In this seminar we will read Adam Smith’s The Wealth of Nations (1776) alongside Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe (1719) with a particular focus on metaphors related to the contested idea of the ‘invisible hand’ that continues to surface in political-economic debates to this date. With the long-standing conviction that the novel was born out of middle-class, Protestant anxieties (Watt 1959), challenged by recent scholarship (McKeon 2000; Parker/Smith 2013; McGurl 2017), as a backdrop, we will scrutinize intertextual references to reconstruct the semantic field of late seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century economics. That re-evaluation is warranted by recent developments in the domain of macroeconomics that call into question the idea that individual self-interests give rise to the public good and sustain social stability (Mizuta 2000; Krugman 2021). We will also probe ideas of ‘liberty’ and ‘free will’ and scrutinize how the meaning of these words has changed over time. ‘Liberty’ within the context of Christian virtues, as expressed in Crusoe’s novel, for example, is a much narrower, morally charged concept closer to what we would call ‘responsibility’. It is our aim to tease out the historical framework and the intellectual and metaphorical landscape in which the concept of the ‘invisible hand’ took shape.

Students taking this course must be willing to engage with economic theory and the poetics of the novel. Active participation in our discussions based on a thorough preparation of set texts is a prerequisite for taking part in this course.

Reading assignments will be communicated in advance, and writing tasks will be an integral part of this seminar. [Studienleistung]