David Graeber argued against ‘Great Man’ approaches to knowledge, but it seems his fate to become one
- Written by The Conversation

David Graeber, who died in 2020 at the age of 59, was an anthropologist and a political activist. The Ultimate Hidden Truth of the World is a curated collection of his essays. Like a glitzy museum exhibition, it is part serious memorialisation, part entertainment, and part invitation to play.
In her foreword, Rebecca Solnit assures us that the title is taken from Graeber’s sensational line:
The ultimate hidden truth of the world is that it is something we make, and could just as easily make differently.
He sounds like a prophet! But Solnit does not tell us where Graeber said this. Worse, she makes it sound like the sentence sums up his lasting legacy.
The volume’s editor Nika Dubrovsky doubles down in her introduction, repeating the “ultimate hidden truth” line and claiming it was Graeber’s “deep understanding”. Again, there is no reference to where readers might catch the great man actually saying this.
Review: The Ultimate Hidden Truth of the World – David Graeber, edited by Nike Dubrovsky (Allen Lane)
Solnit and Dubrovsky are not alone. This sentence is often attributed to Graeber in the press. And it is true that he did write these words. But he did so as an anthropologist attempting to elucidate an underlying principle of the left, not as an activist promoting a position he seriously held.