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ANTH389

Global Perspectives in Anthropology
ANTH389 SP

Crosslistings: WMST389

Spring 97 Availability (Last Updated on Sat Mar 8 05:00:06 EST 1997 )

Section  Limit  Enrollment  Available
  01       20      14         6

This course will examine anthropological approaches to the concept of "globalization" which has increasingly become a part of social science as well as popular discourses. We begin by taking a "global perspective" on culture, anthropology's foundational concept, by asking: Do the economic, political, cultural, and technological links between nations in the late 20th century necessitate a new concept of culture? Does "global culture" exist? Is there a place for cultural relativism in the "globaL village"? We then turn to several anthropological case studies that examine processes typically associated with globalization: tensions between transnational social movements (e.g., feminism, anti-war, and environmental) and nationalist political and economic agendas; the spread of "rights" discourse and corresponding assertions of cultural rights and religious fundamentalisms; patterns of global "zoning" which marginalize "less developed" regions; the effects of transnational tourism and prostitution on constructions of gender and sexuality; the growth of refugee populations; and the global circulation and reception of media images. By directing attention to specific contexts, these case studies use ethnography to high-light the local effects of global processes, including locally-generated resistances and transformations of "the global."

MAJOR READINGS

Lutz, READING NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
Malkki, PURITY AND EXILE: VIOLENCE, MEMORY AND NATIONAL
COSMOLOGY AMONG HUTU REFUGEES IN TANZANIA
Sutton, Constance, (ed.) FEMINISM, NATIONALISM, AND
MILITARISM
Wilson, SPEAKING TO POWER: GENDER AND POLITICS IN THE
WESTERN PACIFIC
Also selections by Abu-Lughod, Appadurai, Basu, Gilroy,
Hannerz, Mies, Ong, and Rouse.

EXAMINATIONS AND ASSIGNMENTS

Several writing assignments, class participation, and a final exam.

ADDITIONAL REQUIREMENTS and/or COMMENTS

Admission by interview. Unless preregistered students attend the first class meeting or communicate directly with the instructor prior to the first class, they will be dropped from the class list. NOTE: Students must still submit a completed Drop/Add form to the Registrar's Office.

COURSE FORMAT: Discussion Seminar

REGISTRATION INFORMATION

Level: UG Credit: 1.00 Gen Ed Area & Dept: SBS ANTH

Prerequisites: None

Section 01
Hirsch, S
Times: ...T... 1:10PM;
Grading Mode: A/F
Registration Preference (1 high to 6 low, 0=Excluded) Sr: 1, Jr: 1, So: 3, Fr: 0
Major Preference Given

Last Updated on MAR-10-1997




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