ANTH 101
How To Be Human Fall 2024 (also offered Spring 2025)
Division II D Difference, Power, and Equity

Class Details

Is there such a thing as ‘human nature’? This course is an introduction to cultural anthropology (also known as social or socio-cultural anthropology), the study of human society in all its profound variety. Through deep, sustained, systematic participation in and observation of a particular social context, anthropologists seek to comprehend and illuminate the human condition. Anthropologists’ insights into the ways in which human institutions – language, economy, religion, social stratification, law, sexuality, art, the state, and many more – are culturally constructed and reproduced have transformed the way the world is understood. Puncturing ethnocentrism, anthropology’s attentiveness to the ideas and practices of cultures in every part of the globe vastly enriches the archive of human answers to human problems. The distinctive methods of the discipline enable anthropologists to discover patterns and phenomena not discernible in other modes of enquiry. With such findings anthropologists are able to make critical interventions in public discourse and to demonstrate how deeply we are all shaped by cultural forces.
The Class: Format: lecture
Limit: 30
Expected: 30
Class#: 1284
Grading: yes pass/fail option, no fifth course option
Requirements/Evaluation: weekly posts in response to readings, two group presentations, several short writing exercises, final exam
Prerequisites: none
Enrollment Preferences: first-year students and sophomores
Distributions: Divison II Difference, Power, and Equity
DPE Notes: The course is an introduction to cultural anthropology and deals extensively with race, ethnicity, religion, gender, etc., as cultural constructs creating social difference, hierarchies of power, and the creation of inequities in communities and societies. Readings in ethnography, social theory, and sociology are designed to give students a deeper appreciation of all these issues.

Class Grid

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