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Jul 08, 2025
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Courses of Study 2019-2020 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Anthropology|
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Introductory Courses:
Each of these introductory courses provides an introduction to one of the subfields of anthropology. They do not form a sequence; students can take them in any order and at any point during their time at Cornell. Sociocultural Anthropology:
Sociocultural anthropology is rooted in the precise observation and rigorous analysis of human cultural capacities and human social practices, relations, and institutions. All sociocultural anthropology involves both inquiry into the diversity of human cultures (ethnography) and comparative analysis of human social dynamics (social theory). Historically, sociocultural anthropology specialized in the study of nonwestern peoples, but today there are few places and domains of human activity that sociocultural anthropologists do not study. To give a few examples, sociocultural anthropologists study nuclear weapons scientists in California, the transformation of state power in Russia, and the politics of development in India. They study how television producers in Egypt contribute to nationalism, the social effects of truth commissions in Guatemala and South Africa, and the emergence of new religious and social movements in Latin America. What distinguishes sociocultural anthropology as a field is its engagement with the full abundance of human lived experience and its integrated, comparative effort to make sense of the key processes shaping this experience. As such, sociocultural anthropology is an excellent, flexible choice of major. It teaches core critical, analytical, and expressive skills and important perspectives on human cultural creativity and social life that are widely applicable. Recently, our majors have gone into careers as diverse as academic scholarship, activism, advertising, consulting, design, film, journalism, marketing, medicine, NGO-work, and politics and government. - ANTHR 1400 - The Comparison of Cultures
- ANTHR 1700 - Indigenous North America (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 1900 - Global Engagements: Living and Working in a Diverse World
- ANTHR 2021 - Viruses- Humans-Viral Politics (Social History and Cultural Politics of HIV & AIDS) (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 2400 - Cultural Diversity and Contemporary Issues
- ANTHR 2410 - South Asian Diaspora (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 2415 - [Anthropology of Iran] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 2420 - Nature/Culture: Ethnographic Approaches to Human-Environment Relations (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 2421 - Worlding Sex and Gender (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 2430 - [The Rise and Fall of Civilization] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 2433 - Anthropology of Law and Politics (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 2437 - [Economy, Power, and Inequality]
- ANTHR 2465 - Global Heritage (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 2468 - Medicine, Culture, and Society (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 2470 - Islam and Gender (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 2546 - South Asian Religions in Practice: The Healing Traditions (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 2577 - American Jewish Women and the Body of Tradition (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 2721 - [Anthropological Representations: Ethnographies on Latino Culture] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 2846 - [Magic and Witchcraft in the Greco-Roman World] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 2920 - [Drugs and Social Justice] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 3000 - Introduction to Anthropological Theory
- ANTHR 3020 - Representing Brooklyn: Race, Place and Popular Culture (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 3061 - Computing Cultures (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 3110 - Documentary Production Fundamentals (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 3136 - Floods, Toxic Drinking Water and Other Muddy Disasters (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 3405 - [Multicultural Issues in Education] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 3410 - [Nationalism and Revivalism]
- ANTHR 3420 - Myth, Ritual, and Symbol (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 3422 - [Culture, Politics, and Environment in the Circumpolar North] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 3432 - [Hasidism: History, Community, Thought] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 3437 - Brave New World, 21st Century Authoritarianism
- ANTHR 3451 - [Global Cultural Heritage] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 3460 - [Language Ideologies and Practices] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 3465 - [Anthropology of the Body] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 3475 - [Ethnoracial Identity in Anthropology, Language, and Law] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 3479 - [Culture, Language, and Thought]
- ANTHR 3516 - [Power, Society, and Culture in Southeast Asia]
- ANTHR 3552 - Genocide Today (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 3620 - [A Global Controversy: How to Study a Human Rights Violation] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 3680 - Islam and the Ethnographic Imagination (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 3703 - [Asians in the Americas: A Comparative Perspective] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 3762 - [Law, Latina/o, Illegality] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 3777 - [The United States] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 3901 - Going Global: Preparing for Engaged Learning
- ANTHR 3902 - Coming Home: Making the Most of Engaged Experiences
- ANTHR 4013 - Textual Ethnography (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 4030 - [The Caucasus: Captives, Cultures, Crossroads] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 4041 - What is (an) Epidemic? (Infectious Diseases in Historical, Social, and Political Perspective) (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 4086 - [Histories of Food Insecurity]
- ANTHR 4101 - [The Entangled Lives of Humans and Animals] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 4114 - Science, Medicine, the Body: A Critical Race and Feminist Inquiry (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 4139 - Global Currents: Immobility and Multi-Sited Ethnography (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 4143 - Life in Ruins (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 4145 - Indigeneity and Energy in Native America (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 4146 - Moving and Knowing (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 4330 - How Do We Know Nature? Language, Knowledge and the Environment (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 4401 - Advanced Documentary Production
- ANTHR 4402 - [Anthropology of Education] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 4403 - Ethnographic Field Methods
- ANTHR 4409 - [Qualitative Methods in the Social Sciences]
- ANTHR 4410 - [Indigenous Peoples, Ecological Sciences, and Environmentalism]
- ANTHR 4413 - Walter Benjamin (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 4418 - [Writing Ethnography: Theory, Genre and Practice]
- ANTHR 4419 - [Anthropology of Corporations]
- ANTHR 4435 - [Postcolonial Science] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 4437 - Ethnographies of Development
- ANTHR 4442 - Toxicity (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 4451 - [Time and Temporality]
- ANTHR 4453 - [Political Anthropology]
- ANTHR 4456 - [Secularism and Political Theology] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 4458 - [Women, Girls and Gender in Education] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 4460 - [Heritage and its Entanglements: Representing, Collecting, and Preserving Cultural Identity] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 4462 - [Politics Beyond the State: Activism, Advocacy, and NGOs]
- ANTHR 4466 - [Citizenship, Borders, and Belonging]
- ANTHR 4467 - [Self and Subjectivity]
- ANTHR 4468 - Jewish Ethnography: Jewish Communities Yesterday and Today (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 4471 - [Jewish Diaspora] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 4478 - [Taboo and Pollution]
- ANTHR 4479 - [Ethnicity and Identity Politics: An Anthropological Perspective] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 4513 - Religion and Politics in Southeast Asia (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 4637 - [Shi’ism: Debates and Discourses] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 4673 - [Body/Politics/Africa] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 4682 - [Healing and Medicine in Africa] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 4725 - [American Indian Lands and Sovereignties]
- ANTHR 4733 - The Lower East Side: Jews and the Immigrant City (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 4771 - [Indigenous Art, Film, and New Media: Anti-Colonial Strategies] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 4774 - [Indigenous Spaces and Materiality] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 4801 - [Water Societies: Ecology, Technology, History] (crosslisted)
Anthropological Archaeology:
Anthropological archaeology studies the diverse societies of the past using the material traces they left behind in the archaeological record. In addition to studying artifacts, archaeologists use unique methods to study the settings in which artifacts were produced and used by examining regional settlement patterns, the structure of sites and communities, the organization of activities, and ancient symbolism and social relations. The concerns of anthropological archaeology range from basic questions about continuity and change in the past, to application of hard science methods to date sites and determine the sources of artifacts, criticism of the uses to which the past is put in contemporary society, and protection of the archaeological record. Anthropological archaeology can be distinguished from other forms of archaeology (such as Classical or Art Historical archaeology) based on its emphasis on holistically studying past cultural systems, and by the theories and approaches it shares with sociocultural and biological anthropology. There are numerous career opportunities for anthropological archaeologists, including work with museums, government agencies, and historic preservation groups in addition to academic employment. Private companies engaged in federally mandated cultural resource management (or CRM) archaeology employ thousands of archaeologists in the United States, and similar management programs exist in many other countries. Biological Anthropology:
Biological anthropology is the subfield of anthropology that explores the physical diversity, evolutionary history, and behavioral potential of our species. Consistent with anthropology more generally, biological anthropology is concerned with human variation. The distinctive perspective of this subfield is that it examines human variation within the framework of evolutionary theory. Analyses of both biology and culture, and of the interaction between the two, mark the broad boundaries of this discipline. Within that wide scope, specific areas of inquiry are diverse, including fossil studies, primate behavior, nutrition and development, sexual behavior, parental investment, molecular and population genetics, adaptation to environmental stress, disease evolution, life history analysis, and more. Some of the most pressing social issues of our time fall within the domain of biological anthropology as well as a range of professions: the controversy over evolution and intelligent design; race, gender, and genetic determinism; the control of disease; the roots of aggression; and conservation and the role of humans in ecological systems. Although the number of anthropology courses offered in this subfield are limited, students can pursue their interests through a variety of related courses in other departments and by constructing independent study courses with specific faculty members. Honors, Field Research, and Independent Study:
Graduate Seminars:
The graduate program in anthropology is described in much greater detail on the anthropology department web page at anthropology.cornell.edu. The seminars described immediately below pertain to the program in sociocultural anthropology. For information about graduate study in archaeology and biological anthropology, see the anthropology department web page. A core set of seminars is required of all graduate students in sociocultural anthropology: ANTHR 6020 , ANTHR 6025 , ANTHR 6440 . A methodology course such as ANTHR 6403 or ANTHR 7418 is strongly recommended. These courses are open to graduate students from other related fields. This sequence, and the graduate curriculum in general, is premised on the idea that anthropology is best defined as the comparative study of human social life. This definition resists institutional pressures in the academy to distinguish social science from humanistic or cultural studies and scholarly from more worldly applications. Our most important method, ethnography, is at once scientific and humanistic; disciplinary aspirations refuse to view cultural interpretation and analytic explanation as separable values. Furthermore, theory in anthropology is directly related to practice in the world whether in relation to research or more action-oriented pursuits. Consequently, the core sequences as well as most other courses for graduate students are oriented explicitly toward subverting an ideological construction of social life as separable into cultural and social (or political-economic) domains. - ANTHR 6015 - Teaching Anthropology/Teaching Culture
- ANTHR 6020 - History of Anthropological Thought
- ANTHR 6025 - Proseminar in Anthropology
- ANTHR 6101 - [Sense, Movement, Sociality] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 6102 - Political Culture (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 6110 - Documentary Production Fundamentals (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7758 - Archaeology of Greek Religion: Theory, Methods, and Practice (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 6210 - [Historical Archaeology] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 6230 - [Humans and Animals] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 6232 - [Politics of the Past] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 6235 - Bioarchaeology (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 6245 - Across the Seas: Contacts between the Americas and the Old World Before Columbus (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 6248 - [Finger Lakes and Beyond: Archaeology of the Native Northeast] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 6255 - Ancient Mexico and Central America (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 6256 - [Maya History] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 6269 - [Gender and Age in Archaeology] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 6301 - [Social Theory] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 6402 - [Material Theory II: Assemblage & Object] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 6403 - Ethnographic Field Methods
- ANTHR 6422 - [Culture, Politics, and Environment in the Circumpolar North] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 6424 - [Ethnoracial Identity in Anthropology, Language, and Law] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 6432 - [Hasidism: History, Community, Thought]
- ANTHR 6437 - Brave New World, 21st Century Authoritarianism
- ANTHR 6440 - Proposal Development
- ANTHR 6451 - [Global Cultural Heritage] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 6460 - [Language Ideologies and Practices] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 6465 - [Bodies and Bodiliness] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 6475 - [Culture, Language, and Thought]
- ANTHR 6482 - [Perspectives on the Nation]
- ANTHR 6516 - [Power, Society, and Culture in Southeast Asia]
- ANTHR 6552 - Genocide Today (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 6680 - Islam and the Ethnographic Imagination (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 6703 - [Asians in the Americas: A Comparative Perspective]
- ANTHR 6729 - [Climate, Archaeology and History] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 6738 - [Networks in Archaeology] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 6771 - [Indigenous Art, Film, and New Media: Anti-Colonial Strategies] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 6777 - [The United States] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 6880 - Proseminar in Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 6890 - [Collapse of the Secular Future] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7010 - [Engaged Anthropology]
- ANTHR 7013 - Textual Ethnography (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7030 - [The Caucasus: Captives, Cultures, Crossroads] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7056 - Heritage Management: Understanding Techniques and Practices (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7086 - [Histories of Food Insecurity]
- ANTHR 7114 - Science, Medicine, the Body: A Critical Race and Feminist Inquiry (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7139 - Global Currents: Immobility and Multi-Sited Ethnography (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7143 - Life in Ruins (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7145 - Indigeneity and Energy in Native America (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7146 - Moving and Knowing (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7227 - [Embodiment of Inequality: A Bioarchaeological Perspective] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7230 - [History of Archaeological Thought] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7235 - [Meaningful Stuff: Interpreting Material Culture] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7240 - Collecting Culture: Museums and Anthropology (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7246 - Human Osteology (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7250 - Time and History in Ancient Mexico (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7254 - [Themes in Mediterranean Archaeology] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7262 - Çatalhöyük and Archaeological Practice (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7263 - [Zooarchaeological Method] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7264 - [Zooarchaeological Interpretation] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7268 - [Aztecs and Their Empire: Myth, History, and Politics] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7272 - Archaeology of Colonialism and Cultural Entanglement (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7401 - Advanced Documentary Production
- ANTHR 7402 - [Anthropology of Education] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7409 - [Qualitative Methods in the Social Sciences]
- ANTHR 7410 - [Indigenous Peoples, Ecological Sciences, and Environmentalism]
- ANTHR 7413 - Walter Benjamin (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7418 - [Writing Ethnography: Theory, Genre and Practice]
- ANTHR 7419 - [Anthropology of Corporations]
- ANTHR 7435 - [Postcolonial Science]
- ANTHR 7437 - Ethnographies of Development
- ANTHR 7442 - Toxicity (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7451 - [Time and Temporality]
- ANTHR 7453 - [Political Anthropology]
- ANTHR 7456 - [Secularism and Political Theology] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7458 - [Women, Girls and Gender in Education] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7460 - [Heritage and its Entanglements: Representing, Collecting, and Preserving Cultural Identity] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7462 - [Politics Beyond the State: Activism, Advocacy, and NGOs]
- ANTHR 7466 - [Citizenship, Borders, and Belonging]
- ANTHR 7467 - [Self and Subjectivity]
- ANTHR 7468 - Jewish Ethnography: Jewish Communities Yesterday and Today (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7471 - [Jewish Diaspora] (corsslisted)
- ANTHR 7478 - [Taboo and Pollution]
- ANTHR 7479 - [Ethnicity and Identity Politics: An Anthropological Perspective] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7513 - Religion and Politics in Southeast Asia (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7520 - Southeast Asia: Readings in Special Problems
- ANTHR 7530 - South Asia: Readings in Special Problems
- ANTHR 7550 - East Asia: Readings in Special Problems
- ANTHR 7637 - [Shi’ism: Debates and Discourses] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7673 - [Body/Politics/Africa] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7682 - [Healing and Medicine in Africa] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7725 - [American Indian Lands and Sovereignties]
- ANTHR 7742 - [Research Methods in Archaeology] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7774 - [Indigenous Spaces and Materiality] (crosslisted)
- ANTHR 7900 - Department of Anthropology Colloquium
- ANTHR 7910 - Independent Study: Grad I
- ANTHR 7920 - Independent Study: Grad II
- ANTHR 7930 - Independent Study: Grad III
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