- AT50/5514 - Practical Anthropology and Archaeology
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Robert Wishart and Alex King
Pre-requisites
N/A
Co-requisites
Compulsory for students taking MSc. in Materialising the Past
Notes
Students will be able to interrogate the physical contexts in which anthropology and archaeology work best together.
They will learn the foundations of a research technique as applied to materials.
They will be able to deploy and adapt conceptual approaches as tools for analysing particular situations.
They will begin to develop their own interests in hands on research and learn how to apply theory and method to them.
Overview
This core course for the Anthropology and Archaeology M.Sc. is tailored around individual student interest in working with research materials. A plan will be developed between the course coordinators and each student to gain access to a research activity such as an excavation, a laboratory, or a museum/archive. After spending at least 20 hours at this activity, the student will write an assessed 3000 word report outlining what they did, the outcomes of the practicum and its application to anthropology and archaeology.
Structure
20 hours practicum, 3 hours supervision.
Assessment
100% coursework. 3000 word report
- AT50/5515 - Synergies and Debates in Anthropology and Archaeology
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Robert Wishart and Alex King
Pre-requisites
N/A
Notes
Students will be able to interrogate the contexts in which anthropology and archaeology work best together.
They will learn the foundations and theory of the synergies between anthropology and archaeology and where the come to points of strong debate.
They will learn particular conceptual and methodological approaches that arise out of shared interests between anthropology and archaeology.
They will be able to deploy and adapt conceptual approaches as tools for analysing particular situations.
They will learn how to read anthropological and archaeological works in depth, and to translate the understandings gained from that reading for different audiences and different purposes.
They will understand how and why the other courses in the programme contribute to their specific skills in anthropology and archaeology.
They will begin to develop their own interests and learn how to apply theory and method to them.
Overview
This core course for the Materialising the Past M.Sc. will be structured around several themes that introduce subjects of common interest to anthropology and archaeology while also providing a space to explore the dialogue between these sibling disciplines over their interpretation, usefulness and how, or even if, the disciplines should engage with them.
Lecture themes include the history of anthropology and archaeology as sibling disciplines; anthropological and archaeological notions of time and progress; socio-cultural evolution and its present day applications; ecology and adaptation; culture change and colonialism; material culture and enskillment; museums and public engagement; museums and the politics of collections (repatriation); socio-linguistics, orality and unpreserved forms of sociality; anthropology and archaeology in indigenous contexts; rescue archaeology and cultural resource management; the politics of the archaeological record.
Each one hour lecture will be followed by a one hour student lead seminar where the students can develop their interests and receive instant feedback from their cohort and the course coordinators on their research ideas.
Structure
1 hour lecture, 1 hour student interest driven seminar per week
Assessment
100% coursework, student will be assessed on one 6000 word essay on a subject that they will choose and develop with guidance over the duration of the course.
- AT50/5516 - Advanced Survey in the Anthropology of Myth
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Alexander King
Pre-requisites
N/A
Notes
Students will be able to identify a myth and explain how a particular story qualifies as a myth in its cultural contexts vis a vis other genres of stories.
Students will learn a wide range of anthropological approaches to myth. They will come to understand the breadth of global variation in the qualities of different myths in different cultures and the breadth of theoretical schools in the analysis of myths.
Students will learn how myths operate as performances in the context of their telling.
Students will learn how to interpret myths in the social and cultural context of their setting.
Students will learn how myths can be transformed as they move across cultures.
Overview
The anthropology of myth highlights the social and cultural contexts of myths as sacred narratives. This course draws upon a wide range of cultures, from ancient Greeks, Mesopotamia and China to contemporary Africa, Asia, and the indigenous peoples of the Americas. Boasian approaches to Native American myths as oral literature and windows into cultural values can be contrasted with the functionalist theories of Tylor and Malinowski. This course emphasizes the performative qualities of myth, drawing upon the work by Dell Hymes, Albert Lord, Dennis Tedlock, Claude Lévi-Strauss, Edmund Leach, Ruth Finnegan, Peter Gow and others. The course concludes with a discussion of the relevance of myth in contemporary society, such as found in the fiction by Tolkien or novels by Native American writers like Alexie, Silko, or Welch.
Structure
1 hour lecture, 1 hour tutorial per week
Assessment
100% One 6000 word essay
- AT50/5520 - Anthropology of the North
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Robert Wishart
Pre-requisites
N/A
Notes
The course will teach students to identify the main principles and issues in the anthropological theorising and ethnography of the North and apply them to specific research problems.
The course will communicate the ways in which anthropological approaches to northern peoples’ lifeways relate to intellectual and theoretical debates in Anthropology and related disciplines.
Students will demonstrate an advanced ability to critically interpret northernist anthropological sources and evaluate their relation to broader social and ideological processes and to theoretical principles and debates in anthropology.
Students will demonstrate a critical understanding of basic and contemporary anthropological concepts, principles, and terminology related to the Anthropology of the North.
Students will understand the process through which anthropological knowledge of a study area develops and changes.
Students will learn to critically analyse popular descriptions of the North and the people who live there that they encounter in their day-to-day lives and relate them to broader anthropological thinking.
The course will promote student study skills in writing analytical, critical essays that draw upon more diverse and advanced ethnographic sources.
Students will learn to formulate and express coherent and reasoned arguments in class discussions about the Anthropology of the North.
The course will engage students in the preparation of material for directing and participating in seminar discussions.
This course will promote self-directed learning by encouraging the students to identify and apply sources relevant to the Anthropology of the North.
Overview
This study of the Anthropology of the North will take advantage of lectures already being taught in the anthropology department at the 4th year level, but it will contain separate advanced seminars for the MSc students.
Each one hour lecture will be followed by a one hour student lead seminar where the students can develop their interests and receive instant feedback from their cohort and the course coordinators on their ideas.
Structure
1 hour lecture, 1 hour seminar per week
Assessment
100% coursework - One 6,000 essay
- AT50/5521 - Morality and Belief in Islam
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Johan Rasanayagam
Pre-requisites
N/A
Notes
Not running in 2013/14Overview
This course examines how Muslims engage with Islam as a system of morality and belief. It discusses the debates within Muslim societies about what constitutes ‘real’ Islam and how Muslims should conduct themselves. How does belief in Islam as a unitary, transcendent Truth, which is universal to all humanity, relate to the diverse manner in which Islam in actually lived in practice throughout the world? An important issue which will be explored in the course is that of subjectivity and selfhood within a Muslim context, and how we might approach the topic of belief itself.
Structure
One 1 hour lecture and one 1 hour seminar per week
Assessment
100% in-course assessment - 6,000 word essay
- AT5004/AT5504 - Anthropology, Archaeology, Art and Architecture for Design Anthropology
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Jo Vergunst/Prof Tim Ingold
Pre-requisites
N/A
Co-requisites
Concepts and Approaches in Design Anthropology
Notes
Not running in 2013/14Overview
This course will explore the connections between anthropology, archaeology, art and architecture, conceived as alternative approaches to understanding and shaping how people perceive and relate to their surroundings, in currents of space, time, and movement. We will focus on issues of perception, design and construction, on the generation and reproduction of form in natural and 'built' environments, on the relation between bodily movements and live time/space, on the significance of craft and skill, on activities, of depiction and description, and on impacts of old and new technologies. We will explore these issues through readings, practical exercises and site visits.
Structure
2 hour lecture, 1 hour individual supervision
Assessment
100% coursework
- AT5005/AT5505 - Anthropological Approaches to Knowledge Production for Design Anthropology
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Maggie Bolton
Pre-requisites
N/A
Co-requisites
Concepts and Approaches in Design Anthropology
Notes
Not running in 2013/14Overview
This course will explore some of the history, meanings, and uses of 'Intellectual Property', a concept of increasing importance in anthropology and beyond. The series of lectures and seminars will provide students with theoretical tools to approach contemporary issues of innovation, ownership, and the value placed upon knowledge. We ask, 'How is knowledge produced?; What are the connections people make between it and other items that can be owned?; How do precedents from one realm of production and ownership appear relevant in another?' The lectures will cover literature from Classical Political Economy, Political Philosophy, Economic Anthropology, and international precedents for attributing authorship and cultural rights to persons and groups. Part of the course will be dedicated to literature within Science and Technology Studies, and studies of Biodivesity, and Genetics, and of software production. The underlying theme is to expose some of the consequences of liberal individualism for the structure and politics on contemporary social realities.
Structure
1 hour lecture and 1 hour individual supervision per week.
Assessment
100% coursework
- AT5007/AT5507 - Materials, Technology and Power in the Andean Region
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Maggie Bolton
Pre-requisites
N/A
Co-requisites
Concepts and Approaches in Design Anthropology
Overview
The theoretical focus of this course is on technology and uses of materials and the way that these intersect with questions of political power. Theoretical concerns are addressed by introducing the anthropology of the Andean region - with the rationale that approaches to working with materials in this region differed markedly from those of Europe until (and also beyond) the Spanish conquest of the 16th century. Different areas of technology and material culture are addressed through examining both historical material and contemporary ethnographic studies - from pre-Hispanic metallurgy to contemporary agricultural development and the role of scientifically trained experts in bringing about changes in practices. Four main technological areas are addressed in the course: mining and metallurgy; fibres and Andean textuality; medicine and the body and working the land.
Structure
1 hour lecture and 1 hour individual supervision per week.
Assessment
100% coursework
- AT5008 - Religion, Power and Belief
-
- Credit Points
- Course Coordinator
- Johan Rasanayagam
Pre-requisites
N/A
Notes
Not running 2013/14Overview
Students will critically investigate the concepts of religion and belief, and the articulation of religion and power.
Students will interrogate the concept of religion, explore contrasting theories of religion and ritual, discuss the interface of religion, power and violence, and critically explore the concept of belief. This course will take a seminar form, led by students and facilitated by a member of staff.Structure
One 2 hour seminar per week
Assessment
5000 word essay (100% in-course assessment)
- AT5009 - Oral Traditions in the Modern World
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Alex King and Nancy Wachowich
Pre-requisites
N/A
Notes
Students will learn the complex variety and forms of narrative. They will gain an understanding the key theoretical positions of importance in the anthropology of oral traditions. Students will use insights from the literature to analyse critically an original text, either written or an oral form.Overview
From charter myths and epics to reminiscences and eyewitiness accounts, stories are an integral part of talk and the sociality of everyday life. Oral traditions have a social life situated in the nexus of relationships among persons. The anthropology of oral traditions focuses on historical oral narratives and the interplay between orality and textuality in contemporary social life. Analysis proceeds from the assumption that form and content are intertwined in the production of meaning and that an attention to performance and medium is important to understanding the message. This course will be of interest to anthropology students, as well as to students in linguistics and history.
Structure
1 one hour lecture and 1 one hour tutorial per week.
Assessment
100% coursework - 6000 word essay
- AT5010/5510 - Anthropology and Landscape
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Andrew Whitehouse
Pre-requisites
N/A
Notes
Not running 2013/14Overview
At the end of the course, students should be able to:
• demonstrate understanding of major theoretical approaches to landscape in anthropology.
• produce coherent and reasoned arguments in written work and class discussions about topics related to the landscape in anthropology.
• demonstrate a critical understanding of empirical research related to the ethnography of landscape.
• show an understanding of the importance of a comparative and critical approach to studying landscape.
• effectively use the library and other information sources to research relevant theoretical and empirical material.
• prepare material for leading and participating in seminar discussions.
• work with fellow students in organising seminars and in commenting on each other’s work.
• engage in self-directed learning, assisted by some formal guidance.
• use a reflexive approach in their own work, involving balanced self-criticism and intellectual progression.
The aim of the course is to address the relevance of landscape to method and theory in anthropology. It will allow students to draw upon analytical skills and knowledge gained in previous courses, and develop an anthropological approach to landscape in ethnography and human-environment relations. The course will creatively explore the tensions and overlaps between landscape as physical landform, as scenery, and as the site of human activities and journeys. Developing advanced themes in environmental anthropology, we will discuss the central place of landscape in ethnography. Topics covered include movement, memory and time, phenomenology and aesthetics. The course will draw on a wide range of materials including recent ethnographic and theoretical work in anthropology, and also texts from geography, environmental history and nature writing. Students will also be encouraged to consider art and photography that deals with landscape.Structure
1 one-hour lecture and 1 one-hour tutorial per week, to be arranged.
Assessment
In-course assessment 100%.
- AT5012/5512 - Religion and the Secular
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Johan Rasanayagam
Pre-requisites
Available to students in level 5 only.
Notes
Not running in 2013/14Overview
This course will interrogate the utility of the category of “religion” and will look at the broadest politics of the category of “religion” and how it becomes distinguished from the “secular”. How have these categories emerged through the history of ideas and political institutions?
Structure
One 2-hour seminar every 2 weeks.
Assessment
One 3,000 word essay.
- AT5013 - Understanding People and Environment
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Andrew Whitehouse
Pre-requisites
N/A
Co-requisites
Compulsory course for students taking the MSc People and Environment
Notes
Students will gain:
• An appreciation of the history, themes and debates within environmental anthropology.
• An appreciation of how anthropology can contribute in distinctive ways to an understanding of environmental issues and questions and also how it can intersect with other disciplines.
• A grounding in core areas of expertise in environmental and ecological anthropology at Aberdeen.
• An understanding of methodological and theoretical approaches in environmental anthropology.
• An opportunity to read a wide range of texts in the field in depth and to develop an appreciation of how to scrutinise, adapt and communicate the ideas contained within.
• A chance to develop their own interests within the field in a coordinated manner that intersects with staff interests within the department.
• An opportunity to develop general anthropological and academic skills in reading, interpretation, oral presentation and writing.
Overview
This core course for the MSc in People and Environment will be structured around four sections. The first section will provide an introduction to ecological and environmental anthropology, exploring key issues, theories and debates in the history of the field. The remaining three sections will focus on three broad sub-themes: environmental perception, human-animal relations and anthropology and conservation. These are areas of particular research strength at Aberdeen but between them they also draw on a wide range of approaches and themes, including phenomenology, political ecology, indigenous rights, applied anthropology and aesthetics.
Structure
One hour seminar and one hour student-led tutorial per week; occasional short field trips within northeast Scotland (sites will be selected to be accessible to students with disabilities, if necessary).
Assessment
100% - Three 2000 word essays
- AT5017/5517 - ROADS: MOBILITY, MOVEMENT, MIGRATION
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Tatiana Argounova-Low
Pre-requisites
Admission to postgraduate degree in the College of Arts and Social Sciences
Notes
At the end of the course the students should be able to:
- demonstrate a critical understanding of empirical research related to study of roads, movement, mobility, and migration;
- understand major theoretical approaches to the anthropology of roads;
- produce coherent and reasoned arguments in written work and class discussions about topics related to the anthropology of roads and subsequent themes.
Overview
This course explores the phenomenon of roads and focuses on the relationship between roads and other anthropological concepts, such as landscape, environment, narrative, knowledge and memory, gradually building up towards theoretical conceptualization of roads. The course will deal with the themes of mobility and migration, topical issues in contemporary world. The course will mainly rely on ethnographic material from the North, including Scotland.
Structure
One hour lecture and one hour tutorial per week.
Assessment
Continuous assessment: one 6000 word essay.
- AT5018/5518 - The North American Plains: Representations, Politics and Social Life
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Alison Brown
Pre-requisites
N/A
Notes
At the end of the course, students should be able to: demonstrate understanding of major theoretical approaches in the anthropology of representation; produce coherent and reasoned arguments in written work and class discussions about topics related to the anthropology of representation; demonstrate a critical understanding of empirical research related to the ethnography of Plains First Nations; show an understanding of the importance of a comparative and critical approach to considering aspects of cultural representation; effectively use the library and other information sources such as museums, websites, popular media and archives to research relevant theoretical and empirical material; prepare material for leading and participating in seminar discussions; work with fellow students in organising seminars and in commenting on each other’s work; engage in self-directed learning, assisted by some formal guidance; use a reflexive approach in their own work, involving balanced self-criticism and intellectual progression.
Overview
The interplay between cultural representation and the construction of identity has long been of interest to anthropologists and cultural historians. The Native peoples of the Plains region of North America have arguably been subjected to more cultural stereotyping than any other indigenous group; popular representations include warriors and princesses, the ‘stoic Indian’, and the ‘ecological Indian’. Through a study of contemporary issues, the lectures and seminars will consider how the tensions created by these imaginaries are negotiated by Native peoples on the Plains today as well as how they feed into broader anthropological concerns relating to the politics of representation. Themes to be covered include the impact of stereotypes; sovereignty; the social and political implications of defining ‘Indianness’; new economic developments and cultural tourism.
Structure
1 one-hour lecture and 1 one-hour tutorial per week, to be arranged.
Assessment
100% continuous assessment - an essay of 6000 words.
- AT5024 - Philosophy and Methods of Research in Social Anthropology 1
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Jo Vergunst
Pre-requisites
Only available to registered postgraduate students.
Notes
This course is to be taken along with AT5524Overview
This course introduces key issues of philosophy, theory and method raised by research in the related fields of social anthropology, ethnology and cultural history,
Structure
This course will allow students to become familiar with the approach to anthropology and allied disciplines taken by staff at Aberdeen.
Assessment
- AT5026/AT5526 - The Museum Idea
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Neil Curtis
Pre-requisites
N/A
Overview
This core course for the MLitt in Museum Studies will be structured in two blocks. The first block will focus on the history and philosophy of museums and collecting, while the second block will relate these theoretical positions to contemporary museum practice, drawing on fieldwork undertaken in galleries and museums. Many taught sessions will be held in the University’s museums, including display areas, conservation workshop and reserve collections. A field trip (to e.g. Dundee or Edinburgh) will include an opportunity to evaluate another museum and meet with other professional museum staff. Each two-hour seminar will be followed by a one hour student lead seminar where the students can develop their interests.
Structure
1 x 2 hour seminar per week; 1 x 1 hour student interest driven seminar per week; 1 x one-day field trip (6 hours).
Assessment
100% coursework. One 4,000 word essay (60%), one 20-minute oral presentation (10%) and one 2,000 word critical review of a museum (30%).
- AT5027/AT5527 - Anthropological Theory for MSc
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Arnar Arnason
Pre-requisites
N/A
Overview
This course explores theoretical issues and key debates in contemporary anthropology. We begin by establishing a broad overview of theoretical developments in anthropology. We will then review how the central concepts of culture and society were rethought in anthropology during the 1980s. Following on from this, we ask the questions that underlie the discussions during the course: how can anthropology proceed if the targets of its investigation can no longer be understood as objective entities? How can anthropology proceed if the anthropologist themeselves is inevitably implicated in and part of those very targets? To look for possible answers, the course examines current anthropological interest in power and history, political economy and phenomenology, experience, embodiment and practice. While the intent is theoretical these issues and debates will be explored largely through ethnographic writing on such subjects as emotions and the body, genetics and reproduction, personhood and politics, death, memory and forgetting. Emphasis will be placed on encouraging students to apply theoretical insights from anthropology to their everyday lives and the world around them.
Structure
1 hour lecture and 1 hour small groups per week.
Assessment
100% coursework.
- AT5029 - Supervised Reading I
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Jo Vergunst
Pre-requisites
Only available to registered postgraduate students.
Overview
The course comprises a programme of readings that will be devised in advance through consultation between student and supervisor, in light of the student’s intended research interests.
Structure
Personal supervision, averaging 2 hours per week throughout all teaching weeks of one half-session.
Assessment
One essay of 3,000 words.
- AT5030/AT5530 - More than Human
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Andrew Whitehouse
Pre-requisites
N/A
Overview
The course is focussed on relations between humans and nonhumans, particularly animals and plants. A range of disciplinary approaches will be explored, including history, cultural geography, natural science and science and technology studies, as well as anthropology. The course will involve advanced themes in environmental anthropology and will examine research that has emerged during the recent ‘more-than-human’ trend in the social sciences and humanities. Topics covered will include the role of the more-than-human in the development of social theory, hunting and its rituals, science and the politics and ethics of the nonhuman, nonhumans in art and the media, how humans perceive nonhumans and the wider implications of a more-than-human anthropology.
Structure
One one-hour lecture and one one-hour tutorial for MSc students per week.
Assessment
Continuous assessment: two 3000-word essays, each weighted 30%, and one 4000-word project, weighted 40%.
- AT5508 - Curating an Exhibition
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Mr Neil Curtis
Pre-requisites
Available only to registered postgraduate students
Overview
This course will afford students the opportunity to work with Aberdeen's extensive museum collections and rare book collections to design and execute an exhibition with both a physical and virtual presence.
Structure
Assessment
One design brief (30%); one group exhibition (30%); one individual portfolio, including a 3,500 word reflexive essay (40%).
- AT5509 - Reading Environmental Ethnography
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Jo Vergunst
Pre-requisites
N/A
Co-requisites
Compulsory for students taking MSc People and Environment
Notes
Students will gain:
• A growing appreciation of the history, themes and debates within environmental anthropology through the reading, comparison and discussion of book-length ethnographic texts.
• An understanding of how anthropology can contribute in distinctive ways to the study of environmental issues and questions through examining a series of in-depth ethnographic case studies.
• A greater insight into how to conduct research in environmental anthropology, how to write ethnography and how to read and compare different anthropological texts.
Overview
The course will be based around students reading approximately six contemporary environmental ethnographies. Texts will be selected to cover a range of issues, styles and approaches and students will read each successively as the course progresses. A seminar will be held every fortnight to allow students to discuss each work in depth together with a tutor. Students will be assessed through a comparative essay that discusses a number of the texts featured in the course.
Structure
Six two-hour seminars to take place fortnightly during the twelve-week semester.
Assessment
100% coursework: Two 2000 word essays (50% each)
- AT5511 - Dissertation Preparation Seminar
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Martin Mills
Pre-requisites
N/A
Notes
By the end of the course students should be able to:
Identify a research question
Identify and review relevant literature
Critically read and respond to texts
Develop a structure for the dissertation
Understand conventions for referencing, footnoting and compiling bibliographies
Understand the process of researching and writing a dissertation
Overview
Though a series of seminars, students will learn how to identify a suitable question for their dissertation, and identify and review the relevant literature in libraries and through on-line databases. The course will discuss how dissertations might be structured, how conceptual frames or theory might relate to ethnography, as well as conventions for footnoting, referencing and bibliographies
Structure
Six 2 hour tutorials over the 12 week semester, one every two weeks.
Assessment
100% continual assessment:
- AT5513 - Work Placement for MSc in People and Environment
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Jo Vergunst
Pre-requisites
AT5013 Understanding People and Environment.
Overview
This course consists of a six-week full-time work placement or a twelve-week part-time placement in a working context related to the field of environmental anthropology. Partner organisations will be based in northeast Scotland. Possible organisations include the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, the Forestry Commission, Scottish Natural Heritage, the John Muir Trust, Aberdeen City Council and the Scottish Environment Protection Agency. Work projects for students will be negotiated with these organisations. Students will meet regularly with a supervisor within the Department of Anthropology to discuss their placement and will write a report, which will form the basis of assessment.
Structure
No formal classes are required for the course, but students will have regular meetings with a supervisor in the Department of Anthropology both before and after the work placement. At these meetings a decision will be made on the most appropriate placement for the student and the student will also be given guidance on writing their report.
Assessment
5000-word report (100%).
- AT5519 - Culture and Society in Latin America
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Maggie Bolton
Pre-requisites
N/A
Overview
This course provides a more in-depth coverage of issues of culture and society in Latin America than the MSc core course Themes in Latin American Studies, although the course will also be available for students of other MSc and MRes programmes, pending approval of the course coordinator. The course will cover a range of topics from the anthropology of indigenous and non-indigenous societies to colonial and modern history and contemporary literature and film. This will also introduce students to a wide range of approaches to Latin American Studies, especially those of anthropology, of history, and of literary and cultural studies.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week
Assessment
Continuous assessment: 100%: 2 x 3,000 word essays (50% each)
- AT5524 - Philosophy and Methods of Research in Social Anthropology 2
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Johan Rasanayagam
Pre-requisites
Only available to registered postgraduate students.
Notes
This course must be taken along with AT5024.Overview
This course introduces key issues of philosophy, theory and method raised by research in the related fields of social anthropology, ethnology and cultural history.
Structure
This course will allow students to become familiar with the approach to anthropology and allied disciplines taken by staff at Aberdeen.
Assessment
- AT5525 - Dissertation in Social Anthropology
-
- Credit Points
- 60
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Jo Vergunst
Pre-requisites
N/A
Overview
The dissertation is a substantial piece of independent research and writing. In it, students will demonstrate the extent to which they have achieved the critical learning outcomes from their year of research training.
Structure
Assessment
- AT5528 - Society and Nature for MSc Degrees
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Robert Wishart
Pre-requisites
N/A
Overview
The course interrogates the distinction between society and nature by examining several topics including wildlife management, protected places, ritual regulation, climate change, energy, and animal rights. Each topic will be examined to provide a historical examination of anthropology’s engagement with it as well as the challenges it presents today.
Structure
1 hour lecture and 1 hour tutorial per week.
Assessment
Continuous assessment (100%): 2 essays of 2500 words.
- AT5529 - Supervised Reading II
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Jo Vergunst
Pre-requisites
Only available to registered postgraduate students.
Overview
The course comprises a programme of readings that will be devised in advance through consultation between student and supervisor, in light of the student’s intended research interests.
Structure
Personal supervision, averaging 2 hours per week throughout all teaching weeks of one half-session.
Assessment
One essay of 3,000 words.
- AT5902 - Dissertation in People and Environment
-
- Credit Points
- 60
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Jo Vergunst
Pre-requisites
N/A
Co-requisites
Compulsory for students on MSc People and Environment
Notes
Students should:
- demonstrate a grasp of the major anthropological approaches to environmental anthropology.
- demonstrate a capacity to assess critically these approaches.
- demonstrate the skills of critical reasoning and argument in an extended piece of writing.
- conduct independent research and report on it.
Overview
Independent research leading to a 10-12,000 word dissertation
Structure
Independent research project
The students will be prepared for this in a separate course entitled ‘Dissertation project seminar’. Supervision will also be provided by an appropriate member of staff.
Assessment
100% coursework – 12,000 word thesis.
- AT5905 - Dissertation: Latin American Studies
-
- Credit Points
- 60
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Maggie Bolton
Pre-requisites
Available only to students registered on the MSc in Latin American Studies
Overview
Students who meet the necessary requirements proceed to the 12-15,000 word dissertation, which is a compulsory part of the MSc in Latin American Studies. It enables students to pursue in-depth knowledge and original research on a topic of the culture, society, politics or international relations of Latin America, subject to approval of the teaching staff. The dissertation is designed to allow students to extend an interest in some aspect of the degree and to have experience in formulating, designing and conducting their own research investigation. Students will be prepared for this by the core and elective courses of the MSc programme, by one 2-hour seminar of dissertation-writing training, and by individual supervision.
Structure
One two-hour workshop in second half-session, followed by independent research under individual supervision.
Assessment
Dissertation, 12-15,000 words: 100%
- AT5906 - Scottish Training in Anthropological Research (STAR)
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- To be confirmed
Pre-requisites
Only available to students taking the MRes in Social Anthropology, Ethnology and Cultural History.
Overview
Students will take part in a series of lectures, seminars and workshops related to anthropological methods and disciplinary practice. Specific topics will vary from year to year but may include participant observation, fieldnotes, documentary research and the ethics and politics of anthropological research.
Structure
One full time working week, from Monday to Friday.
Assessment
Full participation at the STAR event, including presentation of group work. Assessment will be marked on a pass/fail basis.
- AT5907 - Dissertation in Anthropology of Religion
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- Credit Points
- 60
- Course Coordinator
- Johan Rasanayagam
Pre-requisites
N/A
Notes
Not running in 2013/14Overview
Students will make use of the knowledge and critical understanding gained through participation in the MSc Anthropology of Religion to identify a research topic for the dissertation, conduct library based research, and produce an analysis in the form of a 10-12,000 word dissertation.
Independent research leading to a 10-12,000 word dissertationStructure
Independent research project
The students will be prepared for this in a separate course entitled ‘Dissertation project seminar’.
Assessment
10-12,000 word dissertation
- AT5908 - Museum Studies Dissertation
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- Credit Points
- 60
- Course Coordinator
- Neil Curtis
Pre-requisites
N/A
Overview
This course builds on the skills and knowledge acquired in taught courses in the MLitt Museums Studies programme. In completing their dissertation, students will be expected to demonstrate that they can conduct advanced library research, prepare extensive literature reviews situating their research question in its wider academic and professional context and write and edit large pieces of work. In addition, they will be required to prepare abstracts and bibliographies and assess the ethical issues involved in original research. All students will receive staff supervision in identifying a suitable topic and in completing an original research project.
Structure
6 x 1 hour one-to-one tutorials plus other support as appropriate.
Assessment
12,000 word dissertation (100%).
- AT5909 - Museum Studies Project
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- Credit Points
- 60
- Course Coordinator
- Neil Curtis
Pre-requisites
N/A
Overview
This course builds on the skills and knowledge acquired in taught courses in the MLitt Museums Studies programme. In completing their project, students will be expected successfully complete a minimum 20 day placement in a relevant museum or art gallery (to be approved in advance by the course co-ordinator) and identify a topic for study during their placement. The written project will demonstrate that they can conduct advanced library research, prepare literature reviews situating their project in its wider academic and professional context and write and edit large pieces of work. In addition, they will be required to assess the ethical issues involved in original research and working with the public. All students will receive staff supervision in identifying a suitable topic and in completing a project.
Structure
4 x 1 hour one-to-one tutorials plus other support as appropriate.
Assessment
8,000 word project (100%), following a successful approved placement of at least 20 days in a museum or art gallery.
- SL5010/SL5510 - Principles of Research Design
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Jo Vergunst
Pre-requisites
N/A
Overview
This course introduces students to the principles of research design in the social sciences. What constitutes valid and reliable research at the postgraduate and post-doctoral level? How do we: choose a research topic; focus it down into something that will make a serious contribution to the field; identify the substantive, theoretical and methodological possibilities for carrying out our research; and turn these into practical methods that will answer our questions ethically, effectively and efficiently? Students will address these questions a step-by-step process, working on a project chosen in discussion with course co-ordinator.
Structure
One 2-hour session per week.
Assessment
Completion of a research design workbook, usually 3000 words.