Abstract
Herman Melville’s Moby-Dick serves here as a vehicle through which to interrogate core features of American corporate law and excavate some of the deeper lessons about the human soul that lurk behind the pasteboard mask of the law’s black letter. The inquiry yields an illuminating vantage on the ethical consequences of corporate capital structure, the law of corporate purpose, the meaning of voluntarism, the ethical stakes of corporate fiduciary obligations, and the role of lawyers in preventing or facilitating corporate catastrophe. No prior familiarity with the novel or corporate law is required.
Recommended Citation
David Yosifon,
Moby-Dick as Corporate Catastrophe: Law, Ethics, and Redemption,
90 U. Cin. L. Rev.
(2021)
Available at: https://scholarship.law.uc.edu/uclr/vol90/iss2/1
Included in
Agency Commons, Business Organizations Law Commons, Commercial Law Commons, Legal Ethics and Professional Responsibility Commons