Level 1
- AT 1002 - INTRODUCTION TO ANTHROPOLOGY 1
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- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr N Wachowich
Pre-requisites
None
Overview
Anthropology is the comparative study of human ways of life. In this course we introduce some of the key questions of contemporary anthropological debate. How do societies define their kin and what do we mean by 'blood relations'? How does culture effect the way we think about sex and gender? Do economic systems shape our perceptions of the world? How do symbols, rituals, and religious systems regulate our daily lives? How has colonialism affected social relations between peoples and structured our notions of racial differences? What are the causes of ethnicity and nationalism? Does development aid or abet the plight of third-world or indigenous peoples? These themes will be illustrated through readings and films.
Structure
2 one-hour lectures and 1 one-hour tutorial per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 two-hour examination (60%), in-course assessment (30%) and tutorial participation grade (10%).
Resit: 1 two-hour examination if tutorial participation grade is a pass.
- AT 1501 - INTRODUCTION TO ANTHROPOLOGY 2
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- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr T Argounova-Low
Pre-requisites
None
Overview
This course continues the exploration of key questions of contemporary anthropological debate alread begun in 'Introduction to Anthropology I'. Does human nature exist and, if so, how does it relate to cultural variation? How do human beings differ from other animals? How do they make a living? Why do people differ in the ways in which they perceive their environments? What is the relation between the ways people talk and the ways they think? How do they grow up to become knowledeable members of their communities? How, if at all, does traditional knowledge differ from modern science? Can anthropology itself be scientific, or is it more like an art?
Structure
2 one-hour lectures and 1 one-hour tutorial per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 two-hour examination (60%), in-course assessment (30%) and tutorial participation grade (10%).
Resit: 1 two-hour examination (100%) if tutorial participation grade is a pass.
Level 2
- AT 2002 - PERCEIVING CULTURAL DIFFERENCE
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr N Porath
Pre-requisites
Overview
This course builds on 'Introduction to Anthropology 1' and 'Introduction to Anthropology 2' by focusing on kinship, gender and social relatedness, symbols and metaphors, ways of speaking, the relations between how people talk and how they think, language and the study of signs, and power and ethnicity. The course also provides basic training in anthropological writing and bibliographic research.
Structure
2 one-hour lectures and 1 one-hour tutorial per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 two-hour examination (60%), in-course assessment (30%) and tutorial participation grade (10%).
Resit: 1 two-hour examination (100%) if tutorial participation grade is a pass.
- AT 2507 - CULTURE, HISTORY AND ANTHROPOLOGY
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr E Hallam
Pre-requisites
Overview
The course explores key social, cultural and political issues in an anthropological and historical framework. Focusing on Europe from the sixteenth Century to the present day, the following themes are examined through case studies and cross-cultural comparison: travel and cultural encounters; emotion, sexuality and identity; gender and the body; ritual and belief; power and protest; popular culture and festivity; museums, art and material culture. An important aspect of the course is the use and interpretation of textual and visual materials – printed images, material artefacts and photographs, including those held in local collections.
Structure
2 one-hour lectures and 1 one-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 two-hour examination (60%), in-course assessment (30%) and tutorial participation grade (10%).
Resit: 1 two-hour examination (100%) if tutorial participation grade is a pass.
Level 3
- AT 3006 - DOING ANTHROPOLICAL RESEARCH
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr A Arnason
Pre-requisites
AT 2002 and AT 2507 or by permission of the Head of Department.
Notes
This course will normally be available only to single honours or designated degree students in Anthropology.
Overview
This course provides an introduction to the formulation of anthropological research questions and research design, discusses anthropological practice in the context of current issues in the philosophy of social science and language, deals with key questions surrounding fieldwork and participant observation, reviews a range of auxiliary study methods and practical techniques of data collection - including audio-recording and ethnographic film - and examines some of the gender implications and political and ethical issues raised by anthropological research.
Structure
2 one-hour lectures and 1 one-hour tutorial per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 three-hour examination (40%), research proposal (10%), research assignment (30%) and essay (20%).
Resit: 1 three-hour examination (40%), research proposal (10%), research assignment (30%) and essay (20%).
- AT 3018 - SOCIETY AND NATURE
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr A Whitehouse
Pre-requisites
AT 2002 and AT 2507 or by permission of the Head of Department.
Overview
This course examines how the guiding ideas of Western thought and science have emerged historically out of European encounters with the indigenous inhabitants of other lands, and how these ideas have, in turn, influenced contemporary anthropological understandings of ‘other cultures’. We will focus, in particular, on ways of describing and analysing the relations between people and their environment, and between human beings and non-human animals. Through a review of the ways in which the concept of society has been set against that of nature in the work of several prominent anthropologists, the course will lay foundations for subsequent study of history of anthropological thought, while also introducing students to basic techniques of genealogical inquiry, library research and ethnographical writing.
Structure
2 one-hour lectures and 1 one-hour tutorial per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 three-hour examination (60%) and in-course assessment: one essay (40%).
Resit: 1 three-hour examination (100%) unless candidate opts to carry forward internal assessment mark.
- AT 3501 - ANTHROPOLOGICAL THEORY
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr J Rasanayagam
Pre-requisites
AT 3018 or by permission of the Head of Department.
Overview
This course explores the development and contemporary significance of the theoretical debate surrounding the nature of culture and social life, through a critical review of the work of three major figures in the history of anthropology: Emile Durkheim, Marcel Mauss and Claude Lévi-Strauss. Along the way, we shall introduce the writings of many other pioneers of anthropological thought of the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries, including Herbert Spencer, Franz Boas, Ferdinand de Saussure, A R Radcliffe-Brown, Bronislaw Malinowski, Louis Dumont, Edmund Leach, Meyer Fortes and Mary Douglas. The course will be organised thematically rather than chronologically, with the emphasis on society and social life in earlier sections, and on culture and systems of thought in later ones. This division is not absolute, however, and the transition from one focus to the other is gradual.
Structure
2 one-hour lectures and 1 one-hour tutorial per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 three-hour examination (60%) and in-course assessment (40%).
Resit: 1 three-hour examination (100%) unless candidate opts to carry forward internal assessment mark.
- AT 3503 - WRITING ANTHROPOLOGY
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- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr A Whitehouse
Pre-requisites
AT 3006 or by permission of the Head of Department.
Notes
This course will normally be available only to Single Honours students in Anthropology.
Overview
This course deals with some of the issues involved in writing up the results of an original project of anthropological research. We consider the relative merits of alternative styles of writing for the presentation of qualitative material derived from informal interviews and participant observation, including issues of narrative and representation, tense and voice, and reflexivity. We also look at techniques of drafting and editing, including the preparation of abstracts and bibliographies, and the use of footnotes, references, figures and diagrams. The course also introduces students to the workings of the peer review process, and to the steps that lead from writing to publication.
Structure
1 two-hour lecture/seminar per fortnight with 1 one-hour tutorial per fortnight in alternate weeks.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment (100%).
Resit: Project (100%).
- AT 3517 - ANTHROPOLOGY RESEARCH PROJECT PART 1
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- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr T Argounova-Low
Pre-requisites
AT 3006 or by permission of the Head of Department.
Notes
This course will only be available to Single Honours students in Anthropology.
Overview
Under close supervision of a member of staff, students develop a research project involving the collection and analysis of original material. In this part of the project, students clarify the problem to be addressed, placing it in its wider comparative and theoretical context. They review the literature relevant to the project and consider the approach and techniques to be adopted in carrying it out.
Structure
A number of ad hoc workshops.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment (100%).
Resit: Project (100%).
Level 4
- AT 4005 - ANTHROPOLOGY RESEARCH PROJECT PART 2
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr A Whitehouse
Pre-requisites
AT 3517 or by permission of the Head of Department.
Notes
This course will normally only be available Single Honours students in Anthropology.
Overview
In this part of the project, students analyse the material collected and, under the guidance of a member of staff, write the final report. The techniques of analysis vary with the nature of the research problem; however all students are guided in the arts of critical analysis, report planning and report writing. As in Part 1, particular emphasis is placed on helping students develop their own skills.
Structure
1 tutorial per fortnight.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment (100%).
Resit (for Honours students only): Candidates achieving a CAS mark of 6-8 may be awarded compensatory level 1 credit. Candidates achieving a CAS mark of less than 6 will be required to submit themselves for re-assessment and should contact the Course Co-ordinator for further details.
- AT 4007 - CARNIVAL: CULTURAL POLITICS AND SOCIAL CHANGE
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr E Hallam
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 4.
Notes
Not available in session 2005/2006.
Overview
This course focuses upon anthropological and historical studies of carnival. It explores the experience and interpretation of carnival and the carnivalesque in different social and cultural contexts including Europe, Africa and South America. There are several central themes: festivity, cultural performance and display; the body and sexuality; disguise and identity; gender relations; power, resistance and subversion; order and disorder; ritual and symbolism; violence and abuse. The course draws upon a range of media including film, visual images and texts.
Structure
1 one-hour lecture and 1 one-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 three-hour examination (60%) and essays (40%).
Resit (for Honours students only): Candidates achieving a CAS mark of 6-8 may be awarded compensatory level 1 credit. Candidates achieving a CAS mark of less than 6 will be required to submit themselves for re-assessment and should contact the Course Co-ordinator for further details.
- AT 4008 / AT 4508 - ABORIGINAL RIGHTS IN A GLOBAL CONTEXT
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr N Porath
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 4.
Notes
This course be available in the first half-session of 2005/06 as AT 4008; it is also coded as AT 4508.
Overview
This course examines the concept of aboriginal rights as understood and practised in places colonised by the British, the Russians and the Spanish. Examples are drawn from Australia, New Zealand, Russia, Brazil and Peru. In seminars and written work, students are asked to draw comparisons between these regions. Through examining concrete political struggles, the seminar focuses upon symbolic and cross-cultural understandings of legal ideas within various colonial situations. This comparative approach leads to a critical understanding of fourth world politics, human rights, land tenure, symbolic resistance, religious syncretism and national identity.
Structure
1 one-hour lecture and 1 one-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Examination (60%) and in-course assessment (40%).
Resit (for Honours students only): Candidates achieving a CAS mark of 6-8 may be awarded compensatory level 1 credit. Candidates achieving a CAS mark of less than 6 will be required to submit themselves for re-assessment and should contact the Course Co-ordinator for further details.
- AT 4009/AT 4509 - ANTHROPOLOGY OF THE NORTH
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr R Wishart
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 4.
Notes
This course will be available in the second half-session of 2005/06 as AT 4509; it is also coded as AT 4009.
Overview
This course examines the cultures of the circumpolar Arctic and sub-Arctic, and the history of their ethnographic study, by reference to various metaphors that have been used to unite diverse areas of the circumpolar region. The central themes include ideas of the person, models of ecology, distinctive ideas of social power, ritual specialisation ('shamanism'), and national identity. The study of circumpolar ethnography is also put into the context of the history of colonisation on the following imperial frontiers: Siberia, Scandinavia, Greenland, the Canadian Eastern Arctic, the Canadian Sub-Arctic, and Alaska.
Structure
1 one-hour lecture and 1 one-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Examination (60%) and in-course assessment (40%).
Resit (for Honours students only): Candidates achieving a CAS mark of 6-8 may be awarded compensatory level 1 credit. Candidates achieving a CAS mark of less than 6 will be required to submit themselves for re-assessment and should contact the Course Co-ordinator for further details.
- AT 4010 / AT 4510 - INDIGENOUS MEDIA: CULTURE MAKING AND ANTHROPOLOGICAL KNOWLEDGE
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr N Wachowich
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 4.
Notes
This course will be available in the first half-session in 2005/06, as AT 4010; it is also coded as AT 4510.
Overview
This course critically examines representations of indigenous peoples as they occur through such media as: ethnographic films, museums, art, photography and the internet. It addresses the history and politics of colonial representations as well as the contemporary, politicised efforts of indigenous peoples to gain control over their own cultural productions. Students critically analyse anthropological issues related to visual anthropology, performance theory, ethnographic film and museum studies. They explore how visual representations of indigenous cultures emerge in particular contexts and political economics. Questions raised in the course relate to social theory, to anthropological knowledge construction, to ethical and political concerns raised by cross-cultural representation, and to the role that visual media play in facilitating, mediating, but also complicating intercultural encounters.
Structure
1 one-hour lecture and 2 hour lab per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 three-hour examination (60%) and in-course assessment (40%).
Resit (for Honours students only): Candidates achieving a CAS mark of 6-8 may be awarded compensatory level 1 credit. Candidates achieving a CAS mark of less than 6 will be required to submit themselves for re-assessment and should contact the Course Co-ordinator for further details.
- AT 4011 / AT 4511 - THE FOUR A'S: ANTHROPOLOGY, ARCHAEOLOGY, ART AND ARCHITECTURE
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Professor T Ingold
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 4.
Notes
This course will be available in the second half-session of 2005/06 as AT 4511; it is also coded as AT 4011.
Overview
This course explores 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. It focuses on: issues of perception, design and construction; on the generation and reproduction of form in natural and 'built' environments; the relation between bodily movements and lived time/space; the significance of craft and skill; activities of depiction and description, and impacts of old and new technologies. The course explores these issues through readings, practical exercises and site visits.
Structure
1 one-hour lecture and 1 one-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Examination (60%) and in-course assessment (40%).
Resit (for Honours students only): Candidates achieving a CAS mark of 6-8 may be awarded compensatory level 1 credit. Candidates achieving a CAS mark of less than 6 will be required to submit themselves for re-assessment and should contact the Course Co-ordinator for further details.
- AT 4012 / AT 4512 - MATERIAL CULTURE AND MUSEUMS
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr E Hallam
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 4.
Notes
This course will not be available in 2005/06.
Overview
This course examines material culture and anthropological perspectives. It explores the role of collectors and museums in the cultural history of Europe and their place in contemporary societies. Central to the course will be an examination of the meanings attributed to objects; aspects of curiosity, obsession and the ‘fetish’; the representation of ‘others’ in museums; colonialism and cultural encounters; systems of classification; the question of ‘authenticity’ and the ‘heritage industry’; the relationships between museums and European visual culture. Issues of museum conservation, documentation and display will also be addressed.
Structure
1 one-hour lecture and 1 one-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment (100%).
Resit (for Honours students only): Candidates achieving a CAS mark of 6-8 may be awarded compensatory level 1 credit. Candidates achieving a CAS mark of less than 6 will be required to submit themselves for re-assessment and should contact the Course Co-ordinator for further details.
- AT 4013 / AT 4513 - LANGUAGE IN CULTURE AND SOCIETY
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr A King
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 4.
Notes
This course will not be available in 2005/06.
Overview
People speaking are implicit in nearly every anthropological endeavour. Linguistic anthropology examines the articulation of language and culture. It focuses on cultural and social implications of language use as well as the linguistic factors involved in action and behaviour. Course topics covered include language change and its social consequences, power and authority in language, gender issues in speech, creativity and performance, oral narratives, psycholinguistics and the linguistic relativity principle, and discourse. The course is structured on a seminar format, where students and teacher collectively explore key texts each week.
Structure
1 one-hour lecture and 1 one-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 three-hour examination (60%) and in-course assessment: essays (40%).
Resit (for Honours students only): Candidates achieving a CAS mark of 6-8 may be awarded compensatory level 1 credit. Candidates achieving a CAS mark of less than 6 will be required to submit themselves for re-assessment and should contact the Course Co-ordinator for further details.
- AT 4014 / AT 4514 - ANTHROPOLOGICAL THEORY 2
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr A Arnason
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 4.
Notes
This course will be available in the second half-session of 2005/06 as AT 4514; it is also coded AT 4014.
Overview
Continuing on from themes covered in AT 3501, Anthropological Theory 1, this course explores theoretical issues and debates on the cutting edge of contemporary anthropology. It begins with a review of how the key concepts of culture and society were rethought, particularly in the 1980s. Following from this, we ask: how can anthropology proceed if the targets of its investigation can no longer to be understood as objective entities? To find possible answers, the course examines current anthropological interests in power and history, political economy and phenomenology, experience, embodiment and practice. While the intent is theoretical these issues and debates will be explored through ethnographic writing on such subjects as emotions and the body, personhood and politics, death, memory and forgetting, landscape and identity.
Structure
1 one-hour lecture and 1 one-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Examination (60%) and in-course assessment (40%).
Resit (for Honours students only): Candidates achieving a CAS mark of 6-8 may be awarded compensatory level 1 credit. Candidates achieving a CAS mark of less than 6 will be required to submit themselves for re-assessment and should contact the Course Co-ordinator for further details.