Fall 2019

126M: Geoarchaeology

Instructor: Lisa Maher

Term: Fall 2019

Time: Tu 9:00 am – 11:59 am

Room: 61 Barrows

Humans have always been affected by changes in their landscape and, in turn, had an influence on their physical surroundings. The contexts that archaeological material and features are found within yield invaluable clues as to how sites form, what types of activities people performed in them, and what kinds of natural and cultural processes altered the archaeological record from deposition to excavation. This...

R5B 004: Legal Orientalism

Instructor: Kristin Sangren

Term: Fall 2019

Time: M, W, F 10:00 am - 10:59 am

Room: 122 Wheeler

R5B 002: Silence and Secrecy

Instructor: Juliana Friend

Term: Fall 2019

Time: M, W, F 1:00 pm - 1:59 pm

Room: 122 Wheeler

R5B 001: Anthropology of the Aftermath - History, Eschaton, Ruin

Instructor: Aaron Eldridge

Term: Fall 2019

Time: M, W, F 1:00 pm - 1:59 pm

Room: 115 Kroeber

196: Sex and Gender in Biological Anthropology

Instructor: Sabrina Agarwal

Term: Fall 2019

Time: W 1:00 pm - 2:59 pm

Units: 4

Room: 221 Kroeber

084: Race, Gender, and Social Life in Colonial Honduras

Instructor: Rosemary Joyce

Term: Fall 2019

Time: W 11:00 am – 12:59 pm

Room: 192 Barrows

002AC: Introduction to Archaeology

Instructor: Kirsten Vacca

Term: Fall 2019

Time: M, W, F 8:00 am - 8:59 am

Units: 4

Room: Lewis 100

Prehistory and cultural growth. Introduction to the methods, goals, and theoretical concepts of archaeology with attention to the impact archaeology has had on the construction of the histories of diverse communities - Native Americans, Hispanics, and Euro-Americans. It fulfills the requirements for 2.

Requirements Course...

C262A: Theories of Traditionality and Modernity

Instructor: Charles Briggs

Term: Fall 2019

Time: W 12:00 pm - 1:59 pm

Units: 4

Room: 221 Kroeber

Constructing Tradition: In this seminar we explore the implications of the proposition that “tradition” is a process rather than an object, something that people “do” and “make” rather than “have” or “own.”

196: Sex and Gender in Biological Anthropology

Instructor: Sabrina Agarwal

Term: Fall 2019

Time: W 1:00pm-3:00pm

Room: 221 Kroeber

This course takes a bioanthropological approach to the study of variation in sex and gender across the primate species, within and across human populations, and throughout time. Topics include the biological foundations and evolution of sex and sexuality, and the biocultural constructions of sex and gender. References will include evolutionary...