OSAKA UNIVERSITY SHORT-TERM STUDENT EXCHANGE PROGRAM _ |
Gergely Mohacsi (Graduate School of Human Sciences)
Course Objective
This course introduces students to the key aspects of anthropology.
Participants will learn the genealogy of anthropology and its emergence as a discipline.
The course is organized around three thematic clusters.
The INTRODUCTION aims to give students an overview of the multiple histories and methods of anthropology as a discipline.
The second line of inquiry, CONCEPTS: NOW AND THEN, provides an overview of the key concepts that have fostered the anthropological' exploration of diverse human and nonhuman worlds.
In the third part, TOPICS: HERE AND THERE, we will discuss how such a body of knowledge can continuously provide us with critical insights into contemporary issues.
Topics covered will include health and disease, food, environment and migratation; one class will be dedicated to the understanding of Japan as a heterogeneous cultural phenomenon.
The course aims to provide students with a diverse foundation of anthropological knowledge, and study skills that are required for further levels of study in anthropology.
By the end of this course students should:
Requirement / Prerequisite
No
Course Content
INTRODUCTION
Week 1 Orientation: thinking anthropologically (1)
Week 2 Genealogies: the birth of anthropology (4)
Week 3 Methods I (3)
Week 4 Methods II (Film 1)
CONCEPTS: NOW AND THEN
Week 5 Magic: symbols, rituals, cosmologies (6,7)
Week 6 Kinship: difference and relation (10,11)
Week 7 Gift: giving and receiving (9)
Week 8 Culture: interpretation and writing (2,8)
Week 9 Midterm test
TOPICS: HERE AND THERE
Week 10 Disease and health: bodies (13)
Week 11 Natureculture: globalization (14)
Week 12 Food and nutrition: inequalities (12)
Week 13 Anthropology of Japan (5)
Week 14 Migration (Film 2)
Week 15 Final Exam
Class Plan
First and foremost, (A) an engaged and thoughtful participation in class discussion is central, so students should come to class having read and understood the assigned chapter(s) in the textbook when required.
Each participant will be asked to provide (B) an analytical synopsis (1-3 pages) of one extra reading and submit it by the assigned class.
It will be presented as part of a class discussion drawing on the ethnographic material and linking its principle arguments to the questions addressed in the class lecture.
Cross-cultural case studies are used throughout the whole course.
Students are also strongly encouraged to relate each topic to their own ethnic and cultural context and to their personal experiences.
Further important points to keep in mind:
Textbooks
(Required)
Emily Schultz A. and Robert H. Lavenda. 2013. Cultural Anthropology: A Perspective on the Human Condition., Ninth Edition. New York, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
(Optional)
Henrietta L. Moore and Todd Sanders. 2006. Anthropology in Theory : Issues in Epistemology. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing.
Grading Policy
OUSSEP _ |
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