having to re-read parts of essays in order to understand whatever the main point was. There were so many times that the content just meandered somewhere, tried to build into the point, and created confusion about whatever he was trying to describe.

At one point, I was 40 pages into an essay with another 10-20 to go, and it started feeling like he was trying to justify why it was okay to like fantasy literature and games despite the bureaucracy within them. I doubt that was his intent, but that was precisely the way they felt due to the way he writes.

So much of what was said was entirely superfluous, which... is fine. But again, for someone who was touted as being the 'most readable' theorist, this was pretty unreadable.

Review of 'The Utopia of Rules: On Technology, Stupidity, and the Secret Joys of Bureaucracy' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

In The Utopia of Rules, David Graeber dives into a form of government that is controlling a larger chunk of our lives each year: bureaucracy. A group of unelected and unaccountable bureaucrats controlling our lives seems against the American ethos, but public or private, it continues to grow. Graeber's collection of essays explores how bureaucracy intersects with structural violence, popular culture, poetic heroism, and occupy.

https://libcom.org/files/David_Graeber-The_Utopia_of_Rules_On_Technology_St.pdf

Review of 'The Utopia of Rules: On Technology, Stupidity, and the Secret Joys of Bureaucracy' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

Sometime in 2000 I came across an ad in the newspaper telling of a panel that will take place in a club in Tel-Aviv on the topic of "can there be revolution in Israel?". Naive, young, libertarian me understood this to be a debate on whether Israel is in danger of a revolution. I was wrong. It was a panel of anarchists bemoaning the fact that revolution will never occur in Israel for various nonsensical reasons.

Many years have passed since. I drifted left and now consider myself a social-democrat, and I've enjoyed my fair share of arguments with naive, young libertarians. And yet, reading Graeber's "The Utopia of Rules" brought me back to that sensation from over 15 years ago. The reason was that I simply did not expect to fall head first into a rant about the capitalist, democratic (he doesn't call it that, of course) world.

And …

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