The course explores broad central questions both of postwar Europe and of ethnography. Readings examine how regional, national and global interests impinge on local communities as Europe unifies, what anthropology contributes to the study of Eurpope, and how European ethnography reflects the changing discipline of Anthropology. Studies will include comparative cases of religious orthodoxy, popular faith, and anticlericalism; the politics of new identities and old ethnicities; migration; transnationalism; and gender in rural and urban contexts. Relations between regions, center and periphery, and the movement of populations, commodities, and culture across shifting borders are the focus of ethnographies in Central, Southern and Eastern Europe.
COURSE FORMAT: Discussion Lecture Seminar
Level: UG Credit: 1.00 Gen Ed Area & Dept: SBS ANTH
Prerequisites: None
Last Updated on MAR-22-1999
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