Overview of the course
Anthropology is about people in the broadest sense, what makes them
different and what makes them the same. This course will focus on
cultural and social anthropology (or "socio-cultural" anthropology):
the different ways people organize themselves into societies, and the
ways they find meaning in their lives. We will have three main
goals: 1. to understand the history of the discipline of anthropology,
and the main fissures of debate within it, 2. to expose ourselves to
some variety of the different societies of the world, and 3. to
understand different anthropological perspectives, that is, to grasp
something of social theory.
Reading List: Books
Chavez, Leo R.
1998 Shadowed Lives: Undocumented
Immigrants in American Society. Crawfordsville: Wadsworth.
Wardlow, Holly
2006 Wayward women : sexuality and agency in a New Guinea society. Berkeley: UC Press.
Reading List: Articles
Chagnon, N. (1997) Yanomamo. New York, Harcourt Brace. Pp. 121-158
Crawford, David L. (2008) Moroccan Households in the World
Economy: Labor and Inequality in a Berber Village. Louisiana
State University Press. (Chapter 2, Intimate Matrices, and the
Conclusion, "The Market has no Memory")
Geertz, Clifford. (1973). The Interpretation of Cultures. New York,
Basic Books. Chapter 1, pp. 3-30 and Chapter 15, pp. 412-453.
Gell, Alfred. 1986. Newcomers to the world of goods: consumption among
the Muria Gonds. In The Social Life of Things, edited by A. Appadurai.
Cambridge: CambridgeUniversity Press.
Gordon, R. J. and S. Sholto Douglas (2000). The Bushman Myth: The
Making of a Namibian Underclass. Boulder, Westview Press. Pp. 1-12 and
25-42.
Hatch, Elvin. (1973) Theories of Man and Culture. New York, ColumbiaUniversity Press. pp. 13-73
Herdt, Gilbert. H. (1982). Sambia Nosebleeding Rites and Male Proximity to Women. Ethos 10(3): 189-229.
Ibarra, Maria (2002) Emotional Proletarians in a Global Economy:
Mexican Immigrant Women and Elder Care Work. Urban Anthropology
31(3-4):317-350.
Lansing, Stephen (1995) The Balinese. Forth Worth, Texas: Harcourt Brace. Pp. 75-102.
Lee, R. B. (2003) The Dobe Ju/'hoansi. New York, Harcourt Brace. Chapter 4 (pp.37-58) and Chapter 5 (pp. 59 -76)
Levine, N. E. (1988). The dynamics of polyandry : kinship, domesticity,
and population on the Tibetan border. Chicago, University of Chicago
Press. Pp. 3-20.
Malinowski, Bronislaw. (1984 [1922]). Argonauts of the Western Pacific.
Prospect Heights, Il., Waveland Press. (Introduction pp. 1-25) Nanda,
Serena. (1999). Neither Man nor Woman. New York, Wadsworth Publishing.
Pp. 1-23
Reeves, Madeleine (2007) Travels in the Margins of the State: Everyday
Geography in the Ferghana Valley Borderlands. In Everyday life in
Central Asia : past and present. J. Sahadeo and R.G. Zanca, eds. Pp.
281-300. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
Roseberry, W. (1989). Anthropologies and histories: essays in culture,
history, and political economy. London, Rutgers University Press.
Chapter 1 (pp. 17-29).
Shostak, Marjorie. (198). Nisa. New York: Vintage Books. Pp. 81-125
Weismantel, Mary. (2004) Moche Sex Pots: Reproduction and Temporality
in Ancient South America. American Anthropologist 106 (3):495-505.
Wolf, Eric (1982). Europe and the People Without History. Berkeley, University of California Press. pp. 3-23
Grades
You will have a midterm exam, a final exam, a paper, and ten
quizzes. The exams are each worth 25% of your grade.
If you miss either of them you may substitute the other exam minus
20%.
There are no make up exams; pleases do not ask. The
paper is worth 20%. It will be a six page analysis of the
two books we will read in class. Your grade will depend on your
ability to connect the books to the other course material.. One
quarter of the paper grade (5% of the course grade) will be determined
by the draft paper due
November 20th, with the rest determined by the
final paper you submit. You must be in class on the day the draft
is due in order to receive the 5%. Plan accordingly. The
quizzes will each be worth 3% of your final grade (for a total of
30%) and will not be announced in advance. I will give 12
quizzes and allow you to drop the lowest two scores.
There
will be no make up exams or quizzes whatsoever. You may not turn
in your draft paper or your final paper late. Please do not ask.
There is no attendance policy, so you do not need to
explain when or why you are not in class. However, students who
consistently miss class never do very well. A grading scale is
posted at the bottom of this page.
Schedule of Readings and Assignments
September 4 : Introduction, no reading assignment
September 8: read:
Hatch, Crawford (
A Place in Time)
September 11: read:
Malinowski
September 15: read: Geertz (
Introduction),
Geertz (
Balinese
cockfight),
September 18: read:
Roseberry
September 22: read:
Chagnon ***
Optional:
download the kinship lecture slides here
See this link for some useful terms and definitions.
September 25: read:
Lee (social organization),
Lee (mode of subsistence)
September 29: read:
Wolf
October 2: read:
Reeves
October 6: Review –
Click here
for potential exam questions!!!
Note: some questions were left off of the list.
They can be found here.
And here too...
And also here...
*** Here are some kinship questions and diagrams you can use to prepare for the exam.
October 9: EXAM I
October 14: Read Chavez (Preliminary material and Chapter 1 and 2) [
NOTE: Tuesday class]
October 16: Wardlow (Introduction,
Chapter 1)
October 20: Gell
October 23: Nanda,
Levine
October 27: Herdt,
Weismantel
October 30: PBS website “
Race:
Power of an Illusion”
November 3: Shostak (
Chapter 3)
and Gordon and Sholto Douglas (
Chapter 1
and
Chapters 3 & 4)
November 6: Chavez
November 10: Wardlow
November13: Wardlow
November 17: Crawford ("
The Market Has No Memory")
November 20: Draft papers due in class. We will be evaluating the
papers submitted, so please download the rubric linked here:
paper guide
November 24: (no class as I will be at an academic conference)
December 1: Lansing
December 4: Ibarra
December 8: Final lecture and course evaluations; no reading assignment.
Final Exam: Friday, December 19th at 1:30 p.m.
*** Click here for potential final
exam questions.
Here is a map to study for the final.
Be able to locate all the societies we have studied.
NOTE: Special Exam
Review Day: Friday, December 12th, 3 p.m. in Bannow 137.
NOTE: For those taking the exam
early, see me Saturday, December 13th, 4:30 p.m. in Bannow 137.
| A |
93-100 |
| A- |
90-92 |
| B+ |
87-89 |
| B |
83-86 |
| B- |
80-82 |
| C+ |
77-79 |
| C |
73-76 |
| C- |
70-72 |
| D |
60-69 |
Just so you know...
"
Plagiarism
is the appropriation of ideas, data, work, or language of others and
submitting them as one’s own to satisfy the requirements of a
course. Plagiarism constitutes theft and deceit. Students are
often confused by just what constitutes plagiarism. When the
ideas or writings of others are presented in assignments, these ideas
or writing should be attributed to that source. Special care should be
taken, when cutting and pasting materials or when paraphrasing, to cite
sources correctly and to use quotation marks around exact words from
source materials. Actions that result in plagiarism may be intentional
or unintentional. Consequently, students must understand the
concept of plagiarism. When reading, processing, or using
materials from any source, appropriate documentation is always
essential."
Resources such as the library (x2178) and the writing center
(www.fairfield.edu/writingcenter) are available on campus to assist you
in your academic endeavors. You are encouraged to take advantage
of these resources. If you have a disability that may require
special accommodation in this course, contact Student Support Services
(x2614) to make arrangements.