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Section | Day | Time | Instructor | Exam Date | Delivery |
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ANTH 100 - Introduction to Anthropology |
An introduction to the anthropological concept of culture, its uses in the explanation of human behaviour, and its impact on our understanding of human nature, language, and society. The course will explore cultural diversity through the comparative perspective that makes anthropology unique within the humanities and social sciences. It will also show how anthropologists analyse the connections between politics, economics, gender, kinship, and religion within particular cultures. |
001 |
TR |
2:30pm - 3:45pm |
Carlos David Londono Sulkin |
18-APR-23 |
|
002 |
|
- |
Charisma Thomson |
25-APR-23 |
ONLNE |
003 |
TR |
1:00pm - 2:15pm |
Gediminas Lankauskas |
20-APR-23 |
|
395 |
|
- |
Julie Mushynsky |
|
ONLNE |
396 |
|
- |
Julie Mushynsky |
|
ONLNE |
397 |
|
- |
Charisma Thomson |
|
ONLNE |
991 |
TR |
8:00pm - 9:15pm |
Alexander Oehler |
18-APR-23 |
|
ANTH 202 - Anthropology of Language |
An introduction to the anthropological study of language. This course examines a variety of theories and methods for the study of the variable relations between language use and aspects of social life and of personhood, among them social organization, hierarchy, power, gender, sexuality, and subjectivity.
***Prerequisite: ANTH 100 or completion of 12 credit hours or permission of the Department Head.*** |
001 |
TR |
11:30am - 12:45pm |
Carlos David Londono Sulkin |
25-APR-23 |
|
ANTH 237 - Ethnography of Europe |
This introductory course offers an overview of the ethnographic study of Europe since the 1950s. Different regions of the continent are examined through close reading of ethnographic writings concerned with gender, morality, social class, ethnic affiliation, and nationalist ideology.
***Prerequisite: ANTH 100 or completion of 12 credit hours or permission of the Department Head.*** |
001 |
TR |
10:00am - 11:15am |
Gediminas Lankauskas |
20-APR-23 |
|
ANTH 242AQ - Anthropology of Evil |
This course is focused on the social construction of evil as evidenced in belief, discourse, and practice. By drawing on historical and contemporary anthropological theory and research we will debate, explore, and problematize the construction and use of the concept of evil for justifications of violence, weaponized politics, and enforcement of normative cultural systems.
***Prerequisite: ANTH 100 or completion of 12 credit hours or permission of the Department Head.*** |
001 |
|
- |
Charisma Thomson |
25-APR-23 |
ONLNE |
ANTH 340 - Anthropology and Contemporary Human Problems |
The contribution of anthropological methods and principles to search for practical and ethical solutions to contemporary social and administrative problems involving intercultural communication and social change.
***Prerequisite: Completion of 30 credit hours including at least 3 credit hours in ANTH, or permission of the Department Head.*** |
001 |
TR |
1:00pm - 2:15pm |
Alexander Oehler |
20-APR-23 |
|
ANTH 402 - Theory in Anthropology II |
An overview of the principal schools of thought that have shaped the work of anthropologists since 1950.
***Prerequisite: ANTH 202, ANTH 203, and ANTH 401 or permission of the Department Head.***
*Note: Student may receive credit for one of ANTH 402, ANTH 400, or ANTH 890AQ* |
001 |
M |
2:30pm - 5:15pm |
Susanne Kuehling |
|
|
ANTH 496AI - Anthropology of Tattooing |
Taking as its starting point Polynesian tattoo traditions, this course investigates the social, cultural, aesthetic, and other dimensions of marking the human body, and how practitioners and scholars have attempted to understand and explain these practices.
**Permission of department head required to register.** |
001 |
|
- |
Tobias Sperlich |
|
|
ANTH 890AL - Advanced Anthropology of Gender |
This reading course is an enriched, graduate level course. The student will study the relationship between gendered forms of political and economic empowerment and textile weaving cooperatives in Latin America. |
001 |
|
- |
Susanne Kuehling |
|
|
ANTH 890AY - Advanced Theories in Posthumanist Anthropology |
This graduate-level reading course will focus on key theoretical readings in the area of non-anthropocentric human and social sciences, redefining the social as a collective of humans and non-humans, and including animals, plants, and other subjects. The class will include foundational texts ranging from science studies to feminist theory to philosophy as well as anthropology. The student will learn to synthesize key theoretical concepts and apply these concepts to empirical examples. |
001 |
|
- |
Alexander Oehler |
|
|
ANTH 901 - Research |
Thesis research. |
001 |
|
- |
Carlos David Londono Sulkin |
|
|
002 |
|
- |
Susanne Kuehling |
|
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