Courses of Study 2011-2012 
    
    May 13, 2024  
Courses of Study 2011-2012 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

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ANTHR 2015 - [Archaeology of Empires]

(crosslisted)
(also ARKEO 2015 ) @ # (HA-AS)
Fall. 3 credits.

Next offered 2013-2014.

L. Khatchadourian.

The word “empire” today evokes modern, capitalist, European, even American experiments in expansion and asymmetrical relations of power. This course considers the precursors of these modern imperialisms. It offers a comparative study of early empires of the Old and New Worlds, approached from an archaeological perspective. We confront broad theoretical problems of empire—what they are, what they do, why they fail—and address these problems through archaeological interventions into such topics as conquest, colonialism, kingship and ideology, identity and inequality, tolerance and domination, and the everyday workings of empire. Is the very concept of empire as a construct of political, social, or historical analysis useful across time and space? What is archaeology’s contribution to the study of these complex, expansive, and messy sociopolitical phenomena?



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