Mainly the Merchant of Venice, with discussion of its Biblical source: Jacob as trickster; Laban as trickster; Shylock as trickster; Portia as trickster; much about Jacob, Esau, Isaac, and the man Jacob wrestles with; the meaning of the turquois ring and the pound of flesh. NB: this coming week is vacation so no updates till the week of Feb 25.
Feb 17, 2019•49 min•Ep. 93
A last class on Blake's Book of Thel, with much attention given to the Clod of Clay's line: "I ponder and I cannot ponder." NB: February vacation next week, so no new episodes till the week after.
Feb 15, 2019•1 hr 16 min•Ep. 92
A class mainly about interest, usury, compounding of interest vs. Malthusian limits to biological growth -- the interesting fact that if Judas had invested his 40 pieces of silver at prevailing rates of compound interest, he'd own an amount of silver more greater than the entire volume of the earth (so that Christ's redemption, compounded over two millennia, would indeed more than repurchase the entire world).
Feb 14, 2019•48 min•Ep. 91
With a quotation from Blake's description of his (lost) painting "A Vision of the Last Judgment": I assert for My self that I do not behold the Outward Creation & that to me it is hindrance & not Action it is as the Dirt upon my feet No part of Me. What it will be Questiond When the Sun rises do you not see a round Disk of fire somewhat like a Guinea O no no I see an Innumerable company of the Heavenly host crying Holy Holy Holy is the Lord God Almighty I question not my Corporeal or Veg...
Feb 12, 2019•1 hr 21 min•Ep. 90
(February 11, actually, but I think if I change the title I may change the link.) We start with Earle Stanley Gardner on writing by the word -- then on to Kawabata and the spookiness of the story. Then The Merchant of Venice , and the significance of the rings and their value. The reason Shylock is a stranger, and that all the Jews in Venice are: because Deuteronomy permits lending at interest to a stranger, so the Christians wanted to be strangers to the Jews so made the Jews strangers to them....
Feb 11, 2019•53 min•Ep. 89
In particular "The Garden of Love" and "London," "To the Evening Star," and a touch of The Book of Thel
Feb 09, 2019•1 hr 25 min•Ep. 88
Buying and selling based on predictions of what others will buy and sell: Keynesian Beauty Contests (cf. "Family Feud") and what they have to do with narrative interaction. An in class demonstration in which a student wins a dollar! Some discussion of other manipulative games. NB that previous episode was mistitled as Monday's: It was actually Wednesday's....
Feb 08, 2019•51 min•Ep. 87
Functions of money. Ripping a bill in half. A little more on the etymological background of interest as breeding. Usura Canto in Pound, with youtube audio of him reading it . Kinds of wealth in The Merchant of Venice, following James Buchan.
Feb 07, 2019•48 min•Ep. 86
Some discussion of "There is no Natural Religion" and then some Songs of Experience: "The Chimney Sweeper," the two versions of "Holy Thursday," "The Clod and the Pebble," and -- a Song of Innocence -- "The Little Black Boy."
Feb 06, 2019•1 hr 18 min•Ep. 85
Some discussion of the Super Bowl, and of game theory at the end of the game. Then a return to Aristotle on the three functions of money, and on interest -- and the Greek word's etymology as breeding or procreation (from the word τόκος , ὁ , [tokos] = childbirth from ( τίκτω [titko]) meaning to give birth, whence also τεχνη , craft, i.e. the art of producing objects, which word Aristotle uses elsewhere in discussing the unmoved mover)....
Feb 05, 2019•51 min•Ep. 84
A class where we end up going into the labor theory of value -- average abstract labor time being what produces equilibria among different commodities. We were going to talk about Kawabata, and about interest, but that's TK. We did talk about Aristotle -- and therefore a bit about Adam Smith -- on the functions of actual money: medium of exchange, bookkeeping measure, store of value, and also a bit on how these can be confused with each other.
Feb 01, 2019•49 min•Ep. 83
This was going to be on "The Songs of Experience" (watch this space), but in order to discuss what Blake meant by the word "experience" we took a look at his 1788 tract "All Religions Are One" (printed just before "The Songs of Innocence"), which led to a long discussion of the dialectic between Plato and Locke and a counter-dialectic in Blake against both Plato and Locke.
Jan 31, 2019•1 hr 15 min•Ep. 82
A class that spiraled outwards from a consideration of Chaucer's Pardoner's Tale to Maugham's parable of the appointment in Samara to parables in general, including the strange parable of the talents in Matthew. The ontology of things in the world and death as not a thing in the world (in Chaucer, in Maugham). How treasure or gold is like death -- a catalyst, a vector, something not itself (a marker for a return to Aristotle tomorrow).
Jan 30, 2019•50 min•Ep. 81
Much on "The Lamb" (and a little on "The Tyger"), "A Cradle Song," "Infant Joy" and the Innocence version of "The Chimney Sweeper." Innocence as privative (like "infant" and "innocuous")-- a contrast to the world as we know it.
Jan 30, 2019•1 hr 23 min•Ep. 80
A class mainly on Mammon -- in Milton and in Spenser -- though we don't get that far, because we pause for an explanation of The Faerie Queene and of allegory in general -- e.g. Edward Gorey's Innocence, on the Bicycle of Propriety, Carrying the Urn of Reputation Safely over the Abyss of Indiscretion . Hence some talk about the harmony of the virtues in Aristotle -- chastity vs. temperance. Matthew 6:24 quoted -- you cannot serve both God and Mammon....
Jan 29, 2019•50 min•Ep. 79
Aristotle on Midas, and then Ovid on Midas (Golding's translation), which is the just-so story of how the river Pactolus came to run with gold (or actually electrum), leading to the first coining of money under Croesus, with a little fumbling in class about what it was that Archimedes found bathing (that objects submerged in water displace their own volume).
Jan 27, 2019•48 min•Ep. 78
More on the two versions of the Nurses Song, with some subtle narrative theory applied -- who is or are the real narrators of the two songs? Then back to Paradise Lost: a little history, a little consideration of how it champions the proto-Romantic centrality of human judgment to our sense of the world and of morality. (Luther on Pharaoh type of thing....)
Jan 26, 2019•1 hr 21 min•Ep. 77
More Aristotle, on the origin of actual money -- coin of the realm as Gutman will say in The Maltese Falcon (TK) -- and the meaning of the word "tender" in the phrase "legal tender." Polonius's dumb pun on the word. Aristotle, very briefly, on infinity (the unbounded) and its relation to goods and money. Meatloaf's song "Paradise by the dashboard light" naturally comes up, as it most in most classes on Aristotle....
Jan 25, 2019•51 min•Ep. 76
Discussion of a couple of Exeter riddles (you can find them on the original handout ) and how they connect money to various other social interactions, prostitution in particular. Then we broach Aristotle's Politics.
Jan 24, 2019•49 min•Ep. 75
Second class: mainly an intro to Paradise Lost , followed by a return to the two versions of Blake's "Nurses Song." Blake's illustrations here .
Jan 23, 2019•1 hr 20 min•Ep. 74
A class mainly on Kay Ryan's poem "Money is a kind of poetry," a riff on Wallace Stevens' line (in his Adagia ): "Poetry is a kind of money." The class, of course, is about both. Link to handouts (including this poem) available in previous episode or here .
Jan 22, 2019•47 min•Ep. 73
This is the first class of a new course called "Imagining Money." You can find a draft syllabus -- an aspirational one, since we'll never get through it all -- here . There are handouts for the first three days: the short passage from Beckett we discuss first, a miscellany of poems and riddles about money , and a selection of passages from Milton, Ovid, and Ambrose Bierce . The syllabus gives you the lines to read from Milton's Paradise Lost , viz. Book 1, ll. 674-751, and Book 8, ll. 1-178. And...
Jan 20, 2019•48 min•Ep. 72
An introductory class for a course on the early Romantics. Today we talked about the oxymoronic title of Lyrical Ballads , more about ballads than about lyrics; about Milton; about Blake's describing him as being of the devil's party without knowing it. Syllabus TK -- watch this space.
Jan 19, 2019•1 hr 18 min•Ep. 71
Last class of the semester, on Wole Soyinka's Death and the King's Horseman . Compared and contrasted with Achebe's Things Fall Apart , which unlike the play is about the clash of cultures, and what happens when European culture arrives and destroys the cultures it is ignorant of; and with Conrad's Heart of Darkness , which makes African culture a backdrop to European reckoning with its own tragic ontology. Death and the King's Horseman as treating British colonial culture as a catalyst and othe...
May 03, 2016•53 min
The one film in the class. "Print the legend," as a commentary on the kinds of movies Ford makes. Flashback and truth in fiction. Showing vs. telling. Who did shoot Liberty? The two scenes of his death. Flashback within flashback. Woody Strode (Pompey). What is he doing in the second scene? Why does it matter? What we didn't get to: the way Vera Miles seems to have learned the story as we do. We assume she now knows what we now know, though of course she (presumably) didn't know it before wherea...
Apr 26, 2016•38 min
What this strange book is about, at least in part. Macguffins: baptism and murder. And Free Indirect Discourse, natch. The Protestant vs. the Catholic bible. O'Connor quoting from Douay-Rheims. The relevant passage in Matthew: [7]And when they went their way, Jesus began to say to the multitudes concerning John: What went you out into the desert to see? a reed shaken with the wind? [8] But what went you out to see? a man clothed in soft garments? Behold they that are clothed in soft garments, ar...
Apr 25, 2016•50 min
Seeing it as a residue of real drama. Paradramatic elements: what we can know by knowing elements of the script that we wouldn't know on stage. Who is Godot? Who are we meant to think he is? Really an introduction to the play, to how the play makes you think about what it's doing.
Apr 20, 2016•52 min
Invisible Man and Whitman. What does the last sentence mean? MacGuffins in the novel. Du Bois on the education of Black Men. 1943 riot in Harlem and the end if Invisible Man . William Henry Johnson's "Moon Over Harlem." Moral of Invisible Man : don't use people. Doing so turns them into the kind of people who use people. (Even the Invisible Man does: uses Sibyl for example.)
Apr 18, 2016•52 min
An exhortation to take seriously the passion of Invisible Man , not only its purpose or the perception it comes to; a claim that being able to do this will give a hint at least of similar passions in works whose political contexts are now historical, that is no longer as live to us as #BlackLivesMatter, for example, makes Invisible Man , followed by quick but consecutive readings of Stevens's "The Idea of Order at Key West" and the rest of Whitman's "Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking."...
Apr 13, 2016•50 min
First real class on Ellison's Invisible Man; some background, Liberty Paints, electroshock, Norton's interest in Jim Trueblood.
Apr 11, 2016•54 min