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Jerome
Levi (anthropology) (M.Phil. Cambridge, Ph.D. Harvard) is interested
in the ethnography of the Greater Southwest and Mesoamerica. In Mexico,
he has conducted research among the Tarahumara (Rarámuri) of Chihuahua,
and the Tzotzil of Chiapas. In the U.S., he has worked with indigenous
peoples of southern California and on the Hopi-Navaho land dispute. His
current research focuses on the politics of identity, symbolism, and interethnic
relations in the Sierra Tarahumara of northwest Mexico. Jay teaches courses
on the comparative history of native peoples and the state in Mexico,
Canada, and the U.S.; ethnicity, gender, and exchange in Latin America;
and anthropological approaches to the study of religion, economics, and
indigenous rights.
ONLINE COURSE MATERIALS
110
Introduction to Social Anthropology
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