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- | # About this seminar | ||
- | Welcome to *Contemporary theory and anthropology*, | ||
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- | The organization of scholarly inquiry into disciplines is more than simple specialization. What people in one discipline study---in anthropology, | ||
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- | This division of labor among disciplines is a product of the institutional and social history of scholarship, | ||
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- | As a discipline, anthropology has historically been very eclectic. Anthropologists are more willing to cross boundaries between fields and draw on perspectives outside of the canons of anthropology. Marshall Sahlins, Jean Comaroff, and John Comaroff, for example, are equally at home in both anthropology and history (and indeed John Comaroff is a historian by training). Mary Douglas, whose work we will not read in this class, began her career as a social anthropologist who studied African societies, but today is one of the most widely read cultural sociologists and probably best known for her work on bureaucracy as a social form. Perhaps for that reason, then, identifying anthropology as a discipline is very tricky and possibly futile. It is always been an open question what counts as anthropological knowledge (and anthropologists like it that way). | ||
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- | This creates a big problem for us as anthropologists: | ||
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- | *** | ||
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- | What this means for us, though, is that we have a lot to discuss, and each of you, as students of anthropology can each make your own contribution to everyone' | ||
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- | (1) students have done most of the talking, and | ||
- | (2) everyone in the class has had a chance to ask questions and | ||
- | contribute their ideas. | ||
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- | Your participation in discussion is, in that sense, something you do for your fellow students. By offering your views, especially to people who disagree with you, you help them to reflect critically on their own reasoning. Likewise, when you seek out the perspectives of other people, you are able to become aware of your own thought processes. This is ultimately what you will take away from this class: an understanding of your own perspective, | ||
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- | I will not give any lectures in this class, although I can take the floor and give a brief overview of background information relevant to understanding a particular topic or reading.[^rec] My job in the seminar is to facilitate an open discussion in which everyone makes a contribution and is heard. Each week we will come together to help each other understand a set of readings better. Each week's readings represent the work of one important scholar who is making a contribution to a debate about how to answer deep questions about the nature of human societies and their diversity. Our job is to find out all the different ways that these ideas can be interpreted, | ||
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- | Many students are unfamiliar or uncomfortable with speaking in public, or with participating in a class discussion. Discussion is important to this class, and it is a part of your grade, but I am not assuming that it will come easy to everyone. What I expect is that each person try their best, and keep trying. | ||
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- | What you can expect from me and from your fellow students is that we will all help make the class comfortable and welcoming to everyone' | ||
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- | One way we will make it easier for people to participate is by giving students [[3601: | ||
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- | Your work with your group to lead class discussions in class will also help prepare you to develop arguments about cultural theory and the nature of anthropology. This will help you with your other major assignment. In the final essay, you will make an argument in which you present the recent literature in anthropology on a topic of your choice as a debate among scholars. This will be due at the end of the semester. | ||
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- | [^rec]: And since there are no lectures, there are also no lecture recordings for this class either. |
3601/2020/about.1581308082.txt.gz · Last modified: 2020/02/09 20:14 by Ryan Schram (admin)