ANTHR 7466
Last Updated
- Schedule of Classes - September 10, 2024 10:17AM EDT
- Course Catalog - September 10, 2024 9:48AM EDT
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ANTHR 7466
Course Description
Course information provided by the Courses of Study 2024-2025. Courses of Study 2024-2025 is scheduled to publish mid-June.
How is citizenship both an ideal of formal equality as well as a mechanism for the elaboration of social inequity? Although the concept of citizenship is premised on liberal ideals of enfranchisement, the rise of xenophobic nationalisms globally have revealed the very notion of citizenship to be an exclusionary category of belonging. Introducing students to classic and contemporary theories of citizenship, this course examines both the contradictions in the theoretical underpinnings of citizenship that set up binaries of citizen and non-citizen, as well as the proliferation of documentary regimes that try to identify who is NOT a citizen. Questioning universal conceptualizations of citizenship which foreground the individual as the locus of rights and recognition, we will discuss anthropological approaches to understanding how people struggle for legal recognition and social belonging as members of collectivities. The thematic focus of the course will be borders, though materials will be drawn from other areas as well.
When Offered Fall.
Prerequisites/Corequisites Prerequisite: at least one course in Sociocultural Anthropology.
Regular Academic Session. Combined with: ANTHR 4466
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Credits and Grading Basis
3 Credits Graded(Letter grades only)
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