ANTH1003V
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ANTH 1003V - Understanding Cultures: Honors (4 Cr.) Global Perspectives, Social Sciences, Writing Intensive, Honors
Anthropology (10950)
TCLA - College of Liberal Arts
Course description
This course is an introduction into culture and the making of humanity, past and present. What is culture, and what are the everyday practices, values, beliefs, and resources that go into the making of the human? We will ask questions such as the following: What makes jokes funny? How do identities and unequal social orders get made and reproduced? How can we understand human cultural variation and diversity? Why is there so much socio-economic inequality in the contemporary world, and how can we make sense of it to help address massive social problems and challenges?
This course is also an introduction to what it means to "to think like an anthropologist"—which entails challenging our own assumptions and cultural preconceptions about ourselves, other peoples, and the world around us. What does it mean to understand "the natives' points of views"? What if the exotic "others" are actually "us"? What is "us," anyway? In addition to making the "strange familiar" and the "familiar strange," we also investigate what is at stake in doing cultural analysis that is both grounded and responsive to people's lived experiences, and makes claims about the larger world. Key topics to be explored are power and inequality, race and ethnicity, colonialism, globalization, economy and economics, suffering and violence, gender and sexuality, kinship and family.
prereq: Honors
This course is also an introduction to what it means to "to think like an anthropologist"—which entails challenging our own assumptions and cultural preconceptions about ourselves, other peoples, and the world around us. What does it mean to understand "the natives' points of views"? What if the exotic "others" are actually "us"? What is "us," anyway? In addition to making the "strange familiar" and the "familiar strange," we also investigate what is at stake in doing cultural analysis that is both grounded and responsive to people's lived experiences, and makes claims about the larger world. Key topics to be explored are power and inequality, race and ethnicity, colonialism, globalization, economy and economics, suffering and violence, gender and sexuality, kinship and family.
prereq: Honors
Minimum credits
4
Maximum credits
4
Is this course repeatable?
No
Grading basis
A-F - A-F Grade Basis
Discussion
Lecture
Requirements
000571
Credit will not be granted if credit has been received for:
02508
This course fulfills the following Liberal Education requirement(s)
Social Sciences, Global Perspectives
Fulfills the writing intensive requirement?
Yes
Typically offered term(s)
Every Fall & Spring