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Nov 21, 2024
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2016-2017 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Anthropology
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Return to: Academic Disciplines
Professors: Cho,Lozada, Ringle (Chair)
Associate Professors: Samson
Assistant Professor: Bowles
Visiting Professor: Ruhlen
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Cultural Diversity Requirement
Anthropology 205, 220, 222, 232, 233, 251, 253, 261, 265, 267, 323, 340, 341, 350, 354, and 356 are options for fulfilling the cultural diversity requirement.
Major Requirements
Ten courses, including:
- Introductory Cultural Anthropology (101),
- one approved course in biocultural anthropology (102, 271, 272, 273, 275, 335, 340),
- one approved course in archaeology (108, 207, 208, 251, 354, 356),
- a course in anthropological theory (370, 373),
- a methods course (371, 372, 374, 375, 376, 377),
- Senior Colloquium in Anthropology (490),
- four additional courses (at least two numbered 300 or above). (AFR 301 or ENV 375 can count for one of the four additional courses.)
No course can count for more than one category. Normally, seven of the ten major courses should be taken in residence at the college and be graded. A maximum of three 100-level courses and two independent studies may count toward fulfillment of major requirements. Courses taken at another institution may be applied to major requirements with prior written permission. College policy is that Pass/Fail courses taken at Davidson may not be applied toward the major without departmental approval. Note that ANT 498 is in addition to the major requirements for honors candidates, although 499 may be used to satisfy one of the required upper-level seminars.
Minor Requirements
- 1 introductory course (101, 102, 108)
- 1 methods course (371, 372, 374, 375, 376, 377)
- 2 200-level courses (or above)
- 2 300-level courses (or above)
Honors Requirements
A major desiring to become a candidate for honors in anthropology must apply in writing to the department at the beginning of the fall semester of the senior year. Applicants must have an overall GPA of 3.2 and a GPA of 3.5 in all course work taken in the major at the time of application, including at least five graded anthropology courses. To receive honors, a student must, in addition to maintaining this level of performance, complete Ant. 498 (P/F) during the fall semester and receive a grade of at least A- on the honors thesis (ANT 499), as well as a departmental recommendation. Note that 498 is in addition to the other departmental requirements, though 499 may count as one of the upper-level seminars. Further explanation is posted on the departmental webpage.
Anthropology Courses
Anthropology is usually characterized as having four subfields: cultural/social anthropology, archaeology, physical/biocultural anthropology, and linguistics. (We provide courses only in the first three of these.) As these subfields are quite distinct in their subject matter and methods, each requires its own introduction. Our 100-level courses (101, 102, and 108) provide general overviews of each of the first three subfields. Because some majors may prefer to take more advanced courses, the required major course in each subfield is not restricted to the 100-level, with the exception of 101.
Intermediate courses comprise the 200-level series, more specific than the introductory courses but still accessible to those with no previous background in anthropology. Area overviews fall within this category (China, Africa, Mesoamerica). Class size is usually limited to 30, and classes are either lecture-based or a mixture of lecture and discussion.
Seminars comprise the 300-level series. These courses are more focused in their subject matter and emphasize theoretical perspectives. Small class size is intended to foster discussion. Research projects are longer and more ambitious, emphasizing independent research. Theory and methods courses fall in this grouping. Courses over 371 do not satisfy the social science requirement.
Courses at the 400 level are restricted to senior anthropology majors: the required senior colloquium and the two-course honors thesis sequence.
Anthropology courses also contribute to the following programs and interdisciplinary minors: the interdisciplinary minor in Archaeology, the Africana Studies major, the interdisciplinary minor in Chinese Studies, the interdisciplinary minor in Communication Studies, the interdisciplinary minor in Digital Studies, the Environmental Studies major, the interdisciplinary minor in Ethnic Studies, the interdisciplinary minor in Film and Media Studies, the Gender and Sexuality Studies major, the interdisciplinary minor in Medical Humanities, the interdisciplinary minor in Neuroscience, and the Latin American Studies major. Please see those departments for current lists of requirements satisfied by anthropology courses.
- ANT 101 - Introductory Cultural Anthropology
- ANT 102 - Humankind Evolving
- ANT 108 - Introduction to Archaeology
- ANT 205 - Ethnic Relations
- ANT 207 - Foragers, Farmers, and Chiefs of the Ancient World
- ANT 208 - Early Cities and States
- ANT 219 - Reproduction and Childrearing: Biology and Culture
- ANT 220 - Religion, Society, and Culture
- ANT 227 - Environment and Culture in Latin America
- ANT 232 - Contemporary Ghanaian Society and Culture
- ANT 233 - Performing Arts in West Africa
- ANT 234 - Anthropology of Contemporary Africa
- ANT 251 - Mesoamerican Civilizations
- ANT 253 - Latin American Society and Culture Today
- ANT 257 - African Roots, American Soils
- ANT 261 - Science, Policy, and Society
- ANT 263 - Social Change
- ANT 265 - Contemporary Chinese Society and Culture
- ANT 267 - Food and Culture
- ANT 271 - Human Ecology
- ANT 272 - Forensic Anthropology
- ANT 273 - Bioarchaeology
- ANT 275 - Monkeys, Apes, Humans
- ANT 290 - Ethnographic East Asia
- ANT 291 - Digital Anthropology
- ANT 310 - Politics, Society, and Culture
- ANT 319 - Contradictions in Contemporary Motherhood: Culture, Biomedicine, Political Economy
- ANT 321 - Borderlands, Identity, and Rights
- ANT 323 - Human Rights in Latin America
- ANT 325 - Environment, Economy, & Culture
- ANT 327 - Religious Pluralism in Twenty-first Century Latin America
- ANT 335 - Debunking Race
- ANT 340 - Medical Anthropology
- ANT 341 - Globalization
- ANT 343 - Feminist Anthropology
- ANT 351 - Anthropology of the Senses
- ANT 354 - Art and Writing of the Ancient Maya
- ANT 356 - Art, Myth, and History of Ancient Central Mexico
- ANT 357 - Language Before History
- ANT 360 - Anthropology of Development and Environmental Sustainability
- ANT 370 - Theory in Anthropology
- ANT 371 - Ethnographic Writing and Research
- ANT 372 - Visualizing Anthropology
- ANT 373 - Decolonizing Anthropology
- ANT 374 - Methods in Forensic Anthropology
- ANT 375 - Human Osteology
- ANT 376 - Comparative Skeletal Anatomy and Function
- ANT 377 - Imaging the Earth
- ANT 380-9 - Seminars in Anthropology
- ANT 382 - Seminars in Anthropology: Renewable Natural Resources: Science & Policy (= BIO 366, ENV 366)
- ANT 386 - Seminars in Anthropology - Feminist Anthropology
- ANT 388 - Stuffology: The Anthropology of Material Culture
- ANT 396 - Independent Research in Anthropology
- ANT 490 - Senior Colloquium in Anthropology
- ANT 498 - Honors Research
- ANT 499 - Honors Thesis
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Return to: Academic Disciplines
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