Description
Module Content
Critical Issues in Social Anthropology is the key component of the Core Course for the MSc in Social and Cultural Anthropology. The aim of the course is to provide comprehensive training in social anthropological theory, emphasising the discipline’s contribution to the comparative study of human beings in their diverse social and cultural formations.Ìý
In the first part of the course, which runs throughout Term 1, you will explore key analytical issues in social anthropology, examining fundamental debates and controversies that define the discipline. This includes introducing students to central concepts such as ‘culture’, ‘society’, the notion of the ‘other’, as well as the relationship between ‘nature’ and ‘culture’, and local and global worlds. In Term 2, the course continues to provide in-depth seminar learning on key topics within social anthropology, including kinship, religion and ritual, economy and political anthropology.
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Learning Outcomes
Having completed the course students will:Ìý
- have a critical understanding of key debates in the history of anthropology and how these have shaped the production of anthropological knowledge.Ìý
- have a sound grasp of anthropological theory and key concepts in the discipline.Ìý
- be able to demonstrate key skills of critical analysis, reflexivity and comparison when assessing anthropological texts.Ìý
- have a sound understanding of key debates in the fields of kinship, politics, economics and religion.Ìý
- be able to discuss and reflect upon positionality and ethical issues that inhere with the production of anthropological knowledge.Ìý
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Teaching Delivery
The course is taught through a weekly seminar involving a short lecture introducing the topic, which is followed by group discussion. The format of teaching involves discussion of key issues, practice in applying concepts both orally and in writing, and analysis and interpretation of a range of ethnographic and theoretical material.Ìý
Module deliveries for 2024/25 academic year
Last updated
This module description was last updated on 19th August 2024.
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