Spring 2022 /anthropology/ en Conservation & Indigenous Peoples in Tanzania (Arusha, Tanzania) /anthropology/2022/01/28/conservation-indigenous-peoples-tanzania-arusha-tanzania Conservation & Indigenous Peoples in Tanzania (Arusha, Tanzania) Anonymous (not verified) Fri, 01/28/2022 - 11:29 Categories: Spring 2022

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Fri, 28 Jan 2022 18:29:31 +0000 Anonymous 2053 at /anthropology
ANTH 1155 - Explorations in Global Cultural Diversity- Introduction to the Anthropology of Japan /anthropology/2021/10/15/anth-1155-explorations-global-cultural-diversity-introduction-anthropology-japan ANTH 1155 - Explorations in Global Cultural Diversity- Introduction to the Anthropology of Japan Anonymous (not verified) Fri, 10/15/2021 - 10:27 Categories: Spring 2022 Tags: Featured Spring 2024 Courses

This course offers you a broad sample of cutting-edge contemporary social science explorations of Japan, featuring Friday guest lectures. You will meet many of the scholars whose work we will read, giving you the opportunity to ask questions about their research process.

A core theme running through the course is the question of what “Japanese identity” means. The nation is around 98% ethnically Japanese and popular narratives frame the country as “homogenous,” but at the same time, “multiculturalism” and “internationalization” are key words in public discourse and policy narratives. Further, many sorts of people constitute Japan, including Indigenous Ainu and the Ryukyuan people of Okinawa, people whose ethnic origins come from outside Japan or who are mixed-race, gender minorities, and people with disabilities. What might it be like to live in a nation framed as “homogenous,” when the human experience is inherently diverse?

We will consider core methodological and theoretical issues in anthropology more broadly, and the anthropology of Japan, specifically. Assignments will give you the opportunity to explore topics of your own interest.

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Fri, 15 Oct 2021 16:27:02 +0000 Anonymous 1993 at /anthropology
ANTH 4020/5020: Disaster and Culture /anthropology/2021/04/21/anth-40205020-disaster-and-culture ANTH 4020/5020: Disaster and Culture Anonymous (not verified) Wed, 04/21/2021 - 07:51 Categories: Spring 2022 Summer 2021 Tags: Spring 2023

In this class, we study disasters from a broad anthropological perspective questions the false dichotomy between nature and society, and has put front and center the role of human agency in the creation of disasters. This perspective argues that disasters occur within the context of archaeologically/historically created patterns of vulnerability.

Professor Geraldo Gutiérrez

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Wed, 21 Apr 2021 13:51:06 +0000 Anonymous 1861 at /anthropology
ANTH 2100 Introduction to Cultural Anthropology /anthropology/2018/02/26/anth-2100-introduction-cultural-anthropology ANTH 2100 Introduction to Cultural Anthropology Anonymous (not verified) Mon, 02/26/2018 - 10:39 Categories: Fall 2018 Fall 2019 Fall 2020 Spring 2020 Spring 2021 Spring 2022 Summer 2021 Undergraduate Course Description Tags: Fall 2022 Featured Spring 2024 Courses Spring 2023 Summer 2022

 

 

What does it mean to think anthropologically? This course will provide an overview of the history and foundations of anthropological thought, with a special focus on the key method of anthropology: ethnography. Drawing on both classical and contemporary anthropological texts from a broad range of international settings, we will analyze the meaning of the categories we use to organize our experiences and social relationships. Topics will include: the "culture" concept, particularly in relation to ideas of difference, relativism, translation, and individual and group identity; the role of language, narrative, and interpretation in the constitution of the self and the social world; symbols, metaphors, and ideologies as forms of power and vehicles for social transformation; ethnographic methods, ethics, and techniques of anthropological research and fieldwork; and cross-cultural comparisons of systems of kinship, gender/sex/sexuality, labor and economic exchange.

 

See the for specifics, recommendations, and prerequisites.

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Mon, 26 Feb 2018 17:39:36 +0000 Anonymous 1148 at /anthropology
ANTH 2200 The Archaeology of Human History /anthropology/2018/02/26/anth-2200-archaeology-human-history ANTH 2200 The Archaeology of Human History Anonymous (not verified) Mon, 02/26/2018 - 10:30 Categories: Fall 2018 Fall 2019 Fall 2020 Spring 2020 Spring 2021 Spring 2022 Undergraduate Course Description Tags: Featured Spring 2024 Courses Spring 2023

Where did human beings come from?

How did we come to inhabit the world?

Why don’t we eat wild foods anymore?

How did complex urban societies rise and fall?

All this and more…..

 

Professor Douglas Bamforth

See the for specifics, recommendations, and prerequisites.

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Mon, 26 Feb 2018 17:30:36 +0000 Anonymous 1186 at /anthropology
ANTH 4700 / 5700 Practicing Anthropology: Applying Ethnographic Theory and Methods /anthropology/2018/02/26/anth-4700-5700-practicing-anthropology-applying-ethnographic-theory-and-methods ANTH 4700 / 5700 Practicing Anthropology: Applying Ethnographic Theory and Methods Anonymous (not verified) Mon, 02/26/2018 - 08:59 Categories: Fall 2018 Graduate Course Description Spring 2019 Spring 2022 Undergraduate Course Description

 

In this hands-on ethnographic research course, advanced anthropology students will learn how to use anthropological methodologies to collaboratively investigate social problems and positively impact society. We will develop a model of ethnographic research oriented toward facilitating dialogue between student ethnographers and research interlocutors (community members, policy makers, elected representatives, scientists). Readings will give students background in research methods as well as a theoretical framework for applied, engaged, and activist anthropology and community-based research. Students will disseminate research findings in publicly accessible, multi-media formats: photography exhibits, podcasts, story maps, videos. This course may be especially of interest to third-year majors considering an honors thesis in their fourth year, fourth-year majors wanting a “capstone” experience, and MA students.

Professor Kathryn Goldfarb

See the University Catalog for specifics, recommendations, and prerequisites.

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Mon, 26 Feb 2018 15:59:59 +0000 Anonymous 1134 at /anthropology