ENGL 3916
Last Updated
- Schedule of Classes - October 31, 2025 7:07PM EDT
Classes
ENGL 3916
Course Description
Course information provided by the 2025-2026 Catalog.
This course examines the stories, literary examples, and metaphors at work in elaborating capitalist society and its “hero,” the modern economic subject: the so-called “homo oeconomicus.” We will examine the classic liberal tradition (e.g., Locke, Smith, Mill) alongside its later critiques (e.g., Marx, Nietzsche, Weber, Brecht) as well as more recent feminist, Black, and indigenous interventions (e.g., Federici, Davis, “land-grab university” research). Throughout we will create a dialogue between texts, both across centuries (e.g., Locke on Property with Indigenous Dispossession; Balzac’s Pere Goriot with Piketty’s Capital in the 21st Century) as well as across genres (e.g., Nomadland with Geissler’s Seasonal Associate). At stake are the narrative and figurative moments in theoretical texts as well as crucial literary sources (novels, novellas, and plays) as they collectively develop the modern economic paradigms of industry, exchange, credit-debt, and interest – as well as the people they often leave out: women, people of color, the working class. The seminar will include working with an archive, collection, or museum at Cornell. Taught in English.
Last 4 Terms Offered (None)
Regular Academic Session. Combined with: COML 3542, GERST 3610, GOVT 3606, SHUM 3610
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Credits and Grading Basis
3 Credits Stdnt Opt(Letter or S/U grades)
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