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- Courses: Fall 2008
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- Undergraduate
Graduate
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| Anthropology 2AC: Introduction to Archaeology |
| Lightfoot |
|
02303 |
| Anthro 2AC is an introduction to the methods, goals, and theoretical concepts of archaeology. The field of archaeology is concerned with the study of past human societies based primarily on the material culture produced and used by people. For more than a century, archaeologists have been developing and refining a suite of methods for recovering and analyzing material cultural remains that have been deposited into the archaeological record. These material remains--artifacts, ecofacts, features, sites, etc. -- often comprise a rather fragmentary, but nonetheless complex data base. This course explores how archaeologists employ these material remains to construct interpretations about past societies. Lecture topics will include discussions on the formation of the archaeological record; the history of archaeology; developing a research design; field methods (survey and excavation) for recovering and recording archaeological data; laboratory methods employed in the analysis of archaeological data; chronology; and generating interpretations about the past.
One of the themes that will be addressed in the course is the concept of "excluded pasts"-- traditional histories written by the dominant culture that are often exclusionary in their accounts of ancient and recent peoples. Mainstream histories often exclude or present in a biased or distorted manner accounts of common or lower status families, members of minority groups, or individuals persecuted for religious, political or sexual persuasions. The reason for touching on this theme is to recognize that the past practices of archaeology were exclusionary. As a western science dominated in its formative years by Euro-American men, archaeologists working in North America excavated burials and sacred sites with minimal consultation with descendant communities. Sensitive materials were appropriated and placed in museums and curation facilities. As will be discussed in class, Native American scholars refer to this kind of archaeology as "scientific colonialism" or "imperial archaeology." As a consequence of a growing backlash to these past practices, in combination with recent legislation involving the repatriation of material culture back to descendant communities, the field of archaeology is currently undergoing significant changes in its methods and practices as it attempts to become a more inclusive and collaborative science. The course will explore how archaeologists today are creating close working relationships with diverse stakeholders, participating in collaborative research teams, and undertaking educational outreach with the public.
Anthro 2AC will highlight an important goal of contemporary archaeology--the construction of alternative, pluralistic histories using multiple lines of evidence. Course lectures and readings will consider how archaeology can provide a powerful methodology for constructing alternative histories of excluded peoples (and their encounters with the dominant culture) by examining the material culture of their daily practices. As we will see, the performance of daily routines produces patterned accumulations of material culture that are among the most interpretable kinds of deposits found in archaeological contexts. While most people may perceive these kinds of deposits as simply garbage or refuse collections, when analyzed by archaeologists they can provide critical insights about past people. The course examines how the archaeology of daily practice, when integrated with other sources of relevant information (oral traditions, oral histories, written records), provides the most powerful way to understand the past outside of a time machine.
The course will present case studies from California to highlight the potential of writing alternative histories about people with excluded pasts. The case studies will also highlight the benefits and challenges of working with diverse stakeholders, specifically Native Californian tribes (e.g., Kashaya Pomo), Hispanic descendant communities, and Euro-American historical societies.
Course requirements: Three exams required (two midterms and a final exam) and a short research paper. Participation in weekly discussion sections is mandatory. Discussion sections are an important component of the course, you must attend them, and they will count for 20% of your final grade. |
| Anthropology 3AC: Introduction to Social/Cultural Anthropology |
| Hubbard |
|
02375 |
This introductory course to anthropology positions it as a discipline with key concepts for understanding diverse ways of life, with special insights into our global contemporary situations. The course also fulfils the American Cultures course requirement, focusing on the global formation of American society and culture.
Human society is constantly being destabilized and re-formed through engagements with diverse flows of populations, commerce, mass culture, technology, and politics. No country or culture is cut off from transnational links and influences. This class stresses the picture of America as "a nation of immigrants" rather than "a stand alone nation," a land that is an open global system rather than a fortress under siege.
Course materials will illuminate the transnational nature of contemporary American problems through an emphasis on global youth experiences to emphasize the relevance of anthropology to students own lives and identities. Key anthropological concepts of kinship, gender, ethnicity, race, and class-- as ideas and as practices -- will be explored in overseas and American communities. Through engagement with the methods of cultural anthropology and a focus on the dynamic and transnational processes of identity-making we will explore what it means to be "American," as well as to be human, today.
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| Anthropology 24: Freshman Seminar " Humor in Cross-Cultural Perspective" |
| Brandes |
|
02480 |
This freshman seminar is designed to explore various approaches to the topic of humor, particularly as humor reflects and reinforces social boundaries--gender boundaries, ethnic boundaries, national boundaries, class boundaries, boundaries of friendship, and the like. We will examine (1) the sources of humor; (2) types of humor (jokes, riddles, teasing and banter, verbal dueling, among others); and (3) the impact of humor on both individuals and groups. Although humor is intrinsically lighthearted, it invariably reflects deep-seated social and psychological concerns. This is the main message of this course.
Note: This course is restricted to freshman (students who have completed fewer than 30 units) |
| Anthropology 24: Freshman Seminar "The Imagined Past: Other Times in Film" |
| Joyce |
|
02482 |
Films offer an unparalleled opportunity to show what we think another time or place was like, engaging our senses and giving a more vivid impression of actually being there. In the hands of some film makers, these creations of the past can make us feel a simultaneous sense of difference and connection. Other film makers simply use the past as an exotic backdrop for stories that could be taking place today. In this course, we will compare Ang Lee's Ride with the Devil and Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon to films including Mel Gibson's Apocalypto to understand how an imagined past can help us understand other times and places or fail to promote our understanding. If you have ever wondered whether a film set in the past is giving you a real sense of what it would have been like to live in another time or place, this course is for you. This seminar is part of the On the Same Page initiative: http://onthesamepage.berkeley.edu.
Note: This course is restricted to freshman (students who have completed fewer than 30 units) |
| Anthropology 112: Special Topic in Biological Anthropology: "Evolution of Brain and Language" |
| Deacon |
|
02522 |
Description not yet available.
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| Anthropology 115: Introduction to Medical Anthropology |
| Cohen |
|
02525 |
Description not yet available.
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| Anthropology 121AC: American Material Culture |
| Wilkie |
|
02552 |
Material culture as an expression of American socioeconomic, political, religious, gender and ethnic values since the 17th century. Topics include: architecture, domestic artifacts, food ways, healthcare and "pop culture." European, African, Hispanic, Asian and Native American examples will be considered.
Prerequisites: An introductory course in archaeology (Anthro 2) is recommended but not required. |
| Anthropology C125A: Archaeology of East Asia |
| Habu |
|
02555 |
The goal of this course is to provide a general picture of prehistoric and protohistoric archaeology in China, Japan and Korea. The course will emphasize the differences and similarities in archaeological studies between East Asia and North America. It will also consider the role of archaeology in East Asian societies today, and discuss how archaeological interpretations have been affected by the social and political contexts in these countries. Topics to be emphasized include changes in subsistence-settlement systems, origins and dispersal of food production, the development of social complexity, and the formation of state
Prerequisites: None. Freshmen, sophomores and students in non-anthropology majors are encouraged to take this class. |
| Anthropology 127A: Introduction to Skeletal Biology and Bioarchaeology |
| Agarwal |
|
CCN: 02558 |
This course is an introduction to skeletal biology and its basis for the analysis of human skeletal remains. The study of the human skeleton provides insight into human evolution and health, and can be applied in archaeological, forensic, and biomedical contexts. The first half of the course will deal with the structure, function, and growth of the human skeleton, while later classes will introduce the methods used to analyze and interpret archaeological skeletal remains and gain information on aspects such as age, sex, health, and biological variation. Lectures provide relevant background, but students are expected to devote a significant amount of time to work and participate in weekly labs.
Prerequisites:
Anthropology 1, Biology 1B.
Students who have taken ANTHRO C103/IB C142 (Osteology) are NOT able to take this course.
Enrollment information:
Consent of Instructor required.
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| Anthropology 132A : Analysis of Archaeological Ceramics |
| Staff |
|
02576 |
Discussion of and laboratory instruction in methods of analysis of ceramics used by archaeologists to establish a time scale, to document interconnections between different areas, sites, or groups of people, to suggest what activities were carried out at particular sites, and to understand the organization of ceramic production itself.
Course format: Three hours of lecture/discussion and three hours of laboratory per week.
Prerequisites: Anthro 2.
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| Anthropology 136H: Archaeology After School Program |
| Conkey |
|
02579 |
This course is about ethnographic fieldwork, public archaeology, the anthropology of pedagogy and education, the anthropology of technology, and collaborative learning and the material and media representation of culture. The course is designed to provide an opportunity for undergraduates to work with 6 th graders in exploring the worlds of archaeology, history, and computer-based technologies. There is no mid-term or final examination for this course, but there are research projects, weekly field notes, and active participation expected. Students enrolled in Anthropology 136h are expected to mentor and interact with children (predominantly 6th graders) in Expedition, an after-school program at Roosevelt Middle School in Oakland. Additionally, this course fulfills the methods requirement for Anthropology majors, providing an opportunity to learn and use a variety of ethnographic skills. The focus of the course this semester is encouraging the awareness of the multicultural nature of the meaning of material culture and its expression and/or the significances of "place" through digital storytelling.
The Expedition after-school program is designed to bring the archaeological experience to 6th graders through facilitated play with a variety of media, including: digital storytelling (video production), computer games, web browsing, hands-on exploration of real artifacts, etc.
Prerequisites: Students from fields other than archaeology and anthropology are welcome to participate. Bilingual students are strongly encouraged to apply. An Introduction to Archaeology (Anthro.2 or its equivalent) course is recommended but not required. Regular access to an email and Internet account are essential.
Requirements: This course is essentially a practical research/service-learning course. Participation in the Roosevelt School after-school program (approx. 2-3 hrs one afternoon each week) is a required part of the course. You will be expected to keep field notes of your observations and enter them into the course database each week.
Required reading: Kozol, J. 2000 Ordinary Resurrections: children in the years of hope. Crown Publ, New York.
Weekly required readings will also be available for the course on a bSpace website. |
| Anthropology 137: Energy, Culture & Social Organization |
| Nader |
|
02591 |
This course will consider the human dimensions of particular energy production
and consumption patterns. It will examine the influence of culture and social organization on energy use, energy policy, and quality of life issues in both the
domestic and international setting. Specific treatment will be given to mind-sets, ideas of progress, cultural variation in time perspectives and resource use,
equity issues, and the role of power holders in energy related questions.
Prerequisites: None
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| Anthropology 138A: Ethnographic Film |
| Staff |
|
02594 |
This course traces the development of ethnographic film from its beginnings at the turn of the 20th century to the present. In addition to looking at seminal works in the field, more recent and innovative productions will be viewed and analyzed. Topics of interest include the role of visual media in ethnography, ethics in filmmaking, new developments in digital technologies, and the problematic relationship between seeing and believing. Requirements include film critiques, periodic examinations, and a final project or film proposal. Anthropology 138A is a prerequisite for the production class in the Spring (Anthropology 138B). |
| Anthropology 141: Comparative Societies |
| Liu |
|
02597 |
This class takes up "America" as a cultural Other for comparison. In trying to understand possible futures of our world, "America" has drawn our attention as an exotic existence in the contemporary world. The more anthropologists studied other people; the more they came to realize the need for understanding the symbolic predominance of American vision and life for today. To compare with a focus, this class will examine the problems, both social and conceptual, that America has posed for the world, in order to produce an anthropological analysis of some emerging global tendencies of our time.
Prerequisites: No coursework prerequisite is needed, but the requirement for serious engagement with assigned readings will be demanded.
Required Texts (in the order of reading sequence):
Tocqueville, A. de. 2001[1835/40]. Democracy in America. (Abri. Heffner) Signet.
Mills, C. Wright. 2000[1956]. The Power Elite. Oxford.
Riesman, D. 2001[1961]. The Lonely Crowd. Yale Nota Bene.
Rawls, J. 1999. A Theory of Justice. Harvard.
Huntington, S. P. 2002. The Clash of Civilizations. Harvard.
Bloom, A. 1987. The Closing of the American Mind. Simon and Schuster. |
| Anthropology C147B: Sexuality, Culture, and Colonialism |
| LGBT Std. Staff |
|
02612 |
Note: Cross-listed with Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Studies C147B. Course will be taught by a professor from that department.
An introduction to social theory and ethnographic methodology in the cross-cultural study of sexuality, particularly sexual orientation
and gender identity. The course will stress the relationships between culture, international and local political economy, and the
representation and experience of what we will provisionally call homosexual and transgendered desires or identities. |
| Anthropology 150: Utopia, Art and Power in Modern Times |
| Yurchak |
|
|
CANCELLED |
| Anthropology 160AC : Forms of Folklore |
| Briggs |
|
02621 |
This course focuses on how all of us construct notions of difference--racial, ethnic, gender, sexuality, class and nation--through folklore. By examining how a wide range of genres are used in both enforcing social boundaries and hierarchies and challenging the official discourse and institutions that attempt to shape us, the study of folklore forms and analytic approaches provide tools for understanding our world and attempting to transform it. The course project turns each student into a contributor in the field of folklore by collecting traditional knowledge from his/her milieu.
You are required to enroll in a discussion section, but attendance will not be mandatory. These are optional sessions in which graduate students help class members decide which types of folklore (jokes, proverbs, riddles, songs, rituals, games, cyberlore, medical folklore, etc.) to collect, whom to interview, and how to analyze and write-up the materials. Sections can help familiarize students with the Folklore Archive, in which more than half a million examples are available. The GSIs can also discuss the readings and how to use them in analyzing their collections.
Prerequisites: None. The catalog description (which says upper division standing) is not accurate. This course is open for enrollment to any interested student. |
| Anthropology 169B:Research Theory and Methods in Social Cultural Anthropology |
| Ferme |
|
02645 |
This course is an introduction to research problems and research design techniques. Each participant will plan and conduct independent research of particular interest to her or himself. Weekly seminars will discuss the pragmatics, ethics, and philosophy of field research. The once-weekly sessions are divided between lecture and in-class workshops on research design and problem-solving. Lecture and section attendance is required for this course.
In preparation for the class, participants should begin to think through possible research projects. Ideal projects are first of all, feasible given the time you have: a semester. They address situations and problems that are interesting and important and that can be studied locally. Over the past two years, research sites and problems for this course have included topics as diverse as the practices remaking status and personal identity among Filipino migrants who take nursing positions to migrate to the United States; the forms of food discipline and body discipline undertaken by children training in ballet and how these help rethink current debates on eating disorders; the provision of food advice to Berkeley's homeless population and what this reveals about the organization of support services and their relation to different forms of power; and the study of how American military personnel make the transition back to civilian life, and what this reveals about military service as a form of labor and about the organization of labor today more generally.
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| Anthropology 179: Ethnography of the Maya |
| Hanks |
|
02654 |
This course introduces students to the anthropological study of Maya people in Southern Mexico, Guatemala and Belize. Necessarily selective, the course focuses on certain parts of the Maya region, emphasizing selected themes and problems. It is composed of three roughly equal modules, the first introducing the history and extent of the region (from the classic through the colonial period), the second focusing on rebellion in the region, and movements aimed at self-definition of Maya people by Maya people (with a focus on Chiapas and the Pan Mayan movement), and the third zeroing in on the ethnography of Yucatan. The Yucatan is one of the best studied parts of the Maya region, and will provide a case study through which to critically explore the models, methods and practices of ethnography. In the latter part of the semester, we will examine in detail aspects of contemporary Yucatecan ethnography, based on research over the past two decades by myself and others. In this phase, our focus will be the classic ethnographies of Redfield and Villa Rojas, the legacy of misunderstanding and objectification, and aspects of contemporary shamanic practice. The course will be a combination of lectures, film screenings and discussion.
Prerequisites: None. Reading knowledge of Spanish helpful but not required.
Requirements: There will be brief quizzes in weeks 4 and 12, a midterm in week 7, and a final exam at the assigned time during the exam period. Final grades will be calculated as follows: midterm exam (30%), final exam (40%), quizzes, careful reading, attendance and class participation (30%).
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| Anthropology 189.1: "Anthropology of Food " |
| Brandes / Hastorf |
|
02657 |
Food is necessary to stay alive, yet it is never consumed without being transformed by a social meaning and setting. Food is the backbone of society. Food is the foundation of every economy. Food marks social differences, boundaries, bonds and contradictions. Eating is a continual evolving enactment of gender, family, and community. We will think about how food-sharing creates solidarity, how food scarcity damages the human community and the human spirit. This course will focus on food and focus on a series of key topics within cultural food studies, including taboos, ritual, religion, health, alcohol use, social feasting, civilizing society through food use, and the global politics of food. Through a series of lectures, readings, movies, and projects we will explore the important yet perhaps un-noticed place of food in shaping our place in the world as well as those of all humans, through time. |
| Anthropology 189.2: "Cities of the Global South " |
| Holston |
|
02660 |
| Description not yet available.
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| Anthropology 189.3: |
| Staff |
|
|
| Topic and time
TBD. Please check back for details.
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| Anthropology 196: "Evolutionary Theories of Biology and Culture" |
| Deacon |
|
02840 |
Note: This course satisfies the Upper Division Biological requirement for the major.
Fast-paced advanced seminar on classic and current issues in biological
anthropology. Readings will include some basic background but primarily
will be drawn from current research papers in topic areas such as
evolutionary theory, human paleontology, human evolutionary genetics,
brain evolution, evolution of human cognition and language, species-unique
physiology, primate behavior and adaptation, and other relevant areas.
Students are expected to present critical seminar discussions of current
research papers and produce 4 written commentaries critically analyzing
primary sources.
Prerequisite: Open to advanced undergraduates and graduate students with at least 2
courses in biological anthropology or equivalent. Anthro 111 is strongly
recommended.
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Outside the Department (approved for use as major requirements)
| Integrative Biology 160 |
| Padian |
|
43303 |
An analysis of the patterns and processes of organic evolution. History and philosophy of evolutionary thought; the different lines of evidence and fields of inquiry that bear on the understanding of evolution. The major features and processes of evolution through geologic times; the generation of new forms and new lineages; extinction; population processes of selection, adaptation, and other forces; genetics, genomics, and the molecular basis of evolution; evolutionary developmental biology; sexual selection; behavorial evolution; applications of evolutionary biology to medical, agricultural, conservational, and anthropological research.
Prerequisites: Biology 1B or consent of instructor.
Note: This course satisfies the Upper Division Biological requirement for the major.
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| Integrative Biology 187 |
| Kirch |
|
43402 |
Modern Homo sapiens began crossing the water barrier of Wallacea into Australia
and Near Oceania during the Pleistocene, at least 40,000 years ago. Ultimately,
populations of H. sapiens spread all the way across the Pacific to colonize virtually every habitable island. This course examines this remarkable history of dispersal and expansion from the perspectives of biogeography and evolutionary ecology. H. sapiens, like any other species, faced problems of dispersal, colonization, and potential extinction, and adapted in a variety of ways to the diversity of insular ecosystems encountered. For humans, it is necessary to use a dual evolutionary model that takes into account cultural evolution and transmission, as well as biological evolution of human populations. This course also explores the impacts of human populations on the isolated and often fragile natural ecosystems of oceanic islands, and the reciprocal effects of anthropogenic change on human cultures.
Prerequisites: Evidence that student has mastered basic concepts in evolution and ecology (Anthro 1 and/or Bio 1B)
Note: This course satisfies the Upper Division Biological requirement for the major.
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Graduate Courses
| Anthropology 219: Adv. Med Anthro Seminar "Global Health" |
| Scheper-Hughes |
|
02971 |
Description not yet available.
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| Anthropology 229A: History & Theory of Archaeology |
| Conkey / Wilkie |
|
02972 |
This seminar is REQUIRED for all first-year graduate students in
anthropological archaeology and is open to other students in
anthropology and in other departments who are interested in the
history and theory of archaeological practice.
Emphasis is placed on significant developments and debates over the
last five decades that have shaped the field of anthropological
archaeology as we know it today. The seminar begins with an
historical overview of the approaches in archaeology that have been
labeled cultural historical, processual, and post-processual. The
last third of the seminar then considers intellectual issues and
topics that are shaping discourses in archaeology today. |
| Anthropology 229C : Writing the Field in Archaeology |
| Habu |
|
02975 |
Description coming soon! |
| Anthropology 230 : Special Topics: "Food Archaeology" |
| Hastorf |
|
02978 |
Description coming soon! |
| Anthropology 235 : Museum Anthropology: "Collectors and Collecting" |
| Jacknis |
|
03392 |
Description coming soon! |
| Anthropology 240A :Fundamentals of Anthropological Theory |
| Cohen / Ferme |
|
02981 |
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| Anthropology 250R: Dissertation Writing |
| Brandes |
|
02984 |
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| Anthropology 250X-1: "Orientalism/Occidentalism and Control" |
| Nader |
|
02987 |
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| Anthropology 250X-5: "America" |
| X. Liu |
|
02990 |
In response to the disciplinary call for developing "an anthropology of modernity," this seminar takes up "America" as a cultural Other and examines its ideological ramification for the world. "The predicament of culture" is not a cultural predicament; it is a problematic difficulty in relating ourselves to others; it is a difficulty in the production of cultural knowledge or knowledge of cultures. In trying to understand possible futures of our world, "America" has drawn our attention as both power and alienation. The more anthropologists studied other people; the more they came to realize the need for understanding the symbolic predominance of American vision and life for today. Such is the goal of this seminar: it will sort out a hierarchy of problems, both socio-historical and analytico-conceptual, that have made America "American," in order for us to understand some emerging global forms such as the fashion of neoliberalism. The seminar will focus on certain peculiar aspects of American life on the one hand and its vision or conception of liberty, justice, and governance on the other. The choice of readings, taken as a whole, should be seen an analytical exercise by which we hope to defamiliarize the contemporary world.
Required Texts (in the order of reading sequence):
Tocqueville, A. de. 2001[1835/40]. Democracy in America. (Abri. Heffner) Signet.
Nordau, M. 1993[1892]. Degeneration. U. Nebraska Press.
Veblen, T. 1994[1899]. The Theory of the Leisure Class. Penguin.
Lynd, R. S. & H. M. 1956[1929]. Middletown. Harvest.
Mills, C. Wright. 2000[1956]. The Power Elite. Oxford.
Riesman, D. 2001[1961]. The Lonely Crowd. Yale Nota Bene.
Lasch, C. 1996. The Revolt of the Elites. Norton.
Wilson, E. O. 1975. Sociobiology: The New Synthesis. Harvard.
Hayek, F. A. 2007. Constitution of Liberty. Routledge.
Rawls, J. 1999. A Theory of Justice. Harvard.
Harvey, D. 1990. The Condition of Postmodernity. Blackwell.
Huntington, S. P. 2002. The Clash of Civilizations. Harvard.
Bloom, A. 1987. The Closing of the American Mind. Simon and Schuster.
Baudrillard, J. 1986. Amerique. Grasset (Eng. Trans., Verso, 1988). |
| Anthropology 250X-6: "Globalization" |
| Ong |
|
02993 |
Description not yet available
|
| Anthropology 250X-7: "Anthropology of the Contemporary" |
| Rabinow |
|
02996 |
Description not yet available.
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| Anthropology 250X-8: "Postsocialism" |
| Yurchak |
|
02999 |
Description not yet available.
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| Anthropology 250X-9: "Race and Racism" |
| Moore |
|
03002 |
| Description not yet available. |
| Anthropology 250X-12: "Metropolis: Theory and Practice" |
| Holston |
|
03005 |
Description not yet available |
| Anthropology C262A: Theories of Traditionality and Modernity |
| Briggs |
|
03008 |
Cross listed with Folklore C262A.
Description not yet available. |
| Anthropology 280X: Special Topics/Area: "From Post-Classical Maya to Colonial Yucatan" |
| Hanks / Joyce |
|
03011 |
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| Anthropology 290-2 |
| Conkey |
|
03017 |
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| Anthropology 300: Teaching in Anthropology |
| Agarwal |
|
03257 |
NOTE: Required of all first-time GSIs appointed for 2008-2009 in Anthropology. This seminar introduces new GSIs to the theory and practice of teaching and learning within the discipline of Anthropology. By the end of this course, participants will be able to effectively foster small group discussions; organize and coach group work; develop test questions that advance learning; and evaluate student work consistently. Participants will also have developed an individual teaching philosophy, grouned in theoretical work related to teaching and learning, and will understand the implications of that teaching philosophy for practice. |
RELATED COURSES IN OTHER DEPARTMENTS
| Folklore C262A : Theories of Traditionality and Modernity |
| Briggs |
|
31903 |
Cross listed with Anthropology C262A.
Description not yet available.
|
Updated: April 23, 2008.
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