2023-2024 Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Anthropology
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Go to: Division of History and Social Sciences
Faculty
Betsey Behr Brada
Medical anthropology, anthropology of global health and humanitarianism, science studies and expertise, anthropology of the body, pedagogy and ritual, HIV/AIDS, Africa. On sabbatical 2023-24.
Tarik Nejat Dinç
Environmental justice, science and technology studies, critical agrarian studies, risk and uncertainty, mining and extractivism, toxicity, climate change, more than human anthropology, Turkey, Mediterranean, Middle East.
Charlene E. Makley
Development, globalization, anthropology of capitalism, linguistic anthropology, performance and media studies, exchange and value, gender, ethnicity, nationalism, religion and ritual, China, Tibet, East Asia.
Alejandra Roche Recinos
Archaeology, economic anthropology, Indigenous studies, lithic studies, ancient economies, Indigenous Mesoamerica, archaeology of Mesoamerica, Guatemala, Mexico.
Paul A. Silverstein
Race and ethnicity, colonialism and postcoloniality, migration, urbanity, social class, sport, practice theory, historical anthropology, France, North Africa, Middle East.
LaShandra P. Sullivan
Social movements, environmental studies, critical race and ethnic studies, gender and sexuality, Brazil, Latin America. On leave 2023-24
Anand Vaidya
Environmental politics, law, social movements, land and property, political economy, collective action, caste, indigeneity, India, South Asia.
Curriculum
Anthropology offers perhaps the broadest comparative framework for the study of human life and experience. The discipline is traditionally divided into the subfields of cultural anthropology, linguistic anthropology, biological (or physical) anthropology, and archaeology. Of these, we emphasize cultural and linguistic anthropology here at Reed. Cultural and linguistic anthropology explore the astonishing range and variability of human practices past and present, paying particular attention to language, race, gender, sexuality, class, and (trans)nationalisms and providing frameworks for contextualizing and analyzing them. Research in both cultural and linguistic anthropology is distinguished by an implicit and explicit comparative lens, as well as an emphasis on empirically grounding theoretical interpretations or generalizations in firsthand, qualitative ethnographic fieldwork. Anthropology as a discipline has seen seismic changes since its inception in the late nineteenth century. While early Western anthropologists focused on Indigenous peoples past and present, the discipline has expanded and diversified to include practitioners all over the world, and anthropological research now addresses the entire range of human communities, institutions, and practices.
Transfer students should take ANTH 211 even if they have completed substantial coursework in anthropology at another institution. ANTH 211 is normally taken in the sophomore year and is not open to first-year students.
ProgramsMajorsCourses- ANTH 201 - Topics in Contemporary Anthropology
- ANTH 211 - Introduction to Anthropology: History, Theory, Method
- ANTH 300 - African Technoscience
- ANTH 305 - Musical Ethnography
- ANTH 306 - #CentralAmericanTwitter: Continuity and Rupture in Central American Indigenous Histories
- ANTH 307 - “One Good Turkey Hen is Worth 100 Cacao Beans”: An Introduction to Economic Anthropology
- ANTH 308 - Obsidian Rocks! A Natural and Social History
- ANTH 320 - Social Movements, Protests, and Historical Change in South Asia
- ANTH 324 - Sport and Society
- ANTH 331 - Archaeology of Reed
- ANTH 332 - Mesoamerican Archaeology
- ANTH 334 - Queer Politics and Pleasures
- ANTH 337 - Black Ecologies in the Americas
- ANTH 342 - Language and Medicine
- ANTH 343 - African Pasts, African Futures
- ANTH 345 - Black Queer Diaspora
- ANTH 347 - Outbreak, Emergency, Pandemic: Anthropology of Health Systems
- ANTH 349 - Time and Space
- ANTH 357 - Comparative Fascisms
- ANTH 361 - The Middle East: Culture and Politics
- ANTH 363 - Race and Transnational China
- ANTH 364 - The Anthropology of Global Tibet
- ANTH 365 - The Anthropology of Development in Post-Mao China
- ANTH 374 - Urban Anthropology
- ANTH 375 - Anthropology of Science
- ANTH 378 - Nature, Culture, and Environmentalism
- ANTH 379 - Resource-making through the Mediterranean
- ANTH 380 - Anthropology of Risk and Uncertainty
- ANTH 391 - Legal Anthropology
- ANTH 395 - Globalization
- ANTH 397 - Media Persons Publics
- ANTH 398 - Race and Immigration
- ANTH 411 - The Politics of World Making: Semiotics, Pragmatics, Performance
- ANTH 425 - Marx from the South
- ANTH 432 - Archaeological Method and Theory
- ANTH 442 - Ontological Politics
- ANTH 461 - Theories of Practice
- ANTH 465 - Suffering, Narrative, and Subjectivity
- ANTH 470 - Thesis
- ANTH 481 - Independent Reading
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