Ethnographies from the Edge of Capitalism
New School for Social Research: Anthropology
CRN: 18064
Credits: 3
Capitalism, by its very design, always pushes the edge: of markets, of beliefs, of people, of nature. In doing so, it produces forms of excess that no system seems able to fully control. This class examines ethnographically what happens to the excesses that capitalism produces at the edges of the global economy, where life is often lived in ruins, and what it means to write about them. It explores how people remake their symbolic and material worlds in ways that are often unexpected and unpredictable when they are faced with totalizing logics that turn their worlds upside down. The class consists of reading, slowly and patiently, ethnographies from the edges of the global economy. Readings may include works by Michael Taussig, Anna Tsing, Jovan Scott Lewis, or Rosalind Morris. Each of them, in very different ways, shows how people appropriate the upheavals that come with systemic economic change. Arguing against reductionist analyses, the class probes the interstices of a global economy that thrives on living on the edge. Students will write short essays based on close readings and a longer paper/project on an edge of the economy of their choice.
College: New School for Social Research (GF)
Department: Anthropology (ANT)
Campus: New York City (GV)
Course Format: Seminar (R)
Modality: In-Person
Max Enrollment: 10
Repeat Limit: 2
Add/Drop Deadline: September 9, 2025 (Tuesday)
Online Withdrawal Deadline: November 17, 2025 (Monday)
Seats Available: No
Status: Closed*
* Status information is updated every few minutes. The status of this course may have changed since the last update. Open seats may have restrictions that will prevent some students from registering. Updated: 6:04am EDT 4/16/2025