This course examines how markets and economies are made and explores the implications of market-making activities for the production of social space. Using political and cultural economy approaches, the course provides an alternative account of contemporary economies to that offered by mainstream economics and business studies. It focuses attention on economies as sites and outcomes of social practices. The course will demonstrate that real-world economies are complex amalgams of investment trajectories, diverse economic subjectivity, political aspirations, material technology, and cultural practice. The course will be valuable to all students interested in understanding the economy as social practice, in theory, and in real-world forms, as well as those preparing to work in occupations that will require them to interpret and engage with contemporary social change. It will complement and enrich the study programs of students majoring in other social sciences such as environmental management, political studies, history, economics, sociology, and psychology.