Sociocultural Anthropology

Charles L. Briggs

Contact OFFICE: 307 Anthropology and Art Practice Building (Formerly Known As Kroeber Hall) E-MAIL: clbriggs@berkeley.edu OFFICE HOURS Wednesday, 11:30AM - 2:00PM & at other times by appt. Appts scheduled and links provided by emailing clbriggs@berkeley.edu

Mariane C. Ferme

Contact OFFICE: 317 Anthropology and Art Practice Building (Formely Known As Kroeber Hall) E-MAIL: mcf@berkeley.edu OFFICE HOURS: During the Fall 2023 semester, Prof. Ferme's Office hours will be Wednesdays between 10 am - noon, or by appointment by emailing mcf@berkeley.edu.

Sarah E. Vaughn

Contact OFFICE: 335 Anthropology and Art Practice Building (Formerly Known As Kroeber Hall) E-MAIL: sev83@berkeley.edu OFFICE HOURS 11:30 AM - 1:00 PM FRIDAY OR BY APPOINTMENT VIA ZOOM

Lawrence Cohen

Contact OFFICE: 319 Anthropology and Art Practice Building (Formerly Known As Kroeber Hall) E-MAIL: cohen@berkeley.edu OFFICE HOURS General hours (signup by Calendly at https://calendly.com/cohen-1/30min) Thursdays 8am-9am and 3pm-5pm

Charles Hirschkind

Contact OFFICE: 305 Anthropology and Art Practice Building E-MAIL: chirschk@berkeley.edu OFFICE HOURS Tuesdays 11:00AM - 1:00PM

Cori Hayden

Contact OFFICE: 305 Anthropology and Art Practice Building (Formerly Known As Kroeber Hall) E-MAIL: cphayden@berkeley.edu OFFICE HOURS via zoom Students may email me for the link to the sign-up sheet and a specific zoom invitation. Tuesday 4 -5 PM Thursday 4 - 5 PM

William F. Hanks

Contact OFFICE: 315 Anthropology and Art Practice Building (Formely Known As Kroeber Hall) E-MAIL: wfhanks@berkeley.edu OFFICE HOURS Tuesday 1PM - 3PM Sign up sheet by door gets posted Thu at 12:30 for following week

Nancy Scheper-Hughes

Contact OFFICE: 321 Anthropology and Art Practice Building (Formely Known As Kroeber Hall) E-MAIL: nsh@berkeley.edu OFFICE HOURS by appointment

Daena Funahashi

Research

Funahashi’s work attends to moments of negativity, singularity, and accident – all instances that fall out of the calculation of political and economic projects that attempt to transform the fabric of the real. In addressing the limits of what could be projected and articulated, she is particularly interested in rethinking political economy, political legitimacy, and scientific authority through what remains illegible to what we believe we can make legible.

In her first book Untimely Sacrifices: Work and Death in Finland (Cornell University Press 2023), Funahashi brings...