Anthropology Course Descriptions
Note: most courses satisfy one or more across-the-curriculum criteria; check the list of Course Offerings to determine the rating for any particular course, and also to see what courses are offered in this and the coming semesters. Unless otherwise noted, all upper-level (300 and 400) courses have ANTH 101 or ANTH 200 or permission of the instructor as the pre-requisite.
ANTH 101: Introduction to Social and Cultural
Anthropology
ANTH 200: Ethnography
ANTH 203: Theories of Culture
ANTH 215: Pre-Columbian Mesoamerica
ANTH 302: Anthropology of Race
ANTH 312: Anthropology of Gender
ANTH 316: Political Anthropology
ANTH 317: Gifts and Commodities
ANTH 318: Anthropology of Religion
ANTH 322: Symbolic Anthropology
ANTH 341: Practices of Memory
ANTH 342: Touring Cultures
ANTH 343: Culture and Identity in Europe
ANTH 480: Senior Research
ANTH 481: Senior Thesis
Anth 101: Introduction to Cultural Anthropology
Professor Gable . Anthropology's role in developing the concept "culture."
Cosmopolitan, Glamour, or The New Yorker, talk-show hosts and political
pundits, and management gurus tell you that groups of people do this
or believe that because of "their culture." We now habitually assume
that people can "know" the world and act on this "knowledge" in dramatically
different ways. But where do these assumptions come from? Are they assumptions
we tend to have "because of our culture?" And, if they are, how can
we disentangle our assumptions about what culture is and does as we
study "the culture" of others? These will be the kind of questions we
confront in this course as we explore the ways anthropologists developed
the concept of "culture." First, in their studies of the so-called "primitive"
or "traditional" societies, and second, as anthropologists have deployed
the culture concept in their studies of the contemporary United States.
Professor Huber. Introduction to a variety of present-day non-western
cultures from around the world in terms of their major characteristics,
such as subsistence and exchange, social relationships, ideas about
spirits, leadership and stratification. The course aims to arouse your
appreciation of very different cultural styles of life, to help you
see each culture as an integrated whole based on a few fundamental cultural
ideas; and to understand how comparing these cultures to each other,
and to our own, can provide greater insight into any one of them. Besides
studying other people's customs and ideas we also study the methods
of gathering information and some of the theories that anthropology
offers to understand that information. Back
to top.
Anth 200: Ethnography
Ethnography--writing about a particular group of people in a particular
place, with an eye toward describing those people and toward testing
currently popular theories in the humanistic disciplines--is the bread
and butter of socio-cultural anthropology.
Ethnography, as a particular method of writing based on more or less
particular method of research, is also what anthropology offers to the
humanistic disciplines. Ethnography, broadly conceived, has come to
be a crucial textual form in sociology, philosophy, history, literary
studies, and related disciplines. In this course, students are introduced
to path-breaking ethnographies in anthropology. Along the way, students
will see how anthropologists with a range of theoretical perspectives
have used the genre of ethnography to persuade their audiences of the
validity of their approaches. Students will use these ethnographies
as windows into the ways theories are produced and tested. Back
to top.
ANTH 203: Theories of Culture
As a concept, culture has generated much anthropological debate, especially in the United States. As a phenomenon, if it is one, it has proven notoriously difficult to define or even to characterise. The goal of this course is to introduce you to the most important, i.e., influential, theories about culture and to have you see the reciprocal relationship between these ideas and anthropological representations of people's lives, which we commonly call ethnography. If you can accept no definition of culture, nevertheless you will understand the difficulties of defining it We introduce you to the problem by having you read what the major theorists have written about culture. At the same time, in ANTH 200: Ethnography, which is the co-requisite for this course, you will read ethnographic works that reflect and shape such theory. You should achieve sufficient familiarity with the theoretical positions presented here that you can recognise their influence on ethnographic work and also decide which of them, or what combination of them, you will use in carrying out your own ethnographic investigations. Back to top.
Anth 215: Pre-Columbian Mesoamerica
The spectacular cultures of Mesoamerica--the Maya, Aztec, Zapotec, Olmec, Teotihuacan--have fascinated many people for years. This course introduces you to the major cultural achievements of the pre-Columbian Indians of the area and what those achievements meant for the people themselves. The course focusses on the Olmec, Teotihuacan, the Maya, and the Aztec. Important topics include the development of domesticated foods and sedentary life, the emergence of urbanism and hierarchical societies, militarism, styles of art and architecture, the connections between these cultural developments and the environment of this area, and reasons for the collapse of these civilizations. Back to top.
Anth 312: Anthropology of Gender
The course aims to provide a broadly human understanding of gender. Looking at gender definitions and gender relations from a variety of cultures around the world, we address the questions "Are gender and sex the same thing, and if not, what are they and how are they related?" "How is gender related to other ideas of the person such as intelligence, personality, morality?" "What do 'female' and 'male' mean, and are they universal concepts?" "Are gender hierarchy and male dominance inevitable?" "Are there only two genders?" We first look at the meanings of gender in several cultural contexts, and in that connection we study cultures in which three or more genders are identified. Finally we address gender hierarchy, taking it as an aspect of gender definition. In particular, we consider whether the appearance of gender hierarchy is the result of European colonial expansion. Readings include classic works on the subject of gender as well as modern studies. Back to top.
Anth 317: Gifts and Commodities
It's common to think of the economy of a society as its basis, what drives everything else about it. The economy is, in turn, perceived to be a necessary consequence of the ecology. In other words, people have the economy they do in order to survive, and survival is precarious. Farmers live in areas that can support farming, and everyone else is a forager. Common sense concludes that foragers are worse-off than farming peoples, themselves worse-off than peoples in industrialized societies. None of these ideas is valid. This course will show you why. We will see that the form the economy takes is an expression of cultural ideas just as religion, architecture, and clothing are. Non-western foraging and horticultural economies can and do produce surpluses for exchange. Until recently they did not use money, unlike western culture. An important question addressed in this course is the consequences of contact between a non-money economy and the global money-based capitalist economy. Besides reading extensively about such non-western economies the class conducts a limited ethnographic enquiry into some aspect of the economy of Fredericksburg such as personal gift-giving, small-scale retailing, or the art market. Back to top
Anth 318: Anthropology of Religion
(Formerly ANTH/RELG 217: Primitive Religions)
A study of religious ideas and practices, mainly in non-western cultures, from the anthropological point of view. Religious ideas include "sacred," "profane," "divine," "sin," "taboo," and the like; and also the varieties and nature of spiritual beings, identified as "gods," "spirits," "ghosts," and so on; and the possible or actual relations between these beings and humans. The practices arise from these ideas and include shamanism, sacrifice, oracles and divination, exorcism, millenarianism and revitalization movements, funeral customs, and mythology. We examine many of these practices in specific cultural contexts to show how they can be used to arrive at the religious ideas of the culture, ideas which may often be otherwise ill-articulated. We see that religion in these cultures is not a sometime thing; on the contrary, for the people who acknowledge them religious ideas permeate, and explain, every aspect of life. Back to top .
Anth 322: Symbolic Anthropology
Arguably, culture is a structure of symbols, or of symbolic classification. Therefore the study of symbols must occupy a central position in cultural anthropology. This course is both an examination of anthropological theorizing on the subject and an introduction to the methods by which anthropology has analyzed cultural forms. We establish a working definition of "symbol," and then look at such matters as how symbols acquire meaning, how as an anthropologist one may determine the meanings of symbols, whether it is permissible to attribute implicit meanings to symbols, and--depending on the answer to that question--how best to understand symbolic forms such as myth, ritual, art, and text. Most of the course focuses on non-western cultures, but it also addresses comparable American cultural forms such as the birthday cake, Superman and Batman, and the Tooth Fairy. Back to top.
ANTH 342: Touring Cultures
In this course we explore "touring cultures"--cultures of tourists and tourism, as well as the cultures of those toured and the effects of tourism on them. Tourism is one of the largest and fastest-growing industries in the world today, but it also represents a specific form of experience and a culture unto itself that some authors have compared to religious pilgrimage. We will examine interactions between tourists, local people, and institutions, and the ways people, places, and historic periods are produced and packaged for consumption by tourists. Other topics will include the connections between tourism and issues of leisure and consumption, globalization, class and ethnic identities, authentic vs. manufactured experiences, and sex tourism. We will also examine the increasing dependence of many communities on tourist dollars for their livelihood and how this affects those communities. Back to top.
ANTH 343: Culture and Identity in Europe
The economic and political integration of Europe finds part of its justification in the idea of a common European culture. Yet efforts by European Union officials to create a European identity have proven only marginally successful. Most Europeans still see themselves first and foremost as members of local, regional, and national communities. In this course we will use ethnographic texts to consider the variety of cultural forms and identities in Europe, including communities in formerly socialist states and immigrant commnities such as the Algerian Berbers in France. We will also examine attempts to define the boundaries of Eruope and a common European culture. Back to top.
Anth 480: Senior Research
Required of all senior anthropology majors,
this course allows a student to carry out independent research on a topic of specific interest to her- or himself in preparation for writing the senior thesis in ANTH 481: Senior Thesis. Class combines seminar meetings to discuss individual project progress with independent research and one-on-one tutorials. Students may focus on a non-western, non-industrialized society, ancient or modern; or create a research project based on the Fredericksburg region. The research should demonstrate the student's familiarity with the
chosen topic as well as with relevant anthropological concepts, including
the concept of culture itself. The course is one of two (the other is ANTH 481: Senior Thesis) required for
honors in anthropology. Back to top.
