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  • S -  Every semester
  • Y - At least 1x  fall or spring
  • E - Even Academic Yr (e.g., 2004-05)
  • O - Odd Academic Yr (e.g., 2004-05)
  • SI - Upon sufficient student interest
  • IR - Irregularly
  • SS - Only during the summer


ANT - 100 Selected Topics   SI
Exploration of a topic (to be determined) not covered by the standard curriculum but of interest to faculty and students in a particular semester.
Repeatable.

ANT 111  111 - Introduction to Cultural Anthropology   S
Economics, politics, religion, symbolism, rites of passage, developmental cycle, and expressive culture. ANT 112 (crosslisted with:AAS 112) Intro to African American Studies in Social Sciences   S  Required for Anthropology majors.

ANT 112 - Introduction to African American Studies    S 
Historical and sociopolitical materials. Approaches to studying the African American experience, antecedents from African past, and special problems.
ANT 121  Crosslisted with AAS 112

ANT 121 - Peoples and Cultures of the World    3 credits  SWorld   S
Case studies of global cultural diversity. Exploration of daily life, rites of passage, marriage, family, work, politics, social life, religion, ritual, and art among foraging, agricultural, and industrial societies.

ANT 131  131 - Introduction to Biological Anthropology    3 credits   Anthropology    Y
Biological anthropology subfields; anthropology's relationship to history of science. Evolution theory; mechanisms of evolution; survey of the non-human primates; humans ancestral to modern Homo sapiens; and modern human variation. Required for Anthropology majors.

ANT 141  141 - Introduction to Archaeology and Prehistory   Y  
Survey of the prehistoric past spanning the origins of humankind through the rise of complex societies. Class activities and field trip provide a hands-on introduction to archaeological interpretation.

ANT 145 (crosslisted with:HST 145) Introduction to Historical Archaeology   145 - Archaeology of and in the Modern World      Y
Role of history and archaeology in our understanding of 17th- to 19th-century Europe, Africa, and America. Historical archaeology as a mechanism to critique perceptions of the past. Firsthand record ethnic groups and cultural settings not recorded in writing.
ANT 185  Crosslisted with HST 145

ANT 185 - Global Encounters: Comparing Worldviews  and World Views & Values Cross-Culturally   
Predominant views of reality and values in the cultures of Asia, Africa, and the Americas. Humanistic study of cultures and the nature of cross-cultural understanding.

ANT 200  200 - Selected Topics    SI
Exploration of a topic (to be determined) not covered by the standard curriculum but of interest to faculty and students in a particular semester. 
Repeatable

ANT 202 (crosslisted with:LIN 202) Languages of the World  Y 
Introduction to Universal Grammar. Similarities and differences in structures of human languages. Syntax and morphology. Theory development. 
PREREQ LIN 201ANT 221 (crosslisted with:REL 221)Morality and Community  202 - Diversity of World Languages    Y 
Broad survey of world languages, language diversity, identity, contact, and shift. Non-technical overview of linguist phenomena, language documentation, preservation, and revitalization.
Crosslisted with LIN 202

ANT 221 - Morality and Community    O 
Examines how globally diverse religious groups create distinct moral systems in order to provide their members with the feeling of belonging to unique and meaningful communities.  
Crosslisted with REL 221

ANT 249 - Archaeology at the Movies: The Scientific Study of the Past in Popular Culture    Y
Introduction to modern archaeology and the scientific study of the past. Utilizing fictional portrayals of archaeological interpretation in popular culture the course examines some of the major research question of modern anthropology. 

ANT 270  270 - Experience Credit  S  
Participation in a discipline-or subject-related experience.  Students must be evaluated by written or oral reports or an examination.  Limited to those in good academic standing. 
Repeatable

ANT 273 (crosslisted with:REL 244, NAT 244)  - Indigenous Religions     E 
 The connections between material life and religious life in cultures throughout the world. The diverse ways that various cultures inhabit their landscapes.
Crosslisted with NAT 244, REL 244

ANT 290  290 - Independent Study   S
In-depth exploration of a problem or problems. Individual independent study upon a plan submitted by the student. Admission by consent of consent of supervising instruction or instructors and the department. 
Repeatable

ANT 300 - Selected Topics  SI SI
Exploration of a topic (to be determined) not covered by the standard curriculum but of interest to faculty and student in a particular semester. 
Repeatable

ANT 311  311 - Anthropological Theory Theory    S  
Introduction to anthropological theory focusing on the insights and perspectives the discipline brings to historical and contemporary social issues, including fundamentalism. Required for Anthropology majors.

ANT 318  318 - African Cultures Cultures    IR IR 
Selected contemporary African cultures. West Africa and the impact of the slave trade. Aspects of colonialism and neocolonialism and their relationships to current social and political developmentsdevelopment.

ANT 322 (crosslisted with:LAS 318) South American Cultures   Y 
 Archaeology 322 - South American Cultures     Y 
Archaeology and cultural history. Racial, linguistic, and cultural areas from 1492 to today. Studies of contemporary Indian and Mestizo populations.
ANT 323 (crosslisted with:NAT 323) Peoples Crosslisted with LAS 318

ANT 323 - Peoples and Cultures of North America America    IR  
Racial, linguistic and cultural areas of North America from the Rio Grande to the Arctic. Selected areas and tribes. Data from archaeology, historical records, and contemporary anthropological fieldwork.
ANT 324 (crosslisted with:SAS 324, WSP 3234) Crosslisted with NAT 323

ANT 324 - Modern South Asian Cultures Cultures    SI SI 
Societies of India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka. Social organization, economic and political structures, religions and worldview, survey of languages, the arts. Transition and modernization, rural and urban problems. ANT 325 
Crosslisted with SAS 324, WGS 324

ANT 325 - Anthropology of American Life in Film Film    Y
Analysis of American culture using film and literature. Concept of ‘national character.’ Major cultural configurations and themes.

ANT 326 (crosslisted with:WGS 327) 326 - Africa Through the Novel Novel    IR 
Cultural, political and social life of Africa and Africans through African literature. Each semester deals with a motif (e.g., novels of Achebe).
Crosslisted with WGS 327

ANT 327 - Anthropology of Race in Latin America and the Caribbean    IRCaribbean     IR
History of racial ideologies in Latin America and the Caribbean; interactions of racial ideologies with self concepts and life chances; racial ideologies' shaping of expressive culture and religion; antiracism movements and legislation; race and transnational migration.

ANT 343 The Maya: Ancient and Modern   E
This course provides an introduction to the history and culture if the Maya; from the deep past to the modern world. ANT 346 Gender Through the Ages    IR
The study of gender in archaeology from the late Stone Age to Modern era.
ANT 348  History of Archaeology    IR 
Tracing the discipline's origins with the Renaissance dilettante. Brief survey of scientific and quantitative methods.ANT 352 Food, Culture and Identity    S   (OFFERED IN LONDON ONLY)
Introduction to a variety of critical approaches; questions about power and representation; role of food in construction of identity. 
PREREQ:  RENEE CROWN HONORS PROGRAM OR 3.4 MINIMUM GPA
ANT 355 (crosslisted with:SOC 345) Spanish Society and Pop Culture   S  (OFFERED IN MADRID ONLY)
Explores what is considered important, good and fashionable in Spain today and how these values relate to historical developments as well as foreign influences.  
PREREQ: SPA 201 

ANT 356  Applied Anthropology     IR 
Describes past and present uses of anthropology in social policy. Examines the discipline’s role in addressing global issues such as economic development, environmental degradation, indigenous rights, refugees and health care. Careers in non-academic settings.

ANT 357  Health, Healing, and Culture   O
Crosscultural perspective on illness, health, medicine, and the body; medical pluralism; biomedicalization; illness and moral reasoning; local and global political economies of health and healing; globalization and medicine. Applied medical anthropology.

...

ANT 365  Sexual Attraction in Cross-cultural Perspective   E
Sexual attractiveness across cultures. Cultural differences as well as cultural universals.

ANT 367 (crosslisted with:WGS 367, GEO 367) Gender in a Globalizing World   IR 
Economic and cultural processes of globalization as they affect different groups of men, women, and households; including gender and work, gender and the media, and redefinitions of masculinity and femininity across the globe.

ANT 373  Magic and Religion   S
Crosscultural study of magical and religious behavior, ritual and belief systems in simple and complex societies. Specialists and their craft: Shamans, priests. Curing, possession, witchcraft. Millennial and counterculture movements. Religious ideologies and innovations.

ANT 376 Folklore   SI
Folklore as a cultural system expressing the value orientations of nonliterate, illiterate, and minority populations.  Various genres of  folklore (myth, song, art) and the folklore of several specific societies.

ANT 377  Quilts and Community   E
Explores role of quilts and quilting communities. Discussion, films, exploration of quilts and their makers-and communities that result. Class learns quilt making process. No sewing experience required.

ANT 380 - International Course 
Offered through SUAbroad by educational institution outside the United States. Student registers for the course at the foreign institution and is graded according to that institution’s practice. SUAbroad works with the S.U. academic department to assign the appropriate course level, title, and grade for the student’s transcript.
Repeatable

...

ANT 402 (crosslisted with:HST 422) Ethnic History of Britain  S  (OFFERED IN LONDON ONLY)
Examines the ways in which migration has shaped and reworked British national identity over the past two thousand years through the study of original historical sources, literature, film and music, and explores the contributions that migrants have made to modern British society.

ANT 403 (crosslisted with:HST 443) Culture, Confucianism and Chinese Modernity    Y (OFFERED IN BEIJING ONLY)
Contemporary China from historical and cultural perspectives. Exploration of political and ideological conflicts between China and the West. Patterns of Chinese culture. Impact of Confucianism on Chinese society and its influence outside of China
ANT 404 (crosslisted with:HST 404, WGS)  Family and Gender in Renaissance Italy  (OFFERED IN FLORENCE ONLY) 
Historical and interdisciplinary exploration of life stages, rites of passage, marriage, family, social life, sodomy, prostitution, career options, and alternate life strategies as illustrated by case studies.ANT 405 (crosslisted with:GEO 405) 332 - Introduction to Forensic Anthropology     IR
Introduction to the analysis of human skeletal remains to determine a biological profile of the deceased. Methods used by forensic anthropologists, including osteological, archaeological, and cross-cultural techniques are studied as applied to medicolegal investigations.
Crosslisted with FSC 332

ANT 342 - Archaeology of American Life     IR
Examines archaeological studies of 19th-century life in the United States. Topics include: the archaeology of slavery, race, labor, social reform, public institutions (prisons, asylums, almshouses, etc.), health and sanitation, and industrialization.

ANT 343 - The Maya: Ancient and Modern     E
This course provides an introduction to the history and culture if the Maya; from the deep past to the modern world. Anthropologically informed archaeological, documentary and ethnographic research will guide our critical exploration.

ANT 345 - Cyborgs, Aliens & Other Worlds     E
This course provides students an introduction to anthropological and archaeological concepts, ideas, perspectives and critiques via the medium of science fiction novels, short stories and film.

ANT 346 - Gender in the Past     IR
The study of gender and sexuality in archaeology from the late Stone Age to the 1800s.

ANT 348 - Mummies, Tombs, and Treasure    IR 
Drawing on exciting discoveries from the history of archaeology the course traces the fields of history from the first antiquarians to the emergence of the field as a scientific discipline. 

ANT 352 - Food, Culture and Identity     S
Introduction to a variety of critical approaches; questions about power and representation; role of food in construction of identity. 
OFFERED IN LONDON ONLY

ANT 355 - Spanish Society and Pop Culture   S
Explores what is considered important, good and fashionable in Spain today and how these values relate to historical developments as well as foreign influences.  
OFFERED IN MADRID ONLY, crosslisted with SOC 345

ANT 356 - Applied Anthropology     IR 
Describes past and present uses of anthropology in social policy. Examines the discipline’s role in addressing global issues such as economic development, environmental degradation, indigenous rights, refugees and health care. Careers in non-academic settings.

ANT 357 - Health, Healing, and Culture    O
Cross-cultural perspective on illness, health, medicine, and the body; medical pluralism; biomedicalization; illness and moral reasoning; local and global political economies of health and healing; globalization and medicine. Applied medical anthropology.

ANT 358 - Peace, War and Security     E
Anthropology of peace, war and security examining the biological basis for war, archaeology of early warfare, effects of colonial expansion among indigenous people and postcolonial society, contemporary peacekeeping, and humanitarian intervention.

ANT 363 - Anthropology of Family Life     Y 
Historical and cross-cultural study of forms of family and domestic organization, marriage, status and sex roles, ideals, and customs of family life.
Crosslisted with WGS 363

ANT 365 - Sexual Attraction in Cross-cultural Perspective    E
Sexual attractiveness across cultures. Cultural differences as well as cultural universals.

ANT 367 - Gender in a Globalizing World    IR 
Economic and cultural processes of globalization as they affect different groups of men, women, and households; including gender and work, gender and the media, and redefinitions of masculinity and femininity across the globe.
Crosslisted with GEO 367, WGS 367

ANT 371 - Dimensions of Bilingualism and Multiculturalism     Y
Foundations, theory, and practice of bilingual/bicultural education. Critical concepts of linguistic, sociolinguistic, psycholinguistic issues and methods as applied to bilingualism/multiculturalism.
Crosslisted with LIN 371

ANT - 373 Magic and Religion     S
Cross-cultural study of magical and religious behavior, ritual and belief systems in simple and complex societies. Specialists and their craft: Shamans, priests. Curing, possession, witchcraft. Millennial and counterculture movements. Religious ideologies and innovations.

ANT 374 - Topics in Sociolinguistics    SI
Functions of language in society. Geographical, socioeconomic, and male-female differentiation. Functions of various types of speech events.
Crosslisted with LIN 374, SOC 372

ANT 375 - Forensic Linguistics     Y
Examines the application of core linguistic concepts (including concepts of sociopsychological/pragmatic/discourse analysis), and interpretive techniques to investigate crimes, and other legal matters in which language data is used as pertinent evidence.
Crosslisted with LIN 375

ANT 376 - Folklore      SI
Folklore as a cultural system expressing the value orientations of nonliterate, illiterate, and minority populations. Various genres of  folklore (myth, song, art) and the folklore of several specific societies.

ANT 377 - Quilts and Community     E
Explores role of quilts and quilting communities. Discussion, films, exploration of quilts and their makers-and communities that result. Class learns quilt making process. No sewing experience required.

ANT 378 - Language Variation and Change     IR
An exploration of the theories, qualitative and quantitative methods, and the ideological, social, cultural, linguistic and structural factors involved in the study of language variation and change.
Crosslisted with LIN 373

ANT 380 - International Course 
Offered through SUAbroad by educational institution outside the United States. Student registers for the course at the foreign institution and is graded according to that institution’s practice. SUAbroad works with the S.U. academic department to assign the appropriate course level, title, and grade for the student’s transcript.
Repeatable

ANT 381 - Ancient Rituals and Beliefs in Modern Spain     Y
From Paleolithic and Neolithic settlements of the Iberian Peninsula to modern immigration into Spain.  This course examines the complex layering of ancient belief systems in a modern country, using Spain as a laboratory.
OFFERED IN MADRID ONLY

ANT 382 - Health in the Middle East     IR
Surveys major cultural, biological and environmental features of the Middle East and relates them to aspects of health including infectious disease, chronic disease, reproductive health, population, war, poverty and globalization.
Crosslisted with MES 382, PHP 382

ANT 390 - Independent Study    S
Exploration of a problem or problems, in depth. Individual independent study upon a plan submitted by the student. Admission by consent of supervising instruction or instructor(s) and the department. 
Repeatable

ANT 400 - Selected Topics   SI
Exploration of a topic (to be determined) not covered by the standard curriculum but of interest to faculty and students in a particular semester. 
Repeatable

ANT 402 - Ethnic History of Britain    S
Examines the ways in which migration has shaped and reworked British national identity over the past two thousand years through the study of original historical sources, literature, film and music, and explores the contributions that migrants have made to modern British society.
OFFERED IN LONDON ONLY, crosslisted with HST 422

ANT 405 - Conservation and Management Protected Areas: South Africa-OTS    IR  (Taught in South Africa through the Organization for Tropical Studies program) 
 Analyze  IR
Analyze management of wildlife and natural resources within ecological, political, social, historical, and economic context of South Africa.
ANT 406 History and Culture of South Africa - OTS  (Taught in South Africa  through through the Organization for Tropical Studies program, crosslisted with GEO 405

ANT 406 History and Culture of South Africa-OTS     IR
Human history of South Africa. Range of cultural, social aspects of current South African society.
Origin and maintenance of cultural diversity of region, archaeological records, early migration patterns.
Taught in South Africa through the Organization for Tropical Studies Program

ANT 407 Environment and Policy in the Tropics-OTS    (Taught in Costa Rica through the Organization for Tropical Studies program) IR
Issues conservation biology and policy: habitat degradation and fragmentation, design of nature reserves, land-use planning, agro ecosystems, environmental economics, and conservation ethics.
Taught in South Africa through the Organization for Tropical Studies Program

ANT 408 (crosslisted with:HAST 408, WGS) The - The Practice of Eros: A History of Sexuality in Europe (1400-1800)      IR
Authorized and "alternative" sexuality in Europe 15th to 18th centuries (especially Italy, France, and England) "Licit love" (courtship, marriage, conjugal relations) as opposed to "illicit unions" (adultery, rape, prostitution, bestiality, homosexuality, lesbianism). Offered only in Florence.ANT 409 (
OFFERED IN FLORENCE ONLY, crosslisted with : HST 409, REL 409408, WGS 409) A 408

ANT 409 - A History of Witchcraft  (OFFERED IN FLORENCE ONLY) Witchcraft    IR 
History of witchcraft from various perspectives: its intellectual roots, the causes and dynamics of the witch-hunt, and the beliefs and self-perceptions of those who were called "witches". Offered only in Florence.ANT 414 
OFFERED IN FLORENCE ONLY, crosslisted with HST 409, REL 409, WGS 409

ANT 414 - Cities, Spaces and Power      (SOMETIMES OFFERED ABROAD) 
Processes of urbanization, migration, adjustment of peasants in cities, ethnic and cultural variation in urban areas. Cultural differences in industrial development. Uses of applied anthropology in urban situations. 
SOMETIMES OFFERED ABROAD

ANT 415  415 - Culture and Personality Personality    IR  IR 
The person-in-culture and the function of culture in personality formation. Cross-cultural problems of child-rearing, learning and education, life-cycle patterns, cultural conditioning, normality and deviance. The individual and cultural milieu.

ANT 416 - Political Anthropology Anthropology    IR  
Social power in the global political economy. Co-existence of various emergent and residual social formations, such as tribe, peasant, and state. Conflicts over identities in terms of nationality, gender, ethnicity, race and/or class.

ANT 417  417 - Economic Anthropology Anthropology    IR 
Survey of primitive modes of production: Major adaptive strategies (collecting, hunting, horticulture, and pastoralism), division of labor, and ecological influences impinging on these productive techniques
PREREQ: ANT 111

ANT 421 (crosslisted with:SAS) - Gender and Sexuality in South Asia    OAsia     O
Topics explored relating to gender and sexuality include: colonialism; nationalism; development; globalization; kinship; the life cycle; caste and class; religion; same sex/ "third sex" identities.  Additional work required of graduate students.
Crosslisted with SAS 421

ANT 422 (crosslisted with:HOA 303) Etruscans - Etruscans and Romans: Ancient Art and Society in Italy  Y   (OFFERED IN FLORENCE ONLY)  Y
Explores art and society of ancient Italy from ca. 1000 B.C. to A.D. 138, with special emphasis on the early Etruscans through Rome under Hadrian.
PREREQ: ANY HOA 100-499  ANT 423 (crosslisted with: LAS 423) Effedct of Globalization i Latin America     ORequires previous course in art history.
OFFERED IN FLORENCE ONLY, crosslisted with HOA 303

ANT 423 - Effects of Globalization in Latin America      O
A grassroots view of major transformations in Latin America due to globalization/global change, including adapations adaptations to global warming, effects of and reactions to neo-liberal policies, internal and international migration, ethnic movemnets movements and social revolutions. 
Crosslisted with LAS 423

ANT 424  424 - Negotiation: Theory and Practice   YPractice     Y
Negotiation skills for resolving differences effectively and achieving mutually satisfying outcomes. Position based versus interest based negotiation. Advanced techniques of communication such as chunking, reframing, anchoring, metaphor and rapport to obtain negotiation outcomes of excellence. Additional work required of graduate students.

ANT 426 (crosslisted with:  SAS 426)- Cultures and Politics of Afghanistan and Pakistan Pakistan    E E
Introduction to Afghanistan and Pakistan, recent histories, cultures, current politics.   Covers geography, religious systems, gender roles, economic systems, foreign policy issues, refugees, migration.  Additional work required of graduate students.
  
Crosslisted with SAS 426

ANT 427 - Brazil: Anthropological Perspectives    IR
History and culture of Brazil; indigenous populations; Afro-Brazilians; race and ethnic relations; development; kinship; gender; religion; urbanization; politics; nationalism; globalization. Additional work required of graduate students.

ANT 428 - Transformation of Eastern Europe    IREurope     IR
Change and continuity after the demise of communism as experienced by ordinary citizens. Transformations in agriculture, industry, social, and political institutions; the rise of ethnic nationalism; and ethnic conflict.ANT 429  Cultures of the Iberian Peninsula     Y (OFFERED IN MADRID ONLY - ONLY TAUGHT IN SPANISH)
A general cultural introduction to the peoples who populated Spain and Portugal. Emphasis on those living in the Iberian Peninsula before Roman and Carthaginian settlements and their influence on future generations. Field study tours to archaeological and historic sites. in agriculture, industry, social, and political institutions; the rise of ethnic nationalism; and ethnic conflict.

ANT 431 - Human Variation    IR
Genetics as applied by anthropologists to humans. Description of the genetic systems most commonly studied. Descriptions of polygenic, polymorphic mvariations and the methods by which theya re gathered.

ANT 433  Human Osteology    E 
Introduction to methods and techniques in human osteology and anatomy (emphasis varies), which are basic in applied physical techniques involving measuring humans (anthropometrics). Some statistical analysis taught.

ANT 434 Anthropology of Death  E
Survey of the many ways how . Descriptions of polygenic, polymorphic variations and the methods by which they are gathered.

ANT 433 - Human Osteology     E 
This course is an intensive study of the human skeletal system. The focus is identification of fragmentary skeletal elements and their osseous structure, skills relevant to archaeological and forensic contexts. Laboratory practicum forms the basis.

ANT 434 - Anthropology of Death    E
Death in anthropological perspective. Survey of the many ways death has entered into the work of archaeologists, bioanthropologistsbiological anthropologists, ethnographers , and social theorists. 

ANT 436  Bioarchaeology  E436 - Bioarchaeology     E
Surveys the application analysis of human skeletal biology and archaeology to the remains in archaeological and medico-legal fieldsettings. Techniques Methods and techniques of analysis , and interpretation , and evaluation will be emphasized, and domestic and international case . Case studies will be used to illustrate application to variable social and historical contexts.

ANT 438  438 - Beyond the Biological Need to Eat: The Archaeology of Food   E  E
What does it mean for something to be good to eat? Survey of anthropological and archaeoloical archaeological perspectives on how culture, politics, and power inform what and how we wat. Additional work required of graduate students. eat.

ANT 439 (crosslisted with: EAR 407) - Climate Change and Human Origins   O
This course considers the influence of long term climate chandges changes on hominid evolution and human adapatitionadaptation, as well as how abrupt climate events and transitions may have impacted the distribution of human populations, the development of agriculture, human conflict and societal change. Additinal work required of graduate students. 
ANT 442 
Crosslisted with EAR 407

ANT 442 - Methods in Archaeology    O  
Formulation and conduct of archaeological research with a focus on field and laboratory methods used to obtain and analyze data. Survey techniques, excavation strategies, archaeological classification, and data base management.

ANT 443  443 - Field Methods in Archaeology Archaeology    SS 
Supervised training in excavation of prehistoric archaeological site, including cataloging and accessioning of artifacts.
Repeatable

ANT 444  444 - Laboratory Analysis in Archaeology    E  
Introduction to archaeological materials analysis, artifact-classification systems, processing of data, materials analysis (ceramic, lithic, etc.). Conservation and curation of collections.PREREQ:

ANT 141 OR ANT 145ANT 445  (crosslisted with: NAT 445) 445 - Public Policy and Archaeology    IR 
Proactive critique of public policy and implementation efforts to preserve and protect archaeological and historical sites and resources.
Crosslisted with NAT 445

ANT 446 - Caribbean Archaeology     IR  
Caribbean archaeology from the region’s early prehistory through the historic period. Cultural diversity, indigenous societies, Hispanic and colonial impacts, and the African Diaspora.

ANT 447 (crosslisted with NAT 447) - Archaeology of North America America    IR IR
Introduction to the regional prehistory of North America north of Mexico, from the late Pleistocene until European contact. Adaptation of prehistoric human populations to their ecosystems. Additional work required of graduate students.
PREREQ: ANT 141  OR ANT 145 ANT 449 World Heritage Sites   E
Introduction to the regional prehistory of North America north of Mexico, from the late Pleistocene until European contact. Adaptation of prehistoric human populations to their ecosystems.ANT 450
Crosslisted with NAT 447

ANT 448 - Imperial Remains: The Archaeology of Colonialism    E
This course provides an introduction to the archaeology and anthropology of colonialism, with a particular focus on the variety of approaches to the study of colonization used by archaeologists.

ANT 449 - World Heritage Sites    E
A seminar exploring global perspectives on UNESCO World Heritage Sites. Review of laws and policies aimed at protecting cultural and natural sites that have been defined as universally significant. Includes evaluation and critique of policies and practices.

ANT 450 - Undergrad Research Program     S
Repeatable

ANT 452 Anthropology 452 - Anthropology and Public Policy     IR  
Cultural aspects of the development and implementation of public policy. Emphasizing decision-making methodologies and ethnographic studies of the consequences of implemented policies.

ANT 453 - Poverty, Policy, and Human Services      IR
National programs and local interventions that address poverty related social conditions in Syracuse and Onondaga county. Field study of current policies and practices in government and in health, education, and human services agencies. Additional work required of graduate students.

ANT 455 (crosslisted with: WGS 455) Culture and AIDS    IR ANT 455 - Culture and AIDS     IR  
Relationship between AIDS and cultures in which it spreads. Cultural practices and sexuality and social effects of widespread AIDS, including healthcare in Asia, Africa, Latin America and USA.

ANT 456  (crosslisted with:NAT 456) Representations of Indigenous Peoples in Popular Cultures   IR
Contested images used by colonizers and other non-indigenous people to represent Native Americans and other indigenous peoples. How indigenous people represent themselves in different types of media.

ANT 458  Anthropology of Social Change   Y    (OFFERED IN MADRID ONLY) 
Introduces the basic concepts used by anthropologists to study change. Cultural heterogeneity of people of the Iberian peninsula, used as a means to understand social and cultural change in contemporary Spain and Portugal. Some themes examined include culture contact and acculturation, planned and nondirected change, and role of individual.  

ANT 459 (crosslisted with:NAT 459)  Contemporary Native North American Issues    IR Crosslisted with WGS 455

ANT 456 - Representations of Indigenous Peoples in Popular Cultures    IR
Contested images used by colonizers and other non-indigenous people to represent Native Americans and other indigenous peoples. How indigenous people represent themselves in a variety of media.

ANT 459 - Contemporary Native North American Issues     IR  
Contemporary issues including federal Indian Policypolicy, population controls, fishing rights, religious freedom, land disputes, gaming, repatriation, environmental colonialism and Native American artistic response.
ANT 461(crosslisted Crosslisted with NAT 459

ANT 461 - Museums and Native Americans Americans    IR  
The contested relationships among Native North Americans and Museums from earliest contact until the present. Topics include: “salvage” ethnography, collecting practices, exhibition and recent shifts in power.
Crosslisted with NAT 461

ANT 462 (CROSSLISTED WITH htw 462, wgs 462)  - Culture and Reproductive Health and Medicine   IR
Medicine    IR
Cultural anthropological approaches to cross-cultural variations in reproductive practices (pregnancy, childbirth, infertility, etc.). Impact of globalization, biomedicalization, international development on reproduction and reproductive health. Medical anthropology and gender studies.
Crosslisted with PHP 462, WGS 462

ANT 463 - Global Health Health    IR
Health Global health in anthropological perspective.   Examines how culture affects people's experiences and response to morbidity and morality.   Considers topics like gender and health, reproductive health, infectious disease, health and inequality and health and war.
Crosslisted with PHP 463

ANT 465 - Critical Issues in Medical Anthropology     O 
Critical aspects of health care delivery in the United States. Curing in primitive societies. Problems Illness and healing in ecological and cross-cultural perspectives; strengths and weaknesses of Western and non-Western methods of healing; problems of introducing Western medicine to other cultures. Permission of instructor.

ANT 466 - Culture and Sexual Behavior    IR 
Crosscultural
Cross-cultural patterns of dating and courtship, sexuality, marriage, fertility, and divorce from biosocial and medical perspectives. Additional work required of graduate students.

ANT 467 - Culture and Mental Disorder Disorders     E  
Mental disorders viewed as illnesses or social constructions. Crosscultural Cross-cultural variation and universals. Western and non-Western methods of treatment. Additional work required of graduate students. 

ANT 468 (cross listed with: IRP 468, MES 468) - Middle East in Anthological Perspective Perspective    IR
Anthropology of the social, cultural, geographical, and political realities of the Middle East.
Crosslisted with MES 468

ANT 469 - Medical Anthropology in Ecological Perspective    O
Interaction of biological and cultural factors in disease causation, diagnosis, and treatment in Western and non-Western societies. Introducing Western medicine to non-Western cultures. Additional work required of graduate students.

ANT 470  Experience Credit    S470 - Experience Credit     S
Participation in a discipline or subject relatedd experiiencerelated experience. Students myst must be evaluated by written or oral reports or an examination. Limited to those in good academic standing.
Repeatable ANT 471 (crosslisted with: REL 471)

ANT 471 - Religion and Society in Brazil    IR
Role of religion in society; religions of Brazil, including Catholicism, liberation theology, afro-religions. Spring break field stay in Rio de Janeiro; methods of study; preparation of research proposal.  ANT 472 (crosslisted with: LIN 472, WGS 472)   Language, Culture and Society    Y  
Crosscultural survey of the role of language in culture and society, including cognition and language usage along the dimensions of class, gender, race, ethnicity, and social status. Prereq. for ANT/LIN 472: anthropology or linguistics majors with senior standing.
Crosslisted with REL 471

ANT 473 - Peace and Conflict in the Balkans: Anthropological Perspectives    IRPerspectives     IR
Introduction to Balkan histories, cultures, and societies. Topics include ethnic nationalism, the wars of Yugoslav dissolution, effects of international humanitarian interventions on everyday life, and politics of reconciliation and reconstruction. Additional work required of graduate students.

ANT 475  475 - Culture and Disputing   IR Disputing     IR 
Explores modalities of disputing, dispute resolution, and conflict management in cross-cultural perspective. Decision making in meetings and organizations, negotiation, mediation, inter-cultural negotiation, and third party interventions. Ethnographic materials are drawn from many cultures. Prereq: ANT 477/677 or permission of instructor.

ANT 476  Women, War and Peace  E 
Ways in which folklore (oral and material traditions, including personal narratives), reflects key cultural ideas such as gender, ethnicity, and history. Analytical methods for examining fold traditions.  

ANT 477  Culture and Conflict   IR 

ANT 476 - Women, War and Peace    E 
Examines global politics, war and violence through a gender-sensitive lens. The topics include human trafficking, prostitution, militarization, poverty, nationalism, ethnic conflict, war-rapes, torture, genocide, reconciliation and recovery.  

ANT 477 - Culture and Conflict     IR 
An overview of conflict in cross-cultural perspective. Covers a variety of approaches to using cultural analysis in the study of conflict and reviews case studies of specific conflicts. 

ANT 479  479 - Anthropology of Global Transformations   Transformations    IR 
Impact of global processes, including industrialization, capitalist expansion, transnational migration, environmental change, and international tourism on the daily lives of men and women in Third World contexts.

ANT 481  Ethnographic Techniques   O 481 - Ethnographic Techniques     O 
Research methods and techniques in cultural anthropology. Participant observation, interviewing, establishing rapport, recording field data, use of photographic and recording equipment, etc. Also offered regularly abroad.

ANT 482  482 - Life Histories/Narratives   IR 
Evaluation of personal narratives (fieldwork memoirs, reflexive writing), oral histories and testimonials of respondents, a means of personalizing ethnographic discourse, giving more direct voice to respondents, and increasing multivocality. Issues of reflexivity, subjectivity, authority.

ANT 483  483 - Social Movement Theory   Theory    IR 
Theoretical approaches to analysis of social movements including Marxist and other Utopian traditions of social analysis, rational choice and resource mobilization models, new social movement theory, and Gramscian analysis of power and resistance.

ANT 484  Social Movement Research Methods   IR 
A range of research methodologies relevant to the study of social movements. Stimulates critical thinking about these methodologies’ ethical implications. Students develop proposals for projects carried out the following semester. ANT 490  Independent Study  490 - Independent Study    S
Exploration of a problem, or problems, in depth. Individual independent study upon a plan submitted by the student. Admission by consent of supervising instructiorinstructor(s) and the deparment. 
RepeatableANT 494 (crosslisted with:AAS 4343, HST 434)  Underground Railroad   department. 
Repeatable

ANT 494 - Underground Railroad    SI
Myth and history of the Underground in the context of African American freedom efforts. Emphasis on events, personalities, and sites in Upstate New York. Student field research and exploration of archival and Internet resources.
Crosslisted with AAS 434, HST 434

ANT 495 - Research for Distinction in Anthropology    S
Research and background study in preparation to writh write a capstone "Distinction" paper. The project will involve significant library and/or field work under faculty supervision/ GPA requiremnet requirement and faculty approvals needed.  

ANT 496 - Distinction in Anthropology    S
Distinction paper: Advanced research under the supervision of a faculty supervisor. The capstone "Distiction Distinction in AnthropolgyAnthropology" paper involves signifcant significant library and/or field work. GPA requirements and faculty approvals needed. 

ANT 499 - Honors Capstone Project    SI
Completion of an Honors Capstone Project under the supervision of a faculey member. 
Repeatable 2 timesANT 553 (crosslisted with:WGS 553) Women and Social Change   Ethe supervision of a faculty member. 
Repeatable

ANT 500 - Selected Topics       SI
Exploration of a topic (to be determined) not covered by the standard curriculum but of interest to faculty and students in a particular semester.
Repeatable

ANT 553 - Women and Social Change    E
Function of changes in women’s roles in sociocultural urbanization, revolution, and modernization. Women in Third World countries compared to women in industrialized countries.

ANT 571(crosslisted with:LIN 571, SOC 571) Topics in Sociolinguistics   SI
Functions of language in society. Geographical, socioeconomic, and male-female differentiation. Functions if various types if speech events.

ANT 574  Anthropology and Physical Design   E Crosslisted with WGS 553

ANT 574 - Anthropology and Physical Design     E 
Interrelationship of social and spatial organization in traditional and modern societies. Nonverbal communication: use of space, territoriality, and impact of physical design on human behavior.

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