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4.58
2.50
3.58
Spring 2025
Topics to be announced prior to each semester, dealing with linguistics.
4.80
2.60
3.84
Fall 2025
The scientific and administrative focus on life and the centrality of technology to it have become defining features of the contemporary condition. This course will explore various theoretical approaches for understanding this condition, and will explore case studies to elucidate them.
1.89
2.67
3.74
Spring 2025
There's no debate that human reproduction is a biological universal, but it's also an intensely cultural phenomenon with widely disparate, & often contested, specific cultural routines, symbolic systems, ideas & practices whether focused on mothers, fathers, infants or communities or who is recognized as a birthing expert. Course examines variations in physiological & cultural processes globally & explores both the individual experiences & and systemic patterns associated with the phases of reproduction from pregnancy through to post-partum.
2.33
2.67
3.46
Fall 2025
Topics to be announced prior to each semester, dealing with social and cultural anthropology.
3.22
2.67
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Spring 2025
This course surveys transformations in the African past, from the Middle Stone Age emergence of modern humans, to the florescence of lifeways in the Late Stone Age, to the broad mosaic of small-, medium-, and large-scale Iron Age societies, to the archaeology of colonial encounters. We also consider how archaeological methods work to produce knowledge in combination with studies of genetics, climate and environment, and historical methods.
3.70
2.70
3.32
Fall 2024
Language and Thought
3.00
2.91
3.39
Fall 2025
Topics include alternative theories of prehistoric culture change, dating methods, excavation and survey techniques, and the reconstruction of the economy, social organization, and religion of prehistoric societies.
1.67
3.00
3.71
Fall 2025
This course explores anthropological understandings of culture and the environment, particularly with respect to the ecology of human perception, histories of colonialism and related inequalities, food production, consumerism, nature conservation, the Anthropocene concept, and pervasive environmental logics of globalizing capitalism.
2.73
3.00
3.32
Fall 2025
Reviews key findings in the study of language variation. Explores the use of language to express identity and social difference.
3.75
3.00
3.60
Fall 2024
Topics to be announced prior to each semester, dealing with linguistics.
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