• ANTH 2400

    Language and Culture
     Rating

    3.75

     Difficulty

    2.27

     GPA

    3.56

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    Introduces the interrelationships of linguistic, cultural, and social phenomena with emphasis on the importance of these interrelationships in interpreting human behavior. No prior knowledge of linguistics is required.

  • ANTH 3589

    Topics in Archaeology
     Rating

    2.67

     Difficulty

    1.00

     GPA

    3.59

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    Topics to be announced prior to each semester, dealing with archaeology.

  • ANTH 2620

    Sex, Gender, and Culture
     Rating

    3.33

     Difficulty

    2.00

     GPA

    3.60

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    Examines the manner in which ideas about sexuality and gender are constructed differently cross-culturally and how these ideas give shape to other social phenomena, relationships, and practices.

  • ANTH 3679

    Curating Culture: Collection, Preservation, and Display as Cultural Forms
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    3.61

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    This course teaches the importance of understanding cultural meanings when curating items, whether material or intangible, drawn from social worlds other than one's own. It provides a general introduction to collection, preservation, and display through study of a specific collection held by the instructor or by a local institution such as the Fralin Museum of Art.

  • ANTH 5589

    Selected Topics in Archaeology
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    3.66

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    Seminars in topics announced prior to each semester.

  • ANTH 3450

    Native American Languages
     Rating

    4.00

     Difficulty

    4.00

     GPA

    3.71

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    Introduces the native languages of North America and the methods that linguists and anthropologists use to record and analyze them. Examines the use of grammars, texts and dictionaries of individual languages and affords insight into the diversity among the languages.

  • ANTH 2160

    Culture and the Environment
     Rating

    1.67

     Difficulty

    3.00

     GPA

    3.71

    Last Taught

    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.

  • ANTH 2280

    Medical Anthropology
     Rating

    4.00

     Difficulty

    2.42

     GPA

    3.72

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    The course introduces medical anthropology, and contextualizes bodies, suffering, healing and health. It is organized thematically around a critical humanist approach, along with perspectives from political economy and social constructionism. The aim of the course is to provide a broad understanding of the relationship between culture, healing (including and especially the Western form of healing known as biomedicine), health and political power.

  • ANTH 2415

    Language in Human Evolution
     Rating

    4.22

     Difficulty

    2.00

     GPA

    3.81

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    Examines the evolution of our capacity for language along with the development of human ways of cooperating in engaged social interaction. Course integrates cognitive, cultural, social, and biological aspects of language in comparative perspective. How is the familiar shape of language today the result of evolutionary and developmental processes involving the form, function, meaning and use of signs and symbols in social ecologies?

  • ANTH 3290

    Life, Technology, and the Contemporary Condition
     Rating

    4.80

     Difficulty

    2.60

     GPA

    3.84

    Last Taught

    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.