Anthropology
View courses in
- Anthropology
- All Departments
- Actuarial Science
- Administrative Sciences
- Advertising
- Anthropology
- Art History
- Arts Administration
- Biology
- Biomedical Laboratory & Clinical Sciences
- Chemistry
- City Planning
- Computer Science
- Criminal Justice
- Earth Sciences
- Economics
- English Composition & Literature
- French
- Gastronomy
- Health Communication
- Health Science
- History
- Humanities
- Interdisciplinary Studies
- Leadership
- Linguistics
- Management
- Mathematics, Statistics
- Philosophy
- Physics
- Political Science
- Psychology
- Religion
- Sociology
- Spanish
- Urban Affairs
- MET AN 101: Introduction to Cultural Anthropology
This course is an introduction to the field of cultural anthropology. Cultural anthropology seeks to understand the variety of ways that humans organize their experience and live in the world, including different configurations of kinship, sex, gender, ethnicity, race, religion, politics, and economics. This course introduces students to some of that variety by examining how societies in different regions of the world differ and how both global and local social processes transform them. The course also explores the ways that anthropologists frame their inquiries and how over time they developed new approaches to these issues and to core concepts like culture and society. - MET AN 102: Human Biology, Behavior, and Evolution
Biology relevant to the behavioral sciences. Introduces basic principles of evolutionary biology, animal social behavior, primate adaptions, human origins, genetic/hormonal/neural bases of behavior, and issues of human socioecology and adaptions. Discussions highlight nature-vs-nurture issues. - MET AN 210: Medical Anthropology
An investigation of the social dimensions of health and illness, exploring the diverse ways in which humans use cultural resources to cope with disease and develop medical and healing systems. The course also examines variations in the definition, diagnosis, experience, and treatment of illnesses across cultures, including the critical examination of biomedicine. Course materials facilitate the exploration of beliefs regarding some common assumptions about health and human behavior, using the tools provided by anthropological theories and concepts. SS - MET AN 250: Understanding Folklore and Folklife
The ways individuals, families, and communities express themselves, their beliefs, and their values within their own culture. Emphasis on meaning carried by oral literature, folk arts and crafts, social customs and festivals, and family folklore. - MET AN 348: Investigating Contemporary Globalization
This course examines the various processes that have created a more interconnected "globalized" world, including the greater movement of peoples, ideas, goods, and capital across cultural and national borders; new communication technologies; a growing international division of labor; and increased attention to issues such as universal human rights and the experiences of women. Key debates include the question of whether these processes produce global cultural homogenization or greater cultural diversity and whether globalization reproduces power dynamics or allows for new freedoms and opportunities. SS