Course ListingsFall 2012American StudiesAMER0199SENIOR HONORS THESISSenior Honors Thesis.Please see departmental website for specific details.Sections00058 AMER019901 8+ Chen, Thomas 1.0 Amer SeniorsOnly, Year Long<strong>Tufts</strong> <strong>University</strong> Course Listings, Fall 2012Page 9
Course ListingsFall 2012AnthropologyANTH0016INTRO LATINO CULTURESSurvey of the social and cultural histories of the various L<strong>at</strong>inocommunities currently residing in the United St<strong>at</strong>es. Topics include avariety of important issues affecting U.S. L<strong>at</strong>inos, such as immigr<strong>at</strong>ion,bilingual educ<strong>at</strong>ion, citizenship and political particip<strong>at</strong>ion, race, class,gender, ethnicity, and represent<strong>at</strong>ions in the media.Sections03638 ANTH001601 H+TR Pacini, Deborah 1.0ANTH0025ANTHRO OF WAR&PEACEMAKIN(Cross-listed as PJS 25). Introductory-level study of armed conflict andconflict transform<strong>at</strong>ion from standpoint of anthropology of violence.Critical examin<strong>at</strong>ion of causes of conflict; gendered, ethnic, cultural, andreligious dimensions; globaliz<strong>at</strong>ion of conflict through media,transn<strong>at</strong>ional flows of commodities, intern<strong>at</strong>ional interventions; impactof 9/11 and the global "war on terror"; intersection of local, n<strong>at</strong>ional, andintern<strong>at</strong>ional techniques of conflict transform<strong>at</strong>ion. Focus in depth onexperience and initi<strong>at</strong>ives from the ground up.Sections03639 ANTH002501 L+ Abowd, Thomas 1.0 C-lst Pjs 25ANTH0027HUMAN RIGHTS AND CULTURE(Cross-listed as PJS 27). This g<strong>at</strong>eway course examinesanthropological deb<strong>at</strong>es about human rights. It introduces keyanthropological methods, like participant-observ<strong>at</strong>ion, reflexivity, andcultural critique, and anthropological theories on topics like culture, thest<strong>at</strong>e, indigenous peoples, and globaliz<strong>at</strong>ion. We will analyzecontroversies about cultural rel<strong>at</strong>ivism and universalism, approaches toboth violent conflicts and the structural violence of poverty, and therel<strong>at</strong>ionship between anthropology and human rights. We also studyethnographies of human rights work th<strong>at</strong> elucid<strong>at</strong>e how advoc<strong>at</strong>es striveto produce reliable knowledge and circul<strong>at</strong>e it to authorities and thepublic in reports, documentaries, and other media.Sections00060 ANTH002701 F+TR Bishara, Amahl 1.0 C-lst Pjs 27;Cap 10 Se<strong>at</strong>sANTH0050PREHISTORIC ARCHAEOLOGY(Cross-listed as ARCH 30). Survey of human culture from the earliestpaleolithic hunters and g<strong>at</strong>herers to the form<strong>at</strong>ion of st<strong>at</strong>es and thebeginnings of recorded history. Course provides an introduction toarchaeological methods, a worldwide overview of prehistoric ways oflife, and a more detailed analysis of cultural development in the NewWorld.Sections00061 ANTH005001 M+ Sullivan, Laure 1.0 C-lst Arch 30ANTH0099INTERNSHIP IN ANTHSupervised internship in wide range of community organiz<strong>at</strong>ions, healthorganiz<strong>at</strong>ions, museums, governmental and non-governmentalorganiz<strong>at</strong>ions. Twelve to fifteen hours work per week. Writtenassignments, with supporting readings, to place internship in criticalanalytical frame.Prerequisites: Anthropology majors only.Sections00062ANTH009901 ARR Sullivan, Laure 1.0 Permission OfInstructor; Reg.In E<strong>at</strong>on 302ANTH0126FOOD,NUTRITION & CULTUREInterplay of the act of e<strong>at</strong>ing with its biological and cultural correl<strong>at</strong>es.Topics include subsistence str<strong>at</strong>egies, sex differentials in food intake,and the nutritional impact of moderniz<strong>at</strong>ion; hunger and malnutrition inthe developing world; historical and symbolic <strong>at</strong>tributes of food,including taboo, valences, and n<strong>at</strong>ional cuisines; and the rel<strong>at</strong>ion ofnormal and abnormal e<strong>at</strong>ing behavior to gender and cultural norms of<strong>at</strong>tractiveness.Prerequisites: One lower-level anthropology course or permission ofinstructor.Sections00063 ANTH012601 E+MW Bailey, Stephen 1.0ANTH0130ANTHROPOLOGICAL THOUGHTThe development of anthropological thought in American, British, andFrench schools of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Historical,evolutionary, m<strong>at</strong>erialist, functionalist, structuralist, and symbolicperspectives.Prerequisites: One introductory anthropology course or permissionof the instructor.Sections00064 ANTH013001 K+ Stanton, C<strong>at</strong>hy 1.0 Prq: 1 AnthCourse And Jr.Standing, OrConsentANTH0132MYTH, RITUAL & SYMBOL(Cross-listed as REL 134.) Various approaches to myth, ritual, andsymbol including functionalist, structuralist, and psychological. Topicsinclude dreams, landscape shamanism, and fairy tales, along withissues of performance, represent<strong>at</strong>ion, authenticity, and history.Prerequisites: Sophomore standing.Sections00065ANTH013201 I+ Stanton, C<strong>at</strong>hy 1.0 Prq: SophStanding; C-lstRel 134ANTH0149SELECTED TOPICSCurrent Topics in Anthropology.Please see departmental website for specific details.SectionsSEXUALITY&GENDER S ASIA03641 ANTH014919 D+ Pinto, Sarah 1.0 Do Not RegisterIf You HaveCompleted Anth120ANTH0163LATINO CINEMA IMAGSince the inception of the American film industry, U.S. L<strong>at</strong>inos havebeen (mis)represented in Hollywood fe<strong>at</strong>ure films intended primarily fornon-L<strong>at</strong>ino audiences. In this course, students will examine howimages of L<strong>at</strong>inos and their communities have been constructed inHollywood films produced from the silent era to the present. Studentswill contrast these images with those constructed by L<strong>at</strong>ino filmmakerswhen they began making films in the 1970s, contesting Hollywoodstereotypes with more accur<strong>at</strong>e and nuanced constructions of theircommunities. Weekly film viewings illustr<strong>at</strong>e how filmmakers ofdifferent ethnic/racial/n<strong>at</strong>ional backgrounds employ cinem<strong>at</strong>ic images toexpress their views on issues relevant to the L<strong>at</strong>ino experience such asimmigr<strong>at</strong>ion, language choice, changing gender roles, racial and ethnicidentity, and inter-ethnic rel<strong>at</strong>ions. Readings will familiarize studentswith the emergent body of L<strong>at</strong>ino-produced film criticism.Sections03642 ANTH016301 2 Pacini, Deborah 1.0 C-lstAmer180-02;Prq: Jr.Standing<strong>Tufts</strong> <strong>University</strong> Course Listings, Fall 2012Page 10
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