ANTHR 6437
Last Updated
- Schedule of Classes - February 16, 2018 10:59AM EST
- Course Catalog - February 12, 2018 11:18AM EST
Classes
ANTHR 6437
Course Description
Course information provided by the Courses of Study 2017-2018.
This course offers a synthetic perspective on a spectrum of currently troubling phenomena -- the rise of authoritarian populism, growing inequality, racism, misogyny, nationalism, war. In particular, it links macro-scale and historical theories regarding global processes (e.g., "world systems," "globalization"), on the one hand, and the more intimate correlates of these macro forces shaping individual experience, on the other. Drawing from anthropology as well as from cognate disciplines (political economy, history, and psychology), the course surveys and assesses both case studies of phenomena such as the self-delusion of the oppressed, the narcissism of dictators, and how the making and remaking of social identities relate to world economic cycles. Course readings highlight how fantasy, imagination, hope and fear figure crucially in people's apprehensions of the contemporary world.
When Offered Fall.
Prerequisites/Corequisites Recommended prerequisite: some familiarity with issues and debates in anthropology and/or social sciences generally.
Regular Academic Session. Combined with: ANTHR 3437
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Credits and Grading Basis
3 Credits Stdnt Opt(Letter or S/U grades)
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Class Number & Section Details
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Meeting Pattern
- W McGraw Hall B65
Instructors
Fiskesjo, M
Sangren, P
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