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ANTH 1910A: Anthropological Approaches to World Issues
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Capstone seminar for Anthropology concentrators that explores how anthropology can challenge conventional or dominant wisdom about global social problems. Original research project required. Prerequisite: ANTH 1900
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ANTH 1910B: Many Faces of Culture: Meanings and Uses
1.00 Credits
Brown University
The seminar is designed to allow you as anthropology majors to question and to debate and examine some of the assumptions of the discipline, and critically explore the multifarious uses of the concept. We will also contextualize the study of culture within the history of anthropology and across other disciplines in the humanities and the social sciences.
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ANTH 1910B - Many Faces of Culture: Meanings and Uses
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ANTH 1910C: Campus Culture
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Course description unavailable
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ANTH 1910C - Campus Culture
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ANTH 1910D: Faces of Culture
1.00 Credits
Brown University
The seminar is designed to allow you as anthropology majors to question to debate and examine some of the assumptions of the discipline, and critically explore the multfacious uses of the concept. We will contextualize the study of culture with the history of anthropology and across other disciplines in the humanities and the social sciences. Limited to 20. Prerequisite: ANTH1900
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ANTH 1910D - Faces of Culture
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ANTH 1910E: Media and the Middle East
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Media anthropology is a reinvented field within the discipline, emerging from critical engagements with ethnographic film and the crisis of representation of the 1980s. We'll explore the development of an anthropological approach to mass media studies by focusing on research conducted and theories derived from a particular region: the Middle East. Enrollment limited to 20 senior Anthropology concentrators. Prerequisite: ANTH 1621, 1900, 1940, or 1950.
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ANTH 1910E - Media and the Middle East
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ANTH 1910F: Social Construction
1.00 Credits
Brown University
No description available. Enrollment limited to 20.
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ANTH 1910F - Social Construction
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ANTH 1940: Ethnographic Research Methods
1.00 Credits
Brown University
To understand the different theoretical assumptions that shape research efforts; to examine how hypotheses and research questions are formulated; and to appreciate the ethical and scientific dimensions of research by hands-on experience in fieldwork projects. Prerequisite: One Anthropology course.
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ANTH 1940 - Ethnographic Research Methods
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ANTH 1950: Archaeological Field Work
0.00 - 1.00 Credits
Brown University
Training in archaeological lab and field techniques for archaeologists. Topics include the nature of field archaeology, tools of the trade, interdisciplinary field techniques, ethics, excavations methodology, survey and GIS, systematic vs. ad hoc excavation, artifact analysis, site and artifact preservation. Students gain experience as practicing archaeologists through the active investigation of local historical and archaeological sites in the College Hill area.
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ANTH 1970: Individual Research Project
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Section numbers vary by instructor. Please check Banner for the correct section number and CRN to use when registering for this course.
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ANTH 1970 - Individual Research Project
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ANTH 2000: History of Ethnological Theory
1.00 Credits
Brown University
A seminar investigating some themes in the history of anthropological theory. Starting with the delineations of the scope and nature of social science by Marx, Durkheim, and Weber, the seminar then considers various explorations of the concepts of structure, function, and agency, concluding with Bourdieu's reformulation of social anthropology for a new generation in the form of practice theory.
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