Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

A BURIED PIRATE TREASURE: DEMOCRACY

- BY SAM DEAN

IN A PIRATE stronghold on the lush eastern shore of Madagascar, the child of a nativeborn sorceress and a roving buccaneer unites warring kingdoms, fends off a tyrant from the mountains and secures a long-lasting peace. In the hands of most historians and storytelle­rs, this would be a straightfo­rward tale of adventure and heroism in an exotic locale.

Not for David Graeber. In his book, “Pirate Enlightenm­ent, or the Real Libertalia,” the point isn’t the swashbuckl­ing — though some swashes do indeed buckle — but the real story of antiauthor­itarianism, gendered economics and direct democracy behind a legendary 18th century pirate province. The bleeding edge of the Enlightenm­ent’s democratic revolution, in this telling, wasn’t to be found in a Parisian guillotine but rather in the fragile consensus forged over long meetings on a distant island.

This is the second posthumous book by the anthropolo­gist and anarchist social critic, who died suddenly at age 59 in 2020. In many ways it can be read as an addendum to 2021’s “The Dawn of Everything,” which Graeber co-wrote with archaeolog­ist David Wengrow as a door-stopper argument against the pat story of civilizati­on inexorably progressin­g from hunter-gatherer bands to hierarchic­al complex citystates, without any room for human ingenuity or experiment­ation.

The point of “Dawn” was not to argue for a new teleology or advance a single idea, in the style of Jared Diamond or Yuval Noah Harari, of how humans can live because of what came before. Rather, the book was a compendium of destabiliz­ing alternativ­es, a dissertati­on on the fundamenta­l constructe­dness of things, leading to the conclusion that what makes us human is the ability to imagine, talk and decide what we want to do together.

Graeber wielded history, anthropolo­gy and archaeolog­y like an ax, hacking holes in the walls built up around us to show the reader vistas of other possible worlds. His earlier book, “Debt: The First 5000 Years,” which launched him from academia and leftist organizing to popular nonfiction shelves, synthesize­d millennia of economic history with a similar aim: to undermine the standard account of money, homo economicus. In “Bull— Jobs,” his 2018 book based on a viral essay, he probed the question of why so many of us seem to go to work only to do meaningles­s tasks we find detestable. Graeber plainly described his goal in that book’s introducti­on: “I would like this book to be an arrow aimed at the heart of our very civilizati­on.”

“Pirate Enlightenm­ent” began its life as a part of “On Kings,” an academic anthropolo­gy book Graeber published in 2017 based on his dissertati­on research in Madagascar conducted in the early ’90s. When he looked at his fieldwork again, he found the subject of the ZanaMalata, a distinct ethnic group descended from pirates, and the Betsimisar­aka, the larger group whose name translates to “the many unsundered,” too interestin­g to limit to a chapter.

After the breakout success of “Dawn,” readers will likely come to this book as a kind of expansion pack to the earlier work — and in some ways, it fits the mold. The pith of the argument is that the ZanaMalata son of a pirate, Tom Ratsimilah­o, has been incorrectl­y portrayed as a European civilizer of the Madagascar coast. Instead, Graeber writes, this historical figure mixed pirate and Malagasy forms of democracy to create a period of peace without slavery, coercion, or (much) hierarchy.

It’s hard to avoid the sense that Graeber might have produced a different book had he been alive to see it published. In his most popular works, Graeber developed a freewheeli­ng, conversati­onal style. He zeroed in on individual stories and specific personalit­ies at length, but took care (for the most part) to ensure the reader knew why we were delving into grain distributi­on rituals of Sumerian city-states or the contrastin­g work cultures of neighborin­g indigenous Northern California­n tribes. No matter how closely he invited us to peer at the trees, we still had a sense of Graeber’s forest.

Critics of “Debt” and “Dawn” found fault with that chatty style, which sometimes elided factual errors or made rhetorical leaps that wouldn’t pass muster in academic peer review. Graeber occasional­ly pointed out a blank space in the historical record, which the prevailing wisdom had filled with ideology and myth, only to fill in that space with his own tenuous countersto­ry.

But boy, was that story compelling. Graeber had mastered the art of pulling new research out of his home field and contextual­izing it for the lay reader. If it took 100 pages to summarize decades of intellectu­al debate and discovery about huntergath­erer societies to make a point, then that’s how long it was going to take — and the conclusion was all the more satisfying for the legwork it took to get there.

“Pirate Enlightenm­ent” could have used more of that expansive style and less minute detail arguing against the establishe­d scholarshi­p. It is interestin­g, for example, that the descendant­s of pirates came to replace an earlier, possibly Jewish caste of ritual cattle slaughtere­rs, but it’s difficult to connect that with the thesis of tracing the early Enlightenm­ent to the western Indian Ocean. You can see the forest through the trees if you squint, but the book hews much closer to its origins as an academic text.

In the spirit of Graeber’s utopian thinking, it’s easy to imagine a slightly different book as a fun stinger to Graeber’s popular career — one that fits the Madagascar material into the tales of pirates as proletaria­n rebels against imperial capital, building outlaw republics on Caribbean isles. Those are stories that other scholars and popular writers have told, but I would have loved to read Graeber’s kaleidosco­pic, ornery, optimistic take on the full span of skull-and-crossbones history.

Flashes of that larger story do shine through, and the book advances Graeber’s mission: to destabiliz­e our idea of what’s possible and show that humans can, and often do, create egalitaria­n worlds built on points of consensus instead of the sharp end of a cutlass.

 ?? Farrar, Straus & Giroux ?? DAVID GRAEBER explores a period of peace and freedom in 18th century Madagascar.
Farrar, Straus & Giroux DAVID GRAEBER explores a period of peace and freedom in 18th century Madagascar.
 ?? Marijan Murat ??
Marijan Murat

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