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Introduction to Anthropology (ANTH*1150)

Course code: 
ANTH*1150
Section: 
01
Course term: 
Winter 2025
Course instructor: 
Lauren Sneyd
Details: 

Course Description
This course examines the diversity of humanity through the lens of cultural anthropology. Cultural anthropology is the study of humans, particularly the many ways people around the world today and throughout human history have organized themselves to live together: to get along, to survive, to thrive and to have meaningful lives. This course will introduce the work of anthropologists, and the research strategies and analytical perspectives they have developed to understand and to approach human diversity. Through the lens of cultural anthropology, we will consider topics like culture, language, economics, structures of power, race and racism, ethnicity and nationalism, gender, sexuality, kinship, family, marriage, religion, and health and illness. The tools developed by anthropologists to understand human diversity can be appreciated by students in various fields: whether your interest is in marketing, accounting, psychology or political science, you will need a skill set for analyzing and engaging a multi-cultural and increasingly interconnected world and workplace. This course will equip you to better understand and engage the world as you move through it, and if you so choose, to apply those strategies to address complicated contemporary issues. The content of this course will be delivered in lectures, films, and slides.

Learning Outcomes
• Critically reflect on culture, social relations and social structures in order to develop a broader and deeper understanding of social problems;
• Situate and critically evaluate one’s social and cultural identity and location, power and privilege, within a personal, social, cultural, political and global context;
• Engage in classical and contemporary scholarly inquiry to identify and address anthropological questions and issues;
• Demonstrate personal and academic integrity and ethical reasoning.

Evaluation
Two written assignments (20% each) 40%
Midterm 30%
Final exam 30%
Required texts
One textbook and one ethnography

About the College

The College of Social and Applied Human Sciences traces its origins and traditions to the establishment of the Macdonald Institute, one of the University of Guelph's three founding colleges.

The college provides programming in a range of social science and applied human science disciplines and support to discipline-based and interdisciplinary researchers.

Academic Departments

Family Relations & Applied Nutrition
Geography, Environment & Geomatics
Political Science
Psychology
Sociology & Anthropology

Institutes & Other Units

Canada India Research Centre for Learning and Engagement (CIRCLE)
Community Engaged Scholarship Institute (CESI)
Criminal Justice and Public Policy
Guelph Institute of Development Studies
The Live Work Well Research Centre
ReVision: The Centre for Art and Social Justice

Contact

College of Social & Applied Human Sciences
University of Guelph
50 Stone Road East
Guelph, Ontario,
N1G 2W1
Canada

Email: csahs@uoguelph.ca
Tel: 519-824-4120 x56753
Fax: 519-766-4797


Source URL:https://socioanthro.uoguelph.ca/course-outlines/introduction-anthropology-anth1150-26