Cross Listed as AFR215
How can we understand a society organized around controlling some people as private property, to be used and exchanged by other people? How does this relate to a society organized around the universal individual ownership of commodities, and the value that arises from their use and exchange? Slavery is often understood to precede capitalism in economic and social history. This course examines slavery and capitalism as mutually constitutive, one defining the other. In a survey of scholarship theorizing the capitalism and slavery relationship, we will examine key questions of historical precedent and relationship between these social systems, the place of slavery in analyses of capitalism, and, centrally, the struggles of enslaved people to contest their commodification, and the influence of those struggles on life in capitalist society. This course will fulfill the Exploring Diversity Initiative, examining how the organization of power and privilege in societies based on slavery continues to manifest in capitalism. Focusing on slavery and capitalism in the U.S., we will follow the lingering traces of slavery up to the present day.
Class Format: discussion
Requirements/Evaluation: evaluation will be based on class participation and three review essays (5-7 pages each)
Additional Info:
Prerequisites: none
Enrollment Preference: American Studies majors
Department Notes:
Material and Lab Fees:
Distribution Notes:
Divisional Attributes: Division II,Exploring Diversity
Other Attributes: AFR Interdepartmental Electives,AMST Comp Studies in Race, Ethnicity, Diaspora
Enrollment Limit: 25
Expected Enrollment: 17
| CLASSES | ATTR | INSTRUCTORS | TIMES |
|---|---|---|---|
| AMST215-01(S) LEC Capitalism and Slavery (D) | ![]() ![]() |
Manu Vimalassery |
MR 2:35 PM-3:50 PM |

