A N T H R O P O L O G Y
Course ID: 014704
Introduction to Anthropology
Anthropology aims at understanding what it is to be human and to examine how humanity is manifested in the diversity of cultures and societies across time and space. This course gives the student an overview of the breadth of anthropology and orients them toward thinking anthropologically in our shared worlds.
Antireq: ANTH 101 or ANTH 102
Course ID: 015846
Prehistoric Peoples and Places
How did people live prior to the invention of writing and how do we know? This course will survey findings from several important archaeological sites from different parts of the world and different periods in time, in order to show how those questions can be answered.
Course ID: 003399
Social and Cultural Anthropology
This course introduces students to the history and key concepts of social and cultural anthropology through the examination of classic works as well as contemporary ethnographic texts and films. Topics include anthropological approaches to understanding cultural identity and difference, social structure, kinship, politics, and exchange.
Course ID: 014705
Biological Anthropology
This course surveys the lines of inquiry in biological anthropology including evolutionary theory, anthropological genetics, primatology, hominin fossil record, osteology and skeletal biology, and modern human biocultural adaptations. A laboratory component provides students an experiential approach to the material.
Antireq: ANTH 260
Course ID: 015376
Language and Society
This course introduces students to the study of language and culture. Topics covered include language socialization, narrative, the politics of multilingualism, and hate speech.
Antireq: ARTS 290 (LEC 001) taken fall 2014, ANTH 400 (SEM 001) taken fall 2016
(Cross-listed with GSJ 221)
Course ID: 015489
Anthropologies of the Body
Drawing upon diverse anthropological perspectives, this course takes a holistic biocultural approach to exploring what human bodies are, what they are used for, by whom, for what purposes, and how we come to know such things.
(Cross-listed with GSJ 232)
Course ID: 003422
Inuit Cultures
An examination of Inuit and Eskimo cultures of Alaska, Canada, and Greenland from their prehistoric origins to the present. Administrative systems imposed upon the Inuit and Eskimo will be analyzed and compared, as will the contemporary problems these communities face.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 015375
Food as Culture
The course addresses the topic of food from an anthropological perspective. It examines how the acquisition of food has shaped human biology and forms of social organization. Topics examined include the relationship of food to colonialism, political economy, ritual, and taboo.
Course ID: 016461
Doing Ethnography
This course will provide students with experiential learning in collaborative ethnography. Through participation in a group project, students will learn the practice and craft of ethnography, developing skills in interviewing, observation, collaboration, giving presentations, and writing reports. Readings address ethnographic methods, multidisciplinary collaboration, and applied ethnography in work settings.
Antireq: ANTH 289 taken fall 2019
Course ID: 003945
Issues in Contemporary Indigenous Communities in Canada
An examination of First Nations and Métis cultures and cultural development from the perspective of local Indigenous communities. The course will feature lectures, discussions, and occasional guest speakers representative of the wider Indigenous community.
Prereq: INDG 201.
Antireq: ANTH 370, NATST 272
(Cross-listed with INDG 272)
Course ID: 003432
Visual Anthropology
This course examines relations between culture and vision, the history of photography in anthropological research, and ethnographic film and its ethical implications. Topics include the roles of museums and representation, indigenous media, advocacy, and activism.
Course ID: 015848
Skeletons: Sex, Disease, and Death
This course will provide a general introduction to how human remains have been used to reconstruct perspectives on life and death in ancient societies. Topics will include sex, gender and sexuality, cannibalism, human sacrifice, body modification, disease, and beliefs about the supernatural, among others.
Course ID: 003433
Practicing Anthropology
Thinking anthropologically means bringing observations and empirical findings into a dialogue with theoretical approaches. This course explores how anthropologists have developed the methods they use, considers how they interpret their findings through such lenses as functionalism and structuralism, and examines how they formulate critiques of fieldwork.
Prereq: ANTH 202
Course ID: 013560
Anthropology of Digital Media
This course examines diverse forms of digital media and associated practices anthropologically and inquires into the social orders and cultural assumptions that sustain them or are themselves sustained by them. Topics include social media, virtual worlds, and hacker activism.
Prereq: ANTH 202
Course ID: 014127
Paleopathology of Health and Disease
This course introduces students to the identification and interpretation of skeletal evidence for disease, ancient and modern concepts of health and disease, and current clinical interpretations of skeletal pathologies. Topics include pathology in archaeological remains and the process of developing a differential diagnosis of skeletal lesions.
Prereq: ANTH 204
Course ID: 003401
The Archaeology of North America
This course examines past Indigenous lifeways in North America north of Mexico from the time of earliest settlement to contact with Europeans. It provides a broad survey of space-time systematics as well as conceptual, methodological, and ethical issues relevant to study of the North American archaeological record.
[Note: Formerly ANTH 203]
Prereq: ANTH 201/CLAS 221.
Antireq: ANTH 203
Course ID: 003440
Anthropology of Religion
This course examines how religion has been studied as an object of anthropological inquiry. Topics may include ritual, magic, witchcraft, symbolism, cosmology, the relation between beliefs and practices, as well as the mutual influences of religion, politics, nationalism, and socioeconomic change.
(Cross-listed with RS 361)
Course ID: 003445
Hunter-Gatherer Archaeology
Detailed consideration of prehistoric cultural developments from earliest toolmaking to the transition to agriculture. An examination of the human mode of adaptation and the increasing complexity of cultural systems among prehistoric hunters and gatherers. Areas and periods of emphasis will vary from year to year.
Prereq: ANTH 201/CLAS 221
Course ID: 003446
Archaeology of Complex Cultures
Cultural development from the agricultural revolution to the rise of literacy. Special attention to the development of agriculture as a means of subsistence and to the rise of early civilization. Areas and periods of emphasis will vary from year to year.
Prereq: ANTH 201/CLAS 221
(Cross-listed with CLAS 321)
Course ID: 003448
The Archaeology of the Great Lakes Area
An in-depth study of the archaeological evidence for prehistoric cultures in the Great Lakes area from their arrival ca. 11,000 years ago to the coming of Europeans. Cultural ecology and cultural evolution will be stressed.
Prereq: ANTH 201/CLAS 221
Course ID: 003452
Environmental Anthropology
This course examines the relationships between environments and human societies, focusing on the nature/culture divide and social and economic organization. Topics may include politics and practice, the influence of globalization, and regional perspectives.
Prereq: ANTH 202
Course ID: 016462
Anthropology of Childhood
Through engaging with anthropological research on children and youth, students will develop their understanding of key anthropological theories while strengthening their communication skills. By examining work across subfields, including psychological anthropology, the anthropology of education, language socialization, and cross-cultural approaches to ethnography, students will learn to evaluate different methodologies and apply them in their writing while assessing how research in this area has developed over time.
Prereq: ANTH 202
Course ID: 009883
Arctic Archaeology
A detailed examination of the prehistoric development of human adaptations to the Inuit-Eskimo region of Arctic North America, eastern Siberia, and Greenland. Topics covered will include the ecology of the Arctic and the culture history of the peoples who first colonized the region as revealed by archaeological research.
Prereq: One of ANTH 201/CLAS 221, ANTH 233
Course ID: 003460
Directed Research in Anthropology
This course provides selected students with an opportunity to work (up to a maximum of eight hours per week over one term) as apprentices with a specific instructor on a research project in which the instructor is currently engaged.
[Note: This is a non-paid position and may not be combined with sponsored research positions. Previous or external research experiences will not meet the criteria for this course. This course will be graded on a CR/NCR basis.]
Instructor Consent Required
Prereq: Level at least 3A Honours Anthropology
Course ID: 011871
Medical Anthropology
This course teaches students the fundamentals of anthropological approaches to illness, health, medicine, and bioethics. It covers the history of medical anthropology as well as major movements, debates, and current topics. Topics include cross-cultural healing systems, social suffering, and concerns raised by new biomedical technologies and within global health.
Prereq: ANTH 202
Course ID: 003461
Anthropology of Gender
This course examines anthropological perspectives on variations in gender roles and systems through the comparison of ethnographies. Topics include the relationship of gender to social organization, sexuality, economic and political processes, belief systems, and social movements.
Prereq: ANTH 202
(Cross-listed with GSJ 350)
Course ID: 003466
Human Evolution
This course reviews the evolutionary history of humans. It includes an examination of the hominin fossil record, evidence from genetic analyses, and behavioural inferences that have been drawn from nonhuman primate models. Emphasis is placed on the process of knowledge production and interpretation, and the representation of human evolution in the public realm.
Prereq: ANTH 204
Course ID: 012624
Anthropological Field Experience
This course features a combination of academic content and field experience.
[Note: Additional fees required. This is a repeatable course, subject to different content; it may be completed a total of two times.]
Department Consent Required
Course ID: 015712
Dental Anthropology
This course introduces students to the analysis of human teeth, which is of central importance to paleopathology, paleoanthropology, forensic science, and contemporary human biomonitoring research. Students will also gain hands-on experience with laboratory techniques as they explore how to address anthropological questions with their data.
Prereq: ANTH 204
Course ID: 014709
Anthropology of Contemporary China
This course explores cultural and social change in contemporary China, including Taiwan, Hong Kong, and global migration. Topics include politics, identity, medicine and disease, urbanization, food security, post-colonialism, and transnationalism.
Prereq: ANTH 202
Course ID: 003473
Reading in Anthropology
Student-initiated independent research on a selected topic. A high standard of written work is required.
[Note: This is a repeatable course, subject to different content; it may be completed a total of two times.]
Department Consent Required
Prereq: Level at least 3A Honours Anthropology
Course ID: 012749
Anthropological Study Abroad
This course features a combination of academic study and first-hand field study of cultures and visits to or work experience at museums and archaeological sites.
[Note: Field trip fee may be required. This is a repeatable course, subject to different content; it may be completed a total of two times.]
Instructor Consent Required
Prereq: at least 1.0 unit in ANTH
Course ID: 015097
Archaeologies of Landscape
This course examines the ways in which past peoples experienced, transformed, remembered, represented, and controlled landscapes. Readings and discussions emphasize both contemporary theoretical approaches and case studies from various settings in an effort to illuminate the social, political, economic, and ideological dimensions of landscape.
Prereq: ANTH 201/CLAS 221
Course ID: 014710
Science as Practice and Culture
An examination of science as being constituted by practices which are inevitably social and cultural, as well as of scientific expertise in contemporary issues of new technology, biomedicine, and environmental conflict.
Prereq: Level at least 4A
(Cross-listed with SOC 431)
Course ID: 009885
Archaeological Analysis and Interpretation
A study of contemporary archaeological method and theory with emphasis on the process of deriving inferences concerning past peoples and societies from different kinds of archaeological materials and data. Students will be required to carry out an analysis of an actual archaeological assemblage. Specific topics will vary from year to year.
Prereq: ANTH 201/CLAS 221
Course ID: 011982
Skeletal Biology and Forensics
This laboratory course focuses on the evaluation of human skeletal remains in archaeological and forensic contexts. Topics include determination of basic biological categories (e.g., age, sex, race), evaluation of paleopathological conditions, and aspects of forensic anthropology.
Prereq: ANTH 355 or ANTH 370W
Course ID: 015374
Borders, Boundaries, and Crossings
This seminar covers anthropological perspectives on the relationship between state borders and socio-cultural boundaries (across race, gender, class, language, and religion). Readings include ethnographies about contested borders, border dwellers, and border crossers.
Prereq: ANTH 202
Course ID: 014712
Anthropology Capstone
This course explores themes of current anthropological research as they intersect across the major subfields of the discipline. Topics may vary.
[Note: The department chair is the course co-ordinator. This course cannot be substituted for other 400-level plan requirements. Course will be graded on a CR/NCR basis.]
Prereq: Level at least 4A; Anthropology majors only