Exploring Capitalist Fiction - Allen Mendenhall
Interviews
Edward W. Younkins* |
Thank you for
taking the time to do this interview. I'd like
to start by asking why you chose to write
Exploring Capitalist Fiction. Was
there a void you were seeking to fill?
The origins of this
book go back to the Spring of 1992 when I began
teaching a course called Business Through
Literature in Wheeling Jesuit University's MBA
program. Exploring Capitalist Fiction is
heavily based on my lectures and notes on the
novels, plays, and films used in this popular
course over the years and on what I have learned
from my students in class discussions and in
their papers.
The idea to write this book
originated a few years ago when one of Wheeling
Jesuit University's MBA graduates, who had taken
and enjoyed the Business Through Literature
course, proposed that I write a book based on
the novels, plays, and films covered in that
course. I agreed as I concluded that the
subject matter was important and bookworthy and
that the book would be fun for me to write and
for others to read. I went on to select twenty-five
works to include in the book out of the more
than eighty different ones that had been used in
my course over the years. I have endeavored to
select the ones that have been the most
influential, are the most relevant, and are the
most interesting. In a few instances, I have chosen works that I believe to be undervalued
treasures.
I was not intentionally trying
to fill a void as there are a number of similar
books by fine authors such as Joseph A.
Badaracco, Robert A. Brawer, Robert Coles, Emily
Stipes Watts, and Oliver F. Williams, among
others. Of course, I did see my even-handed
study of business and capitalism in literature
as a nice complement and supplement to these
works.
I assume that
you'll use this book to teach your own courses,
and I suspect other teachers will also use the
book in their courses. Anyone who reads the
book will quickly understand the reason you
believe that imaginative literature and film
have pedagogical value in business courses, but
would you mind stating some of those reasons for
the benefit of those who haven't read the book
yet?
The underpinning
premise of this book and of my course is that
fiction, including novels, plays, and films, can
be a powerful force to educate students and
employees in ways that lectures, textbooks,
articles, case studies, and other traditional
teaching approaches cannot. Works of fiction can address a range of issues and topics,
provide detailed real-life descriptions of the
organizational contexts in which workers find
themselves, and tell interesting, engaging, and
memorable stories that are richer and more
likely to stay with the reader or viewer longer
than lectures and other teaching approaches. Imaginative literature can enrich business
teaching materials and provide an excellent
supplement to the theories, concepts, and issues
that students experience in their business
courses. Reading novels and plays and watching
films are excellent ways to develop critical
thinking, to learn about character, and to
instill moral values. It is likely that people
who read business novels and plays and watch
movies about business will continue to search
for more of them as sources of entertainment,
inspiration, and education.
Who are the
intended audiences for your new book?
My target audiences
include college students, business teachers,
general readers, and people employed in the
business world. My summaries and analyses of
twenty-five works are intended to create the
feel of what it is like to work in business. The premise of the book is that fiction can
provide a powerful teaching tool to
sensitize business students without business
experiences and to educate and train managers in
real businesses. Studying fictions of business
can provide insights to often inexperienced
business students and new employees with respect
to real-life situations.
In each of my 25 chapters I
provide a sequential summary of the fictional
work, interspersed with some commentary that
highlights the managerial, economic, and
philosophical implications of the ideas found in
the work. My emphasis is on the business
applications of the lessons of particular
novels, plays, and films. This book highlights
the lessons that an individual can take from
each work and apply to his or her own life. It is not literary analysis for its own sake.
I do not delve deeply into these
novels, plays, and films in order
to identify previously-covered and
previously-uncovered themes in existing
scholarship. My book is essentially a study
guide for people interested in becoming familiar
with the major relevant themes in significant
works of literature and film. The book can also
serve as a guide for professors who desire to
expand their teaching approaches beyond the
traditional ones employed in schools of
business.
Of course, literary scholars can
use my book as a starting point, catalyst, or
reference work for their own in-depth scholarly
studies of these and other works. For example,
I can envision a number of scholars, from a
variety of viewpoints, contributing essays to
book collections devoted to different literary
works. One possible collection that readily
comes to mind would be devoted to David Mamet's
Glengarry Glen Ross. Other candidates
for potential collections might include Howell's
The Rise of Silas Lapham, Norris's The
Octopus, Dreiser's The Financer,
Cahan's The Rise of David Levinsky,
Lewis's Babbitt, Miller's Death of a
Salesman, Hawley's Executive Suite,
Lodge's Nice Work, Sterner's Other
People's Money, among others. It would be
great if some of the contributing literary
scholars to these volumes would come from
pro-business, pro-capitalist thinkers such as
Paul Cantor, Stephen Cox, Ryan McMaken, Sarah
Skwire, Amy Willis, Michelle Vachris, and
yourself. As you know most literary critics are
from the left. Those mentioned above celebrate
individualism and freedom in place of
collectivism and determinism.
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“Imaginative literature can enrich business
teaching materials and provide an excellent
supplement to the theories, concepts, and issues
that students experience in their business
courses.” |
What can be learned
from business fiction?
Fiction can be used
to teach, explicate, and illustrate a wide range
of business issues and concepts. Many fictional
works address human problems in business such as
managing interpersonal conflict and office
politics; using different styles of management;
the potential loss of one's individuality as a
person tends to become an “organization man”;
the stultifying effect of routine in business;
the difficulty in balancing work life and home
life; hiring and keeping virtuous employees;
maintaining one's personal integrity while
satisfying the company's demands for loyalty,
conformity and adaptation to the firm's culture;
communication problems a business may experience;
fundamental moral dilemmas; depersonalization
and mechanization of human relationships; and so
on. Fictional works tend to describe human
behavior and motivations more eloquently,
powerfully, and engagingly than texts, articles,
or cases typically do. Literary authors and
filmmakers are likely to develop and present
ideas through individual characters. They
depict human insights and interests from the
perspective of individuals within an
organizational setting. Reading imaginative literature and watching films are excellent ways
to develop critical thinking and to learn about
values and character.
Many novels, plays, and films
are concerned with the actual operation of
the business system. Some deal directly with
business problems such as government regulation,
cost control, new product development, labor
relations, environmental pollution, health and
safety, plant openings and closings, tactics
used and selection of takeover targets,
structuring financial transactions, succession
planning, strategic planning, the creation
of mission statements, the company's role in the
community, social responsibility, etc. Assessing fictional situations makes a person
more thoughtful, better prepared for situations,
and better able to predict the consequences of
alternative actions. Fiction can address both
matters of morality and practical issues. There
are many fine selections in literature and film
which prompt readers to wrestle with business
situations.
Older novels, plays, and films
can supply information on the history of a
subject or topic. They can act as historical
references for actual past instances and can
help students to understand the reasons for
successes and failures of the past. Older
literature can provide a good history lesson and
can help people to understand the development
of our various businesses and industries. These
stories can be inspiring and motivational and
can demonstrate how various organizations and
managers were able to overcome obstacles, adapt,
and survive. Fictional works are cultural
artifacts from different time periods that can
be valuable when discussing the history of
business. Many fictional works present history
in a form that is more interesting than when one
just reads history books.
Imaginative literature reflects
a variety of cultural, social, ethical,
political, economic, and philosophical
perspectives that have been found in American
society. Various images of businessmen have
appeared in fictional works. These include the
businessman as Scrooge-like miser, confidence
man, robber baron, hero, superman, technocrat,
organization man, small businessman, buffoon,
rugged individualist, corporate capitalist,
financial capitalist, man of integrity, etc.
How will your
teaching approach change in your Business
Through Literature course now that you have
published your own book on the subject?
In the past
students in this course have read, analyzed, and
discussed novels, plays, and films. Each
student prepared a minimum of 6 short papers
(2000 words each) on the assigned works. Grades were based on these papers and class
discussions.
I am experimenting this semester
using my book in the class for the first time. I am requiring each student to take notes on
each chapter of the book to help them in
bringing up topics for class discussion and in
participating in class discussions. Each
student is also required to prepare and turn in
three essay questions on each chapter. These
are turned in before each relevant class. Grades for the class are based on class
participation and two essay tests.
Isn't the reverse
also true that literature students ought to
study economics or at least gain an
understanding of business from something besides
imaginative literature and film, which tend not
to portray capitalists in a favorable light?
It would definitely
be beneficial for literature students to study
classes in business areas such as management,
marketing, accounting, and finance. It would
help them somewhat if they took a course or two
in economics. Unfortunately, almost all college-level
economics courses are based on Keynesian
economics. I would encourage anyone who takes
such courses to read and study Austrian
economics in order to gain a more realistic
perspective.
You've written a
great deal about Ayn Rand, and the chapter on
Atlas Shrugged is the longest one in your
book. Rand can be a divisive figure, even,
perhaps especially, among what you might call
“libertarians” or “free marketers” or
“capitalists” and the like. But even the people
in those categories who reject Objectivism tend
to praise Rand's novels. What do you make of
that, and do you think there's a lesson there
about the novel as a medium for transmitting
philosophy?
I suspect that
there are a lot of people like me who value
“novels of ideas.” There have been many good
philosophical novels but none have been as
brilliantly integrated and unified as Atlas
Shrugged. Rand characterizes grand themes
and presents an entire and integrated view of
how a man should live his life. Rand's great
power comes from her ability to unify everything
in the novel to form an integrated whole. The theme and the plot are inextricably integrated. Rand is a superb practitioner of synthesis and
unity whose literary style and subject are
organically linked and fused to the content of
her philosophy. She unifies the many aspects of
Atlas Shrugged according to the
principles of reality. People from the various
schools of “free-market” thought are in accord
in promoting an appropriate reality-based social
system in which each person is free to strive
for his personal flourishing and happiness.
I want to ask about
Henry Hazlitt's Time Will Run Back, the
subject of chapter twelve of your book. Why do
you think this book has not received much
attention? It has been, I'd venture to say, all
but forgotten or overlooked by even the most
ardent fans of Hazlitt. Is the book lacking
something, or are there other factors at play
here?
Hazlitt's novel may
not be “literary” enough for many people. However, in my opinion, the author does
skillfully use fiction to illustrate his
teachings on economics. I think that the book
also has a good story line. Economics
professors tend to shy away from using it in
their classes. Some may be so quantitatively
oriented that they cannot envision using a novel
to teach economics. Others may perceive the
Austrian economics principles found in Time
Will Run Back to not fit in with the
Keynesian economics principles found in most
textbooks (and of course they are right).
Thank you again for
doing this interview. All the best in 2014.
* This interview was first published on The Literary
Lawyer,
on February 12, 2014.
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From Dr.
Younkins |
▪
The Best Novels and Plays about Business: Results of
a Survey
(no
311 – May 15, 2013)
▪
Reflections on Victor Hugo's Les Misérables
(no
309 – March 15, 2013)
▪
Business Through Literature and Film
(no
308 – February 15, 2013)
▪
Workplace Freedom and Right to Work Laws
(no
307 – January 15, 2013)
▪
Flourishing and Happiness in a Nutshell
(no
301 – June 15, 2012)
▪
More...
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First written appearance of the
word 'liberty,' circa 2300 B.C. |
Le Québécois Libre
Promoting individual liberty, free markets and voluntary
cooperation since 1998.
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