Course schedule:
Week 1
M August 22:
W 24: Introduction.
F 26: Liberalism, in the classical sense. Dean Baker, Taking Economics Seriously. Listen to This American Life podcast if time permits. It will help you understand some of Baker’s ideas.
Week 2: Origins
M 29: Provocations and precursors. Read Hobbes (chapter XIII) and Mandeville (for some interesting background, read this, and check out the larger site more generally for good explanations of some of the concepts we cover).
Week 3: Division of Labor
M 5: Happy Labor Day! No Class.
F 9: Bring in rough draft of first paper.
Week 4: Labor and the law
W 14: Reading TBA
F 16: First paper due.
Week 5: Labor and surplus value
W 21: Reading TBA
F 23: Workshop thesis statements.
Week 6: Money
F 30: Reread articles from last two classes. Write questions about what you don't understand from our recent discussions.
Week 7: Peer editing and other policy discussions
W 5: Reading TBA
F 7: Paper #2 due.
Week 8: Topics fair
W 12: Short presentations
F 14: No class. Fall break 13-16
Week 9: General gluts, panics, and the origins of macroeconomics
W 19: Reading TBA
F 21: Writing workshop.
Week 10: Macroeconomics: the conscience of econ class?
W 26: Reading TBA
F 28: Bring in rough draft for peer editing.
Week 11: Beyond the classics and back to their precursors
W November 2: Reading TBA
F 4: Paper #3 due.
Week 12: Becoming classical again?
W 9: TBA
F 11: Workshop paper proposal.
Week 13: Resurrecting Marx?
W 16: Reading TBA
F 18: Paper proposal and bibliography due.
Week 14: Continued
M 21: Recap and review. Reading TBA
W 23: No class. Thanksgiving.
F 25: No Class
Week 15
M 28: Work on final papers.
W 30: Work on final papers.
F December 2: Work on final papers.
Week 16
M 5: Last class. Final papers due. No final examination.
W 7: Study day. Final exams conducted Dec. 8 (Th)-14 (W)
F 9: Final exams.
Week 17
M 12: Final exams.
W 14: Final exams. Campus housing closes Dec. 15 (Th) at 10 AM.
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