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Herman Melville: The Confidence-Man (Live Online)

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Overview

Herman Melville’s The Confidence-Man depicts one day aboard a New Orleans-bound Mississippi River boat the Fidele. The novel’s titular character assumes a variety of guises—from legless beggar to worldly “cosmopolitan” to bankrupt divorcee—as he perpetrates a series of petty cons on his fellow passengers. Written in the midst of the U.S.’s rapid industrialization, set on a vessel headed into recently acquired slave territory, Melville’s ninth and final novel satirizes a society in which neighborly norms of community and religion were being increasingly displaced by the impersonality of the cash nexus. With his tricks and backslapping deceits, Melville’s confidence man engineers an existential drama that seems quintessential to capitalist modernity: in a world of self-interested strangers and distant institutions, how do we trust, befriend, and believe? How do we live when, as Melville’s friend Nathaniel Hawthorne put it, we “can neither believe nor be comfortable in [our] disbelief”?

In this course, we will read The Confidence-Man in its entirety, alongside primary sources and select secondary readings, as we explore the troubled, and troubling, interdependence of economy and confidence, greed and trust. We’ll attend to the novel’s historical context and formal innovations, and explore the rich variety of readings generated by its ironies, ambiguities, and racially and economically diverse cast of characters. We will ask: what kind of figure is the confidence man—devil, prophet, or, as the critic D. Graham Burnett suggests, messiah? How is distrust conducive to knowledge? Is it existentially necessary, amidst doubt, to have faith? Is it socially necessary, amidst constant uncertainty, to cultivate an aspect of willful ignorance? Is there a difference between a legal transaction and a con? Where exactly is the line between acceptable spin and criminality located?

Taught by

Brooklyn Institute for Social Research

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