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SOAN
110. Introduction to Anthropology
An introduction to cultural and social anthropology which develops the
theoretical rationale of the discipline through the integration of ethnographic
accounts with an analysis of major trends in historical and contemporary
thought. Examples of analytical problems selected for discussion include
the concepts of society and culture, value systems, linguistics, cultural
evolution, structural/functional analysis of economic, social, political
and religious institutions, ethnographic method and the ethical position
of anthropology.
P. Feldman-Savelsberg, J. Fisher, J. Levi
SOAN
111. Introduction to Sociology
An introduction to sociology, including analysis of the sociological perspective,
culture, socialization, demography, and social class and caste institutions
in modern industrial societies and cultures; stability and change in societies
of the twentieth century. Pros and cons of various theoretical strategies
will be emphasized.
N. Saiedi, B. Nagel, A. Nierobisz
SOAN
130. Population and Food in the Global System
Cross-listed with ENTS 130,LTAM 130.
This course focuses on issues of population growth, hunger, and world
food supply. Topics to be considered include: dynamics of population growth
and demographic change; food production systems and sustainable development
in the Third World; socio-political and ecological causes of famine; and
patterns of world food distribution. Special attention will be given to
policies aimed at controlling population and increasing food production,
and why they succeed or fail. No prerequisites.
B. Nagel
SOAN 216. Anthropology of Music
Cross-listed with MUSC 216.
This course examines the anthropological study of music, including consideration
of the role of music in culture and society, the social organization of
musical life, symbolism, creativity, relationship of music and cultural
values, musical change, and the musical results of contact among cultures.
Examples are drawn from a variety of cultures, including South Asian,
Middle Eastern, Native American, and West African. Prerequisite: Either
any introductory music course or any Sociology/Anthropology course.
SOAN 220. Class, Power, and Inequality in America
Cross-listed with AMST 224.
The processes, structures, and functions of stratification in advanced
capitalist societies. Marxist, neomarxist, Weberian, and functionalist
models of class analysis; theories of status attainment and mobility;
the relationship between class, gender, and ethnicity; the relation of
education to status attainment; class and socialization; models of justice
and rationality; and the global stratification system. Prerequisite: Sociology
111 or consent of the instructor.
SOAN 221. Law and Society
Law is everywhere, permeating every aspect of our lives. Yet, law does
not exist in a vacuum. Law is responsive to its social, cultural, political
and economic context. In this course we will examine the social context
of law. We will explore questions such as: What is law? How does law respond
to its environment? How do legal systems operate? Does law facilitate
or reduce social inequality? Can law be used to create social change?
What is the future of law in American society? These questions will be
answered by examining major theories and research in the sociology of
law.
A. Nierobisz
SOAN 222. Work and Occupations in Contemporary Society
Whether we work at home, in an office, or in a factory, work is a prominent
aspect of our daily lives. In this course, we will examine work from a
sociological perspective. The course is designed to help students understand
what work is, how work and occupations developed to what they are today,
how work is changing, and what its future may be. We ill explore questions
such as: What makes a job satisfying? What is skill? Where are the good
jobs? In what ways are women and minorities gaining equality at the workplace?
What does the global world economy mean for the future of work?
SOAN 226. Anthropology of Gender
Cross-listed with WGST 226.
This course examines gender and gender relations from an anthropological
perspective. We discuss such key concepts as gender, voice/mutedness,
status, public and private spheres, and the gendered division of labor,
exploring the intellectual history of these terms and how they have been
used. The course focuses on two areas: 1) the role of sex, sexuality,
and procreation in creating cultural notions of gender, and 2) the impacts
of colonialism, globalization, and economic underdevelopment on Third
World women. Reading include both theoretical articles and ethnographic
case studies from around the world. Prerequisite: Sociology/Anthropology
110 or 111 or permission of the instructor.
P. Feldman-Savelsberg
SOAN 228. Sociology of Religion
Cross-listed with RELG 261.
The social dimension of religion and the relationship between religion
and society. Sociological theories of religion; conversion and commitment;
sects, churches and cults; secularization debate; institutionalization;
civil religion and new religious movements; religion and politics; and
social basis of religious behavior and organization. Prerequisite: Sociology
111 or consent of instructor.
SOAN 230. Human Evolution and Prehistory
Cross-listed with ENTS 230.
A survey of the course of human evolution from Australopithecenes to the
Upper Paleolithic. Areas of discussion include genetics, primate ethology,
the role of archaeology in providing evidence for human evolution and
culture, and the importance of environment and technology in the evolution
of culture. No prerequisite.
SOAN 234. Ecology, Economy, and Culture
Cross-listed with ENTS 234,LTAM 234.
This course examines the ways in which economic goods are embedded in
social relations. When does a thing become a commodity? What relationships
exist between culture and ecology? Formulating an anthropological perspective
for the interpretation of "economic facts," we will examine
simularities and differences among hunter-gatherers, horticulturalists,
and peasants. We will also discuss the interpretation of traders in the
brokering of culture, asymmetrical articulation of local and transnational
economies, gender bias in classical exchange theory, Mauss on gift-giving
and Marx on "commodity fetishism." Theoretical material will
be illustrated with ethnographic examples from Africa, Asia, Oceania,
and the Americas.
J. Levi

SOAN
240. Methods of Social Research
The course is concerned with social scientific inquiry and explanation,
particularly with reference to sociology and anthropology. Topics covered
include research design, data collection, and analysis of data. Both quantitative
and qualitative methods are considered. Prerequisites: Sociology and Anthropology
110 and 111 and Mathematics 115.
A. Nierobisz
SOAN 241. Dialects
Cross-listed with LING 240.
In this course, we examine the power of dialect as a means of expressing
our own, and identifying other people's, social identities. Using both
linguistic and sociological criteria, we address such questions as: What
is a dialect? In what ways do social phenomena such as regional loyalties,
socioeconomic status, ethnicity, gender and age shape the dialect we speak?
What consequences does dialect variation have with regard to social equality?
To what extent can this variation help us understand how and why languages
change over time? Prerequisite: Linguistics 110 or another linguistics
course and consent of the instructor.
SOAN 246. Archaeological Methodology
A study of the methods currently employed in the retrieval, recording
and interpretation of archaeological evidence. Among the topics to be
covered are regional surveys, selection of sites for excavation, methods
of excavation and recording, conservation of artifacts, scientific analyses
of archaeological material and data, and the final publication of results.
Lab course; no prerequisite. Required for the Archaeology Concentration.
N. Wilkie
SOAN 250. Ethnography of Latin America
Cross-listed with LTAM 250.
This course explores the historical development and contemporary experience
of selected peoples and cultures of Latin America. We will examine the
historical and structural processes that have shaped contact among indigenous,
European, and African peoples in Latin America during Conquest and the
colonial period, under conditions of global economic expansion and state
formation, and in present day urban centers and extractive/agricultural
"frontiers." Special attention will be given to local-level
transformations and resistance. Examples will be drawn principally from
Mayan, Afro-Brazilian, Aymara-Quechua, and mestizo cultures.
SOAN 252. Middle Eastern Social Theory
This course will investigate the development of social theory and political
philosophy in both medieval and contemporary middle east. The relation
between secular and religious power, the questions of identity in a modern
world, nationalism, imperialism, fundamentalism, cultural diversity, Islamic
social thought, and the idea of justice will be discussed. We will read
works by Ibn Khaldun, Samir Amin, Al-Afghani, Abdal-Malek, Tibi, Shariati,
Mutahhari, Mernissi, IQbal, Said and others.
SOAN 254. Anthropology of South Asia
This course will consider some of the methodological and theoretical problems
involved in studying complex Hindu civilization. Topics such as caste,
marriage and kinship, economics, politics and leadership, religion and
social change will be treated, primarily as they appear at the level of
selected Hindu and Buddhist villages of India, Nepal, and Sri Lanka.
SOAN 256. Ethnography of Africa
Cross-listed with AFAM 256,FRST 256.
This course emphasizes the study of several sub-Saharan African societies
so as to deal with themes that have concerned anthropologists working
in Africa. The types of questions anthropologists have posed about African
societies, and the role Africa has played in the development of anthropological
theory is explored. Texts include two classics, The Nuer and Chisungu,
as well as contemporary re-studies and ethnographic case studies by both
African and Western scholars to address issues affecting the entire continent,
including colonialism, gender, local-state relations, the role of history,
and debates about cultural identities. Prerequisite: Sociology/Anthropology
110 or 111 or permission of the instructor.
P. Feldman-Savelsberg
SOAN 259. Comparative Issues in Native North America
Cross-listed with AMST 259,LTAM 259.
This course examines the cultural and historical situation of indigenous
groups in the United States, Mexico, and Canada to develop a comparative
perspective for understanding native peoples in North America. How have
indigenous peoples variously coped with continuity and change? What strategies
have they employed in pursuit of political sovereignty, economic survival,
and cultural vitality? In answering these questions, we will explore the
politics of representation regarding "the Indian" as a symbol
in national consciousness; the negotiation of identity in inter ethnic
contexts; patterns of resistance; the impact of European powers and state
agendas; and the resurgence of tradition.
J. Levi
SOAN 260. Myth, Ritual, and Symbolism
Cross-listed with RELG 260.
Exploring the ways in which people make sense of their world through myth,
ritual and symbolism, this course takes an anthropological approach to
the study of comparative religion. What is the relationship between "myth"
and "history?" How do animals, food, color, music, and the human
body function as idioms of symbolic communication? Why is ritual credited
with the ability to heal illnesses, offer political commentary, maintain
cosmic harmony, and foster social cohesion through the exhibition of interpersonal
tensions? Examining major theories in the anthropology of religion, students
learn to record and analyze both "familiar" and "unfamiliar"
myths, rituals, and symbols.
J. Levi
SOAN 262. Anthropology of Health and Illness
An ethnographic approach to beliefs and practices regarding health and
illness in numerous societies worldwide. This course examines patients,
practitioners, and the social networks and contexts through which therapies
are managed to better understand medical systems as well as the significance
of the anthropological study of misfortune. Specific topics include the
symbolism of models of illness, the ritual management of misfortune and
of life crisis events, the political economy of health, therapy management,
medical pluralism, and cross-cultural medical ethics. Case studies range
from birth and death to epilepsy, AIDS and cancer, and from a working
class neighborhood in Philadelphia, to Hmong immigrants, to South African
street children. Prerequisite: Sociology/Anthropology 110 or 111 or permission
of the instructor.
SOAN 281. Race and Ethnicity in US and China
In this course we will read and discuss anthropological and sociological
works on race and ethnicity in U.S. and China. It will help students to
understand how different cultural prejudices create cultural images. We
will compare lines of thinking between the two peoples and will communicate
different mental images of each other. We will also discuss whether notions
of race and ethnicity can overstep cultural boundaries and share the same
"roots". The course should make students become more culturally
reflexive and critical.
N. Bilik
SOAN 282. Anthropology of Japan
This course will provide students with the genealogy of postwar anthropological
knowledge on Japan beginning with Chrysanthemum and the Sword by Ruth
Benedict. We will read and discuss anthropological texts and other related
literature that have helped the western academy in forming images of Japan
and the knowledge of her society and culture. We will also look at Japanese
"national character" and cultural uniqueness by unfolding the
Anthropological Other in Japan, such as Koreans.
N. Bilik

SOAN 302. Anthropology and Indigenous Rights
Cross-listed with AMST 300,LTAM 302.
This seminar examines the relationship between culture and human rights
from an anthropological perspective. By asking "who are indigenous
peoples?" and "what specific rights do they have?" this
course introduces students to a comparative framework for understanding
cultural rights discourse. Given the history of intolerance to difference,
the seminar demonstrates the need to explore the determinants of violence,
ethnocide, and exploitation routinely committed against the world's most
marginalized peoples. At the same time, it also asks about the limits
of tolerance, if human rights abuses are perpetrated under the banner
of cultural pluralism. Students will analyze case studies drawn from Africa,
Asia, and the Americas, as well as issues that cross-cut these regions
Prerequisite: Sociology/Anthropology 110, 111 or permision of the instructor;
upper division coursework in anthropology, sociology, history or philosophy
recommended.
SOAN 303. Criminology: Classical and Contemporary Perspectives
This course is designed to familiarize students with sociological approaches
to the study of crime and criminal behavior and criminal justice responses
to criminal activity. Students will learn dominant sociological theories
of crime, understand how social forces play a key role in crime and reactions
to crime, and understand how sociological theory and research can prevent
criminal activity.
A. Nierobisz
SOAN
312. Actors and Issues in Contemporary Third World "Development"
Cross-listed with ENTS 312,LTAM 312.
This course focuses on the processes known as "development,"
the roles of various social actors in these processes, and the social,
environmental, and human rights implications of these processes. We discuss
the concept of development, the construction of an ideology of development,
and the various theoretical perspectives on development within the fields
of sociology and anthropology. Specific issues that we examine include:
the political economy of agrarian change; gender issues in development;
international development actors and institutions, and their roles in
shaping the social and environmental impacts of development; the role
of social movements and grassroots organizations in contesting development
activities and in shaping new models and meanings of development; and
strategies for sustainable, democratic development locally, nationally,
and internationally.
B. Nagel
SOAN 320. Schooling and Opportunity in American Society
Refer to EDUC 353 for description.
J. Ramsay
SOAN
330. Sociological Thought and Theory
Classical sociological theory has been concerned with at least three fundamental
questions. They are the nature of the historic transition from feudalism
to capitalism, the appropriate method of social studies, and the form
of a rational society. Beginning with the Enlightenment and romanticism,
we study nineteenth century positivism, liberalism, Marxism and nihilism,
and investigate the ideas of Weber, Durkheim, Simmel and Husserl at the
turn of the century.
N. Saiedi
SOAN 331. Anthropological Thought and Theory
A systematic introduction to the theoretical foundations of social and
cultural anthropology with special emphasis given to twentieth century
British, French and American schools. The course deals with such seminal
figures as Morgan, Boas, Malinowski, Radcliffe-Brown, Levi-Straus, Harris,
Sahlins, Bourdieu, and Geertz. The reading strikes a balance between ethnographic
accounts and theoretical statements. Prerequisites: Sociology/Anthropology
110 and 330 or consent of the instructor.
J. Fisher
SOAN 332. Contemporary Social Theory
Basic overview of nature and major types of contemporary sociological
theory, from roughly 1920s to the present. Major issues include analysis
of action theory, the method of social sciences, structuralist-historicist
debate, the relation between rational and normative social institutions,
the linguistic turn in sociology, new approaches to hermeneutics, and
the question of domination and critique. Major figures include Mannheim,
Mead, Parsons, Schutz, Lukacs, Althusser, Habermas, Gadamer, Foucault,
Bourdieu and Luhman.
N. Saiedi
SOAN 340. Advanced Topics in Research Design and Data
Analysis
This course will examine special topics in sociological and anthropological
research, including survey design, data management, qualitative fieldwork
techniques, interviewing strategies, and quantitative data analysis. The
course will be run as a seminar; each student will work on a project of
their own design. This project could involve development of a detailed
empirical research proposal, design of a survey instrument, qualitative
or quantitative data collection and analysis, or some combination of these
activities. Prerequisite: Sociology/Anthropology 240 or consent of the
instructor.
SOAN 395. Idioms of Inequality: Ethnicity, Gender, and
Exchange in Latin America
Cross-listed with LTAM 395,WGST 395.
Focusing on Indian as well as Hispanic cultures in Mexico, Central, and
South America, this course will analyze the ways in which identity is
processed through symbols of difference. It seeks to understand how ethnicity,
gender, and exchange sometimes operate as means for achieving solidarity
and complementarity, yet at other times function as the quintessential
sources for inequality. Drawing ethnographic materials from Latin America,
this course examines the meaning and significance of culturally variable
expressions of inequality as modulated through critical social relations.
An emphasis will be placed on highlighting salient theoretical debates
through the interpretation of both classic and contemporary ethnographies.
Prerequisites: Sociology/Anthropology 110, 111, upper division coursework
in Latin American Studies, or permission of the instructor.
J. Levi
SOAN 395. Ethnography of Reproduction
Cross-listed with LTAM 395,WGST 395.
This seminar explores the meanings of reproductive beliefs and practices
in comparative perspective. It focuses on (but is not limited to) ethnographic
examples from the U.S./Canada and England and from sub-Saharan Africa
(societies with relatively low fertility and high utilization of technology
and a set of societies with mostly high fertility and low utilization
of technology). Topics examined include fertility and birth, fertility
rites, new reproductive technologies, abortion, population control, infertility,
child survival and child loss. Prerequisites: Sociology/Anthropology 110
or 111; 226, 260, 262 or 130 is recommended; or permission of the instructor.
P. Feldman-Savelsberg
SOAN 395. Archaeology Seminar, Contemporary Issues in
Archaeology
Cross-listed with LTAM 395,WGST 395.
Refer to ARCN 395 ro description.
M. Savina, N. Wilkie
SOAN 400. Integrative Exercise
The integrative exercise in Sociology and Anthropology consists of carrying
out and presenting a major piece of research, and in sharing and discussing
the work-in-progress with a group of others engaged in the same process,
under the guidance of a faculty supervisor. Please consult the "Sociology/Anthropology
Handbook for Majors" for a full description.
Staff
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