Life Incorporated: The Course


I’m teaching an online course, Life Incorporated, through the MaybeLogic Academy beginning January 12, for six weeks.

“Students” will get a working draft of the book (to be published in June) as well as six weeks of discussion and interrogation of the issues within and beyond it. I’ll be doing some live video lectures, as well, and inviting participants to help devise ways of restoring bottom-up commerce and social exchange to a world that seems incapable of abandoning its faulty, top-down, disconnected way of extracting value from people.

But the bulk of the exploration will be history, economics and social theory: How did corporatism become the dominant cultural ideology and operating system, who did it benefit, how did we internalize it, and what keeps it running?

Here’s a description from the catalog. If you are interested in taking the course but just don’t have any money, let me know and I’ll see if I can subsidize your participation.

Something has gone terribly wrong.

Unquestionably but seemingly inexplicably, we have come to live in a world where the market has insinuated itself into every area of our lives. From erection to conception, school admission to finding a spouse, there are products and professionals to fill in where family and community have failed us. Commercials entreat us to think and care for ourselves, but to do so by choosing a corporation through which to exercise all this autonomy.

Born in the Renaissance, necessitated by the Industrial Age, powered by workers, paid for by consumers and eventually sold back to us as shareholders, today’s faceless fascism – what Mussolini called “corporatism” – is a closed system that conquers not through exclusion but total inclusion. Everything, even dissidence, is assimilated. And in the process, life itself is reduced in its complexity, unpredictability, and intrinsic value.

Instead of depending on a parental dictator or nationalist ideology, the system of control to which we have succumbed depends on a society cultivated to see the corporation as central to its welfare, value, and very identity.

This course will explore how we got here, and what to do about it. We will begin with the first chartered corporations, and explore how their mandate to extract resources from distant colonies still lives on in the unbalanced relationship between today’s corporations and the communities they exploit. We will study how the invention of centralized currency, the division of the realms, and the notion of the “individual” all served to enhance the power of central authority by institutionalizing competition and artificial scarcity.

We will chronicle a project that began in earnest in the 1900′s, as early American industrialists sought to maximize the efficiency, enthusiasm and compliance of their work force; under the guise of philanthropy, they funded public schools designed to keep men “malleable,” and supported public servants who would keep them quiet.

Finally, we look at today’s perpetuators of the corporatist society, as well as their utter ignorance of the underlying biases of the marketing, media, and technology they are using. The corporatists themselves have left the building; we are in the thrall of an operating system we are now mistaking for reality. For given circumstances.

Participants in these lively, no-holds-barred discussions will receive free preview versions of Rushkoff’s book in progress, “Life Incorporated: How our world became a corporation and how to take it back,” to be published by RandomHouse in June 2009. They will also have exclusive access to new video/podcast lectures and live iChat/AV discussions. They will also witness and, if they choose, participate in the assembly of a documentary on the same subject. Each week, supplementary texts will be suggested or supplied.

Posted on 4 January '09 by Douglas, under teaching.

31 Comments to “Life Incorporated: The Course”

#1 Posted by matt griffin (04.01.09 at 13:32 )

How often will the class “meet”? I’m interested, but want to make sure I would be able to fit it into my schedule.

#2 Posted by Tobias H. (04.01.09 at 20:09 )

Would love to take part in this (but i don’t have work right know and not really any money plus i’m from Germany. Is it worldwide? i don’t know anything about maybe logic except that wilson had something to do with it…) .

Anyway, sounds really interesting. I liked the talk you gave at the Institute for General Semantics, by the way. Looking forward to the book.

#3 Posted by gomehead2000 (04.01.09 at 23:25 )

i would very much like to learn about and participate in this online course. however i would definitely need to look into the subsidies. is it possible to get corporate sponsorship?

#4 Posted by Erin Kirby (05.01.09 at 01:02 )

I would love to take this course, but I am currently up to my eyeballs in students loans pursuing a bachelor of music at the outrageously expensive Eastman School. And somehow I am doubting that the two copies of Nothing Sacred I recently purchased will do much to appease the folks at Maybe Logic. Is there someone I can contact about subsidization?

#5 Posted by Marcelo Vial (05.01.09 at 09:29 )

Looks very interesting to me, Rushkoff. Is there a way to create an online class, as an experiment perhaps? I’m from Brazil and would love to take part on it.
All the best,
Marcelo

#6 Posted by Douglas (05.01.09 at 12:16 )

This *is* an online course. It is being taught through a website called MaybeLogic.org Take a look there, and it should become clear that this happens over the Internet, and how.

Most of what happens will be asynchronous – this means things like bulletin board conversations and podcasts that people can participate in or listen to whenever they want. We don’t all need to be on the Internet at the same moment. Though I will be scheduling some chats and other live events, based on everyone’s availability. Everyone should be able to make at least some of them, because they will be scheduled at very different times of the day each time.

For subsidization, email me via the contact page here, or try faculty {at} maybelogic(.)org We will see how many I can pay for, and how many they can let in for free.

#7 Posted by Bobby Campbell (05.01.09 at 21:39 )

I’m all signed up and ready to go!

Having taken a Maybe Logic Course w/ Prof. Rushkoff before, I can attest that it is an extremely worthwhile endeavor.

#8 Posted by mpaunovich (05.01.09 at 21:58 )

Can’t wait!

#9 Posted by izbn (07.01.09 at 00:49 )

Doug,

Would love to be subsidized in some way, to attend your class, at the maybe logic academy! I plan on attending college this spring, as a junior completing a psychology degree with a full load, I know I can find some time to commit to your curriculum even if I can’t find the money.

Ian

#10 Posted by izbn (07.01.09 at 00:51 )

By the way I currently make like 8 dollars an hour, I actually don’t know the exact amount, and with fourty hours a week, I get about 590 dollars every couple weeks after taxes. Which will go toward rent, food and gas. Anything you can do will not ever be forgoten. Not that it usually is :)

#11 Posted by Apophenian (07.01.09 at 22:13 )

I am looking forward to this very much – hope I can make at least some of the discussions! (I am in Australia)

#12 Posted by Steven Kruyswijk (09.01.09 at 09:52 )

I subscribed! Really looking forward to it.

#13 Posted by mason (09.01.09 at 12:08 )

As the unemployment numbers head towards significant ceilings and government begins to contemplate a bit of bottom stimulus, it strikes me the course should (now and again) revisit the role of the monarch and political elite.

Somehow, i can’t really buy into your premise that the corporatists have left the room. If so, however, the course needs to consider the near universal bias for top down thought and management. What or who motivates or has interest in that and why do so many buy into it?

Sounds like you all are really going to have a wild ride. Hope to hear more.

-mason

#14 Posted by battymcdougall (09.01.09 at 14:46 )

Well, the folks at MLA have offered me a 50% discount to try and get into the course. It’s a very generous offer, but I am still not too sure whether I’ll be able to make it. I’ll have to wait and see…

#15 Posted by Kate (11.01.09 at 02:43 )

I just signed up. Should be a good challenge.

#16 Posted by Kay O. Sweaver (11.01.09 at 13:13 )

I’m interested, but of course only updated my RSS feeds now, one day before the whole thing starts. The idea of an online course/discussion group is interesting, particularly with regards to this topic.

It would be nice to see more of this sort of thing since I think critical discussion simply doesn’t happen enough, people just join their political/religious/economic/scientific/philosophical cult of choice and proceed to sing from the hymnbook.

#17 Posted by Douglas (11.01.09 at 21:37 )

If you can’t afford the 50%, email them back and tell them what you want.

As for monarchs, yes Mason. There’s a whole lot on monarchs in my book and in the course. But I really don’t think people in, say, advertising today understand what Bernays or Colbert, for that matter, were up to.

As for more of this kind of thing, Kay and everyone, I am hoping the course ends by spilling out into the forums on this site, and from there to everywhere. But the people taking the course are definitely involved in creating value for the rest of the world by engaging in meaningful conversation and modeling some new strategies.

#18 Posted by rumighoul (12.01.09 at 10:19 )

I was very close to scouting for a discount and joining this course – I’ve let it go in the end thinking I might be able to put more into it a 2nd time round when i’m financially a bit more solvent (heh) and more set up in other areas of my life (job seeking ex-student here). Hopefully once it’s done us who couldn’t attend will in some form get to see what you guys come up with in yr discussions. I’ll be getting the book when it comes out for sure. Looking forward to the results from you all.

#19 Posted by Kate (12.01.09 at 13:32 )

I feel like its the first day of class and I don’t know where my classroom is.

#20 Posted by EAltwies (12.01.09 at 20:39 )

How do we long onto the “class”?

#21 Posted by Dr Dim (12.01.09 at 21:35 )

Sounds great – still on the same wavelength after all these years! Cheers man.

#23 Posted by Douglas (14.01.09 at 11:14 )

And who is Dim? Tim Barker?

#24 Posted by mason (19.01.09 at 12:11 )

Hey Doug,

I think you misunderestimate advertising and propaganda people today and the degree to which we are motivated to buy some of the top down tags they package.

I think that i shall never know a lovelier thing than a “predator drone.”

#25 Posted by Dr Dim (19.01.09 at 13:04 )

Yes Dim is Tim Barker Doug! Sorry. Lol. Busy writing http://www.systemmalfunction.net and living the life of the ‘Bohemian’ writer. Hard work but someone has to do it! May get back to you on the Maybe Logic idea as no takers at thirdspace.mobi but must crack on with this first chapter for now. All best to all. Tim :-) )

#26 Posted by javier (20.01.09 at 12:40 )

Unfortunately, I didn’t enroll in the course…
Here’s one person that would enroll if the course is given again in the future.

#27 Posted by nohaii (27.01.09 at 01:00 )

this sounds very interesting, I would join up.
When will it start?
What is the format? (lectures, times…)
If the info is in the post, sorry should have read the whole thing first.
Please email me if possible and keep me informed

#28 Posted by nohaii (27.01.09 at 01:05 )

Just read the whole thing
would it be possible to join in now?Or do you have another one planned soon
Thanks

#29 Posted by Douglas (27.01.09 at 13:17 )

Well, it’s almost half over, but you could probably catch up pretty easily. Email the ADMIN at MaybeLogic and see if they will give you half off at this point. They should. Tell them I sent you.

But do it now while we’re at the beginning of week 3.

#30 Posted by nohaii (30.01.09 at 17:29 )

Hi Doug,
I sent the email like you said.
Then i followed the instructions the admin sent, to donate the fee to redleaf paypal (link was provided)
I sent the fee in, and i also sent a number of emails to follow up, yet they all seem to say message unsent.
There must be something wrong on the admin side, since i have tried sending the email from multiple addresses.

Basically i paid but have not signed up, nor received a username and password.

If you can help me out or have any info that would be great.

#31 Posted by Ron O'Neal (01.02.09 at 10:16 )

FT.com / Weekend / Reportage – The credit crunch according to Soros: Soros attributes his effectiveness as an investor to his philosophical views about the contingent nature of human knowledge: “I think that my conceptual framework, which basically emphasises the importance of misconceptions, makes me extremely critical of my own decisions … I know that I am bound to be wrong, and therefore am more likely to correct my own mistakes.”