Department of Anthropology 2015 Fall Course Descriptions PLEASE NOTE: IT IS THE STUDENT’S RESPONSIBILITY TO CHECK THE OFFICIAL U.S.C. MASTER SCHEDULE ( https://ssb.onecarolina.sc.edu/BANP/twbkwbis.P_GenMenu?name=homepage ) FOR ANY CHANGES IN DAY, TIME AND/OR LOCATION OF ANY PARTICULAR COURSE. SUCH INFORMATION CAN BE CHANGED AT ANY TIME. University of South Carolina 1 ANTHROPOLOGY MAJOR REQUIREMENTS The Department offers work leading to the Bachelor of Arts Degree in Anthropology. Carolina Core Requirements: Same as the College of Arts and Sciences, except for the following more specific requirements: Major Prerequisites: ANTH 101 or ANTH 161 & ANTH 102 (ONLY 101 or 102 fulfill 3 hrs of the 6-hr Social Science Distribution Requirement) General Major: A topical course in biological anthropology (3 hours) A topical course in archaeology (3 hours) A topical course in linguistic anthropology (3 hours) A topical course in cultural anthropology (3 hours) A 500-level anthropology course (3 hours) At least four other anthropology courses (12 hours) (Prerequisites do not satisfy any of the above General Major requirements!) Major requirements (27 hours) Total of 33 credit hours with the Prerequisites B.A. with Distinction: Departmental Undergraduate Research Track/Intensive Major is available to students majoring in Anthropology who wish to participate in significant research activities in collaboration with, or under the supervision of, a faculty mentor. Minimum GPA of 3.3 overall and in major A topical course in biological anthropology (3 hours) 2 A topical course in archaeology (3 hours) A topical course in linguistic anthropology (3 hours) A topical course in cultural anthropology (3 hours) Two 500-level anthropology courses (6 hours) Field School, Laboratory, Practicum, Qualitative Methodology or Quantitative Methodology course (3 hours) At least two other anthropology courses (6 hours) ANTH 201 Inquiry or additional 500-level course chosen in consultation with advisor (3 hours) ANTH 498 Thesis (3 hours) Major requirements 33 hours Total of 39 credit hours with the Prerequisites The senior thesis will produce a piece of original research and a public presentation of the research in a venue approved by the faculty mentor. Examples of such venues would include: Annual meeting of the Southern Anthropological Society (or another annual meeting of the appropriate professional organization) A regular or special session of the Department of Anthropology Colloquium Series USC Discovery Day Submission to a professional journal A written sponsorship agreement from the faculty mentor will be placed on file in the Department of Anthropology office. Students who successfully complete the intensive major requirements with a GPA of 3.3 or higher in the major and overall will be awarded their degree with Distinction in Anthropology upon graduation. 3 University of South Carolina MINOR IN ANTHROPOLOGY REQUIREMENTS This minor consists of eighteen (18) semester hours. ANTH 101—Primates, People and Prehistory ANTH 102—Understanding Other Cultures And four (4) courses of your choice at the 200-level or above. **(If ANTH 161 is taken for Scientific Literacy, then ANTH 101 does not have to be taken; but another course must be selected to have the correct number of total credits for the MINOR) In certain cases ANTH 101 or ANTH 102 can be exempted by permission of the Undergraduate Director in the Department, and replaced with other anthropology courses. *For more information on advisement and majors and minors in Anthropology go to: http://www.cas.sc.edu/anth/undergrad2.html COGNATE IN ANTHROPOLOGY REQUIREMENTS A Cognate requires a minimum of 12 hours in advanced courses (usually 300 or above) in other departments related to and supporting the major. Courses should be junior/senior level and must be approved in advance by the advisor. Cognate courses may be taken in one or more departments. A grade of D will be accepted for cognate credit only if approved by the Anthropology Department advisor, who should note and date such approval in writing on your advisement worksheet (kept in your file in the Anthropology main office, Hamilton 317). 4 Things to Remember for Undergraduate Advisement The Anthropology Department is committed to quality academic advising. Each student enrolled in the Department is assigned a faculty advisor whose specialty most closely matches the student's interests. The faculty advisor must sign advisement forms and monitor the progression toward the degree. The advisor cautions the student to make certain that academic programs are completed in a timely manner. This is especially important since not all required courses may be offered each semester. It is the responsibility of students to keep track of their courses and make sure that their programs satisfy department and College graduation requirements. Reminders: 1. Check name on list outside of Anthropology Main Office (Gambrell Hall, Suite 440) 2. Sign up for advisement on your advisor's door. (He/she will have clearly marked their available times.) Make sure you put your phone number on the advisement sign-up sheet. 3. Take your file to the advisement appointment with ideas about the courses you would like to take. (Files are picked up from the main office in Gambrell Hall, Suite 440.) 4. It is ultimately the responsibility of the student to make sure he/she fulfills the requirements for the degree. 5. Following advisement, the student must take a copy of the signed advisement form to the College of Liberal Arts Dean's office in Flinn Hall or to the departmental Undergraduate Administrative Assistant. Only then will the student be cleared on the computer for registration. 6. During the student’s the first semester of their Senior Year, he/she must call the office of the Dean (777-2993) and make an appointment for a Senior Check. The Major Program Card (available in the Department of Anthropology Office, Gambrell Hall, Suite 440) must be completed in advance of the Senior Check. The student should schedule an appointment with his/her advisor to fill out the Major Program card in time to take it to the appointment at the Dean's office. 7. The student must apply for graduation at the Dean's office in the first month of their last semester. NOTE: The normal course load is 15-18 hours per semester. In order to take 19 or more hours, a student must have attained in the previous full semester an average of 3.0 or better on a minimum of 12 hours taken on a non-pass/fail basis. In order to enroll in independent study, a student must have a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. No student may apply more than 15 hours of independent study credits toward the degree. Courses taken on a pass/fail basis can only be used as free electives. This option is available only to students with a GPA of 2.000 and above and for no more than 8 courses. No grade of D will be permitted to count toward a student's major, minor, or cognate. If necessary, the course must be repeated, raising the number of hours required for graduation. In order to graduate, the student must have a minimum of 120 applicable hours, meet all course requirements, be in good standing, meet departmental or program requirements, and have a cumulative GPA of at least 2.000 on all work completed at USC. 5 Help your advisor help you! ☺Be on time for your appointment ☺If you are in trouble with a specific course, or all of your courses, be prepared to discuss this matter. Be open to your advisor’s suggestions for using the Academic Skills Center, Writing Center, Math Lab, etc. ☺If you are undecided about your major or you are having second thoughts about your major, ask your advisor’s opinion. Your advisor cannot make your decision for you, but he or she can suggest possibilities and refer you to other sources for help and information. ☺Have an idea about which courses you would like to take in the upcoming semester, and listen carefully to your advisor’s recommendations. Familiarize yourself with the pre-requisites for the courses that you wish to take. Be sure you have met the pre-requisites. ☺Ask questions about your progress toward meeting your general education requirements, major requirements, major course sequences and other course requirements for your degree. Review your progress toward graduation. 6 Contact Information Office Phone Email Dr. Drucilla Barker Gambrell 408 7-3200 barkerdk@mailbox.sc.edu Dr. Joanna Casey Gambrell 413 7-6700 jlc@sc.edu Dr. Carlina de la Cova Gambrell 409 7-2957 delacova@mailbox.sc.edu Dr. Sharon DeWitte Gambrell 410 7-6940 dewittes@mailbox.sc.edu Dr. Sherina FelicianoSantos Gambrell 423 7-7259 Felicianos-@mailbox.sc.edu Dr. Ken Kelly Gambrell 401 7-2616 Kenneth.kelly@sc.edu Dr. Courtney Lewis Gambrell 411 7-9922 lewisco@mailbox.sc.edu Dr. Marc Moskowitz Gambrell 418 7-1536 moskowit@mailbox.sc.edu Dr. Jennifer Reynolds Gambrell 420 7-2392 jenreyn@sc.edu Dr. David Simmons Gambrell 424 7-2321 dsimmons@mailbox.sc.edu Dr. Kimberly Simmons Harper College 7-0822 ksimmons@sc.edu Dr. Gail Wagner Gambrell 432 7-6548 gail.wagner@sc.edu Dr. Terry Weik Gambrell 414 7-6789 Weik@mailbox.sc.edu Cat Keegan Gambrell 435 7-9604 Keegan@sc.edu Claudia Carriere Gambrell 439 7-0993 cfcarri@mailbox.sc.edu 7 Anthropology 399 (Independent Study), 498 (Senior Thesis), 699 (Reading and Research), 799 (Master’s Thesis) and 899 (Dissertation Prep) are being offered. Please speak to your Advisor if you are interested in signing up for one of these classes. PLEASE NOTE: IT IS THE STUDENT’S RESPONSIBILITY TO CHECK THE OFFICIAL U.S.C. MASTER SCHEDULE ( https://ssb.onecarolina.sc.edu/BANP/twbkwbis.P_GenMenu?name=homepage ) FOR ANY CHANGES IN DAY, TIME AND/OR LOCATION OF ANY PARTICULAR COURSE. SUCH INFORMATION CAN BE CHANGED AT ANY TIME. 8 Fall 2015 Calendar FALL 2015 August 16, Sun. New Student Convocation August 17, Mon. Faculty Reporting Date August 20, Thurs. Classes begin August 26, Wed. Last day to change/drop a course without a grade of "W" being recorded September 7, Mon. Labor Day Holiday - no classes September 10, Thurs. Last day to apply for December graduation October 8, Thurs. Last day to drop a course or withdraw without a grade of "WF" being recorded Midpoint in semester October 22-23, Thurs.-Fri. Fall break - no classes November 25-29, Wed.Sun. Thanksgiving recess - no classes December 4, Fri. Last day of classes December 5, Sat. Reading day December 7-14, Mon.-Mon. Final examinations (includes exams on Sat.) December 14, Mon. Commencement Exercises in Columbia 9 Courses Being Offered Fall 2015 PLEASE NOTE: IT IS THE STUDENT’S RESPONSIBILITY TO CHECK THE OFFICIAL U.S.C. MASTER SCHEDULE ( https://ssb.onecarolina.sc.edu/BANP/twbkwbis.P_GenMenu?name=homepage ) FOR ANY CHANGES IN DAY, TIME AND/OR LOCATION OF ANY PARTICULAR COURSE. SUCH INFORMATION CAN BE CHANGED AT ANY TIME. Anthropology 101.001 / Primates, People, and Prehistory MWF / 9:40 – 10:30 / Petigru 108 Professor: Terrance Weik (3 credits) Prerequisite for Anthropology Majors & Minors AND Fulfills 3 hrs. of the 6 hr. Social Sciences (GSS) Requirement Course Readings: ANNUAL EDITIONS: Physical Anthropology 11/12, 20e (New York, McGraw Hill, 2010), by Elvio Angeloni. Blackboard Articles. Course Description: This course is a survey of some of the fundamental evidence, methods, and theories that comprise archaeology and biological anthropology. Students will develop an introductory understanding of how archaeology and biological anthropology are related to other subfields of anthropology, as well as the social and natural sciences. This class is designed to explore the relationship between human biology, history, environment, artifacts, and culture with special emphasis on evolution. . Learning Outcomes: Course Learning Objectives By the end of the semester students will be able to 1) Understand the most important events, processes, and concepts regarding human evolution; 2) Describe methods employed by archaeologists and biological anthropologists; 3) Recognize parameters for good interdisciplinary, comparative, social scientific research; 4) Explain theories that have shaped anthropological approaches; 5) Map our ancient global cultural heritage; 6) Articulate the challenges that we face in preserving our cultural & natural resources; 7) Apply fundamental principles of effective cultural analysis and critical thinking . 10 Anthropology 101.002 / Primates, People and Prehistory TR / 2:50 – 4:05 / Gambrell 302 Professor: Andrew White (3 credits) Prerequisite for Anthropology Majors & Minors AND Fulfills 3 hrs. of the 6 hr. Social Sciences (GSS) Requirement Course Readings: TBA Course Description: This course covers the origin and evolution of humans and human societies, exploring our cultural and biological evolution from the first appearance of upright-walking, small-brained hominins (5 to 7 million years ago), though the appearance of fully modern humans during the Ice Age, to the emergence of complex civilizations during the last 10,000 years. Among other things, we will discuss: How paleoanthropologists and archaeologists use material evidence to understand what happened in the past; How our evolutionary past is related to the human condition; How and why human populations transform themselves from mobile, hunting-and-gathering societies into complex political/social formations such as chiefdoms, states, and empires; What the past has to do with the present. These questions are both profoundly interesting and profoundly difficult. We will address them in a broad overview of what we know and what we don’t know about the human past, focusing on the major transitions that led from the first bipedal apes to the Industrial Revolution. Anthropology 101.E01 / Primates, People and Prehistory TR /6:00 – 7:15 / Gambrell 412 Professor: Adam King (3 credits) Prerequisite for Anthropology Majors & Minors AND Fulfills 3 hrs. of the 6 hr. Social Sciences (GSS) Requirement Course Description: Physical anthropology, as a subfield of general anthropology, is focused on understanding humans as biological organisms and users of culture. This class will provide an introduction to the concepts, methods, and data of physical, biological, and archaeological anthropology. 11 Students will explore human origins, human evolution, human prehistory, and cultural existence from its less complex forms to early civilizations. ANTH 102.001-012 / Understanding Other Cultures MW / 10:50 – 11:40 / Darla Moore School of Bus. 123 Professor: Jennifer Reynolds (3 credits) Section 1: Wednesday / 1:10-2:00 / Gambrell 406 Section 2: Wednesday / 2:20-3:10 / Gambrell 406 Section 3: Wednesday / 3:30-4:20 / Gambrell 406 Section 4: Thursday / 10:05-10:55 / Gambrell 406 Section 5: Thursday / 11:40-12:30 / Gambrell 406 Section 6 Thursday / 1:15-2:05 / Gambrell 406 Section 7: Thursday / 2:50-3:40 / Gambrell 406 Section 8: Thursday / 4:25-5:15 / Gambrell 406 Section 9: Friday / / 9:40-10:30/ Gambrell 406 Section 10: Friday / 10:50-11:40 / Gambrell 406 Section 11: Friday / 1:10-2:00 / Gambrell 406 Section 12: Friday / 2:20-3:10 / Gambrell 406 Prerequisite for Anthropology Majors & Minors AND Fulfills 3 hrs of the 6-hr Social Science GSS (Global Citizenship & Multicultural Understanding) Carolina Core Requirement Course Description: What is the concept of culture? How have anthropologists studied it? This course is designed to celebrate creative similarities & differences expressed through cultural diversity in all of its social and symbolic manifestations. It will also deal with the effects of class, ethnic, racial, and gender hierarchies across a range of cultural and societal contexts. The course will introduce the beginning student to the primary domains of cultural anthropology: the concept of culture, fieldwork, and professional ethics. The overarching objectives of this class seek to help students develop an appreciation of how human cultural diversity is always understood against the backdrop of what is shared, to develop an awareness of our own cultural ethnocentrisms, to deepen students’ understanding of different forms of social stratification and inequality in cross-cultural perspective, and to illustrate how anthropology contributes to interdisciplinary approaches which seek to ameliorate contemporary world problems. Course Presentation: Lectures, films, and small & large group discussion. Audience: Undergraduate students interested in learning about contemporary human cultural and linguistic diversity. 12 Anthropology 102.E01/ Understanding Other Cultures MW / 5:30 – 6:45 / Gambrell 412 Instructor: Nick Younginer (3 credits) Prerequisite for Anthropology Majors & Minors AND Fulfills 3 hrs of the 6-hr Social Science GSS (Global Citizenship & Multicultural Understanding) Carolina Core Requirement Course Description: Anthropology, in general, is the holistic study of human cultural variation through time and space. The course will address a range of anthropological issues including economics, political systems and globalization, religion and ideology, language and communication, gender, race, and kinship systems. Anthropology 161.001 - 008 / Human Origins: An Intro to Biological Anthropology TR / 10:05 – 11:20 / BT Washington Professor: Carlina De La Cova (4 credits) Can be used as a Prerequisite in place of ANTH 101 within the Major AND Fulfills 4 hrs of the Carolina Core Requirements for the Scientific Literacy’s 8 hrs Section 1: Thursday / 11:40 – 1:10 / Gambrell 430 Section 2: Monday / 12:00-1:30 / Gambrell 430 Section 3: Monday / 2:20-3:50 / Gambrell 430 Section 4: Tuesday / 11:40-1:10 / Gambrell 430 Section 5: Thursday / 2:50-4:30 / Gambrell 430 Section 6: Wednesday / 9:40-11:10/ Gambrell 430 Section 7: Wednesday / 12:00 – 1:30 / Gambrell 430 Section 8: Wednesday / 2:20 – 3:50 / Gambrell 430 (Note: This course can be used as a Prerequisite for the Anthropology Major and it can also be used for 4 hrs of the Carolina Core Requirements for the Science Literacy’s 8 credits at the same time. This course cannot be used to satisfy any credits for the Social Science GSS Carolina Core Requirement) Course Description: This four-credit course satisfies the College of Arts and Sciences requirement for a Lab Science Course. It can also meet the Anthropology Major prerequisite requirement and the Anthropology Minor requirement in place of ANTH 101. It meets for two one hour and fifteen minute lectures and a required two-hour lab. Students should take either ANTH 101 and ANTH 161, and not take both courses due to some course overlap. The course is an introduction to the science of biological anthropology. Biological anthropology is a subfield of anthropology that emphasizes a focus on humanity and its origin from a biological perspective. As a subfield of Anthropology, biological anthropology recognizes the complex interaction of biology and culture in the evolutionary development of the human species. In this class we 13 study the basic concepts and mechanisms of evolution and the evolutionary history of humankind from primate beginnings to anatomically and behaviorally modern Homo sapiens. The course is divided into 3 sections: 1) the science of anthropology and the models and mechanisms of human evolution; 2) modern human variation and adaptation, and our relationships to non-human primates; and 3) the origin, development, and dispersal of humans using evidence from the fossil record (paleoanthropology) and archaeological remains. Along the way, it illustrates the ways in which anthropologists learn about the past and how we can use our knowledge of the past to understand the present. The weekly labs will address subjects including genetics, human variation, primate anatomy and behavior, human anatomy, fossil hominids, and archaeological dating techniques Anthropology 161.H01 - H04 / Human Origins: An Intro to Biological Anthropology TR / 10:05 – 11:20 / BT Washington Professor: Carlina De la Cova (4 credits) FOR HONORS COLLEGE STUDENTS ONLY Can be used as a Prerequisite in place of ANTH 101 within the Major AND Fulfills 4 hrs of the Carolina Core Requirements for the Scientific Literacy’s 8 hrs Honors 1: Monday / 9:40 – 11:10 / Gambrell 430 Honors 2: Tuesday / 2:50 – 4:30 / Gambrell 430 Honors 3: Friday / 12:00-1:30 / Gambrell 430 Honors 4: Friday / 9:40-11:10 / Gambrell 430 (Note: This course can be used as a Prerequisite for the Anthropology Major and it can also be used for 4 hrs of the Carolina Core Requirements for the Science Literacy’s 8 credits at the same time. This course cannot be used to satisfy any credits for the Social Science GSS Carolina Core Requirement) Course Description: This four-credit course satisfies the College of Arts and Sciences requirement for a Lab Science Course. It can also meet the Anthropology Major prerequisite requirement and the Anthropology Minor requirement in place of ANTH 101. It meets for two one hour and fifteen minute lectures and a required two-hour lab. Students should take either ANTH 101 and ANTH 161, and not take both courses due to some course overlap. The course is an introduction to the science of biological anthropology. Biological anthropology is a subfield of anthropology that emphasizes a focus on humanity and its origin from a biological perspective. As a subfield of Anthropology, biological anthropology recognizes the complex interaction of biology and culture in the evolutionary development of the human species. In this class we study the basic concepts and mechanisms of evolution and the evolutionary history of humankind from primate beginnings to anatomically and behaviorally modern Homo sapiens. The course is divided into 3 sections: 1) the science of anthropology and the models and mechanisms of human evolution; 2) modern human variation and adaptation, and our relationships to non-human primates; and 3) the origin, development, and dispersal of humans 14 using evidence from the fossil record (paleoanthropology) and archaeological remains. Along the way, it illustrates the ways in which anthropologists learn about the past and how we can use our knowledge of the past to understand the present. The weekly labs will address subjects including genetics, human variation, primate anatomy and behavior, human anatomy, fossil hominids, and archaeological dating techniques ANTH 205.001 / Panoramas of Prehistory MWF / 1:10 – 2:00 / Gambrell 247 Professor: Joanna Casey (3 credits) Fulfills the Archaeological Requirement for the Anthropology Major Course Description: This course is a romp through the world’s great archaeological sites with a view to making students literate in world archaeology. For most people, the word archaeology conjures up images of pyramids, gold and far-away places, of civilizations lost and found and the swashbuckling adventurers who brought these finds to light. This course shamelessly panders to popular perceptions of archaeology by introducing students to the well-known sites and artifacts that have shaped our view of the past from the advent of modern humans to the beginning of written records. We will look at the causes and consequences of the developments in the human career, and also at the hoaxes, frauds and bad science that plague popular views of the human past. By the end of this course, students will know what archaeologists know about how and why the big events in human prehistory occurred and will be able to identify the sites and artifacts that have captured the public imagination and shaped our thinking about the past and will be able to critically evaluate the way things archaeological are presented in the popular media. Course Presentation: This is primarily a lecture course, but students will also watch films, and read articles and websites. ANTH 212.H01/ Food and Culture MWF / 12:00 – 12:50 / Petigru 217 Professor: Gail Wagner (3 credits) Fulfills the Cultural Requirement for the Anthropology Major OR Fulfills the Inquiry Requirement for DURT FOR HONORS COLLEGE STUDENTS ONLY 15 Course readings: Michael Pollan (2006) The Omnivore’s Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals. Also assigned pdfs. Course description: In this course we explore foodways, or food within a social and cultural context. We look at food as a cultural and gender marker, social rules associated with foods, foods associated with various stages of life, and human nutritional needs. Furthermore, we examine globalized (industrial) versus local food, nutritional evolution, pop culture of food, and regional cuisines. Students participate in The Snack Project, an ethnographic project on American foodways. Students gain professional-level certification in Human Subject Research. Evaluation: Approximately 20% exam, 40% class project; 40% assignments. Course Presentation: Lectures, discussion, films, and a hands-on ethnographic research project in which students conduct interviews and write individual hypothesis-driven papers. The Snack Project, begun in Fall 2013, has already collected over 200 interviews. Learning Outcomes: By the conclusion of the course, students will be able to: - Demonstrate linkages between food and identity, gender, age, nutrition, and health; - Outline how industrialized food fits in today’s globalized world; - Give examples of food in pop culture; - Outline basic theoretical approaches to food studies; - Give examples of ethical responsibilities in human subject research; - Apply the scientific method by stating a testable hypothesis, compiling data, and evaluating the findings - Conduct an oral interview and be certified for Human Subject Research. Audience: Anyone who is interested in food in a social and cultural context, and is willing to participate in original ethnographic research (with a lot of direction and help). No prior knowledge of anthropology is needed, and how to conduct ethnographic research will be taught in class. ANTH 215.001/Chinese Popular Culture TR / 2:50 – 4:05 / Gambrell 412 Professor: Marc Moskowitz (3 credits) Fulfills the Cultural Requirement for the Anthropology Major 16 Course Description: This course will focus on Chinese popular culture. This will include mass media such as film, pop music, television programming, and other related topics. The course will also include theoretical examinations of cultural hybridity, colonial pasts, alternate modernity’s, local vs. transnational space, and the adoption and adaptation of foreign influences. ANTH 291.001 / Special Topics: Sex and Gender in the Past MWF / 10:50 – 11:40 / Gambrell 412 Professor: Joanna Casey (3 credits) Cross-listed with WGST 298 Fulfills the Cultural Requirement for the Anthropology Major Course Description: What do we know about sexuality and gender in the prehistoric past, and why should we care? This course discusses anthropological approaches to sex and gender, the archaeological evidence for these practices, and the ways in which these concepts affect our interpretations of the prehistoric past. Presentation is through lectures, readings, discussions, films and written assignments. ANTH 291.E01 / Special Topics: Indigenous Caribbean Archaeology Online Professor: Tony de la Cova (3 credits) Fulfills the Archaeological Requirement for the Anthropology Major Course Description: Historical archaeology and ethnography of the Casimiroid, Ortoiroid, Saladoid, Ostionoid, Taino and Carib indigenous cultures of the Caribbean from 4,000 BC to 1524 AD. Emphasis on social complexity, religion, art, and political organization to illustrate the diversity and richness of Amerindian Caribbean life until their rapid decline after European contact. ANTH 314.001 / Caribbean Cultures TR / 10:05 – 11:20 / Gambrell 412 Professor: Sherina Feliciano-Santos (3 credits) Fulfills the Cultural Requirement for the Anthropology Major 17 Course Description: Ethnographic approach to Caribbean cultures and societies. Topics include colonial histories and experience, gender and race relations; beliefs and religious life; verbal arts, literature and creole language. ANTH 319.001 / Principles of Archaeology MWF / 9:40 – 10:30 / Gambrell 412 Professor: Gail Wagner (3 credits) Fulfills the Archaeological Requirement for the Anthropology Major Course Readings: No textbook, but readings will be posted on Blackboard. Course Description: This course introduces the vocabulary, basic methods, theories, history, and goals of archaeology and provides the student with experience in solving archaeological problems. The course is divided into three parts: (1) basic terms and methods; (2) what can be learned from artifacts; and (3) asking big questions about human behavior. Evaluation: Course grades will be based on quizzes (15%), exercises (15%), two tests (35%), and a final comprehensive exam (35%). Attendance is required. Course Presentation: This is a lecture course with occasional in-class workshops and movies. Blackboard is heavily used. Audience: Students who are interested in archaeology, this is the basic introductory course that prepares you for upper-level courses, field school, or a laboratory course. No prior knowledge of anthropology or archaeology is needed. ANTH 331.E01 / Mesoamerican Prehistory Online Professor: Tony de la Cova (3 credits) Cross-listed with LASP 322 Fulfills the Archaeological Requirement for the Anthropology Major 18 Course Description: Historical ethnography of the major pre-Columbian Mesoamerican civilizations, especially the Olmec, Teotihuacanos, the Maya, Aztec, the Zapotec and Mixtec. Emphasis on the social life, gender roles, cultural achievements, religion, world view, and political systems to illustrate the diversity and richness of Amerindian life before the Spanish conquest. ANTH 333.E01 /North American Prehistory TR / 6:00 – 7:15 / Petigru 111 Instructor: Chris Judge (3 credits) CANCELED Fulfills the Archaeological Requirement for the Anthropology Major Course Description: This course is an exploration of North American prehistory via archaeology. The student will develop an understanding and appreciation for the Native cultures often disenfranchised by history. Students will learn the temporal and geographic distribution of the major societies of Canada and the US. Students will learn about the lifeways, technology and material culture by way of a natural regions approach (Southwest, Arctic, Plains, etc.) ANTH 335.E01 /Old World Archeology TR / 6:00 – 7:15 / Petigru 217 Instructor: Alisa Stoughton (3 credits) Fulfills the Archaeological Requirement for the Anthropology Major Course Description: Old World Archaeology will trace the birth and growth of complex societies in the Mediterranean, northern from Africa, and Europe from the Neolithic period to the start of the Middle Ages (10,000 BC-1,000 CE) and will examine the ways in which archeology can aid in our understanding of past civilizations. ANTH 345.001 / Historical Archaeology MWF / 12:00 – 12:50 / Gambrell 406 Professor: Terrance Weik (3 credits) 19 Fulfills the Archaeological Requirement for the Anthropology Major Required Readings: In Small Things Forgotten (1996) by James Dietz Other readings are on Blackboard. Course Description: This course explores the researchers, methods, and geographies of historical archaeology. This area of intellectual specialization has a unique history that has led to the emergence of groups such as the Society for Historical Archaeology, as well as numerous conferences, publications, and research projects. A major course goal is to juxtapose the various approaches that characterize archaeological practice. Another objective is to demonstrate the application of general concepts and theories that resonate with archaeologists, regardless of their intellectual orientation, temporal focus, or data sets. Films, readings, & lectures contain vital information that you will apply in assignments & exams. Students are expected to come prepared to contribute to all class discussions. In accordance with university policies, a penalty of one letter grade will be applied to any student with more than 3 unexcused absences. Learning Objectives: By the end of the semester students will be able to do the following : 1) Differentiate historical archaeology & other disciplinary approaches to the past. 2) Employ research methods of some historical archaeologists. 3) Understand anthropological, interdisciplinary, and comparative studies. 4) Explain core ideas and concepts that shape archaeological theory. 5) Identify historical places that constitute our national and global heritage. 6) Analyze and curate artifacts. ANTH 353.001/ Anthropology of Law & Conflict MW / 2:20 – 3:35 / Gambrell 412 Professor: Jonathan Leader (3 credits) Fulfills the Cultural Requirement for the Anthropology Major Course Description: The Anthropology of Law and Conflict provides a forum for considering the cultural and crosscultural aspects of the social contracts implicit and explicit in formal and informal legal systems. We will discuss the relationship between individual and community rights in a variety of states, the situation of stateless peoples, and the construction of concepts such as citizenship, normalcy, and human rights. Violence will be discussed in relation to communal identities, legacies of colonialism and nationalism, economic inequality, and resurgent reactionary religious and enforced triumphalist secular systems. Students will learn to engage topics including universal rights, individual accountability, international law and conflict resolution through an ethnographic and applied lens. 20 ANTH 355.001 / Language, Culture and Society MWF / 1:10 – 2:00 / Gambrell 412 Professor: Jennifer Reynolds (3 credits) Cross listed with LING 340 Fulfills the Linguistic Requirement for the Anthropology Major Course Description: In this introductory course we will be exploring the relationship between language, culture, and communication as it has been theorized and analyzed within one of the four primary fields of American Anthropology: linguistic anthropology. You will learn about what scholars have had to say on the subject, past and present, as well as gain hands-on-experience in what linguistic anthropologists actually do. I encourage you to bring your questions and queries to class and share them with your peers and me as we problematize the naturalized, and seemingly transparent systems of communication that shape our lives. This perspective allows for an examination of a range of issues: (1) The ways that languages differ; (2) language and cognition; (3) how theories of language are implicated in theories of culture; (5) language acquisition and socialization; (4) the relationship between speech, social class, race, and gender; (5) the politics of language use and identity. Methods of Evaluation: Assignment #1 – Field Linguistics Exercise (individual) 10% Midterm Exam I (in-class) 15% Midterm Exam II (in-class) 15% Assignment # 2 – Speech Community Project (groups 3-4 people) 30% Final Exam (take-home) 30% Total 100% Course Presentation: Class discussion, short lectures, panel debates, student presentations, use of audio/video material, use of Blackboard. Audience: Undergraduate students, no prerequisite, not limited to anthropology / linguistics. ANTH 358.E01 / Gender and Culture MW / 5:30 – 6:45 / LeConte 113 Instructor: Seo Yeon Park (3 credits) CROSS LISTED WITH WGST 358 21 Fulfills the Cultural Requirement for the Anthropology Major Course Description: This course will examine the ways in which gender is culturally constructed and elaborated by various societies. Through analyzing a variety of case studies in gender, we will explore how gender shapes labor relations, marriage patterns, kinship and social stratification. It will also engage discussions on how gender in our everyday lives is articulated as well as concepts of gendered society and culture. These discussions will include connections between gender and changing economies, globalization, migration and health. ANTH 367.001 / Basic Forensic Anthropology TR / 2:50 – 4:05 / Gambrell 402 Instructor: Brittany Walter (3 credits) Fulfills the Biological Requirement for the Anthropology Major Course Description: Forensic anthropology is an applied area of biological anthropology that focuses on the identification of human skeletal remains in a medicolegal context. Forensic anthropologists collaborate with police officers, lawyers, doctors, and other specialists to identify dead bodies and skeletonized remains often involved with homicides. This course will introduce students to the basic principles of forensic anthropology and focus on current and past methods used in this discipline. Forensic case studies will also be examined. ANTH 373.001 / Intro. To Language Science MW / 8:05 – 9:20 / Gambrell 149 Instructor: TBA (3 credits) Cross-listed with LING 300 / PSYC 470 Course Description: Introduction to the linguistic component of human cognition. Properties of speech, the organization of language in the mind/brain, cross-linguistic universals, child language acquisition, and aspects of adult language processing. *** NOTE: This course should only be used if the student has no other choice for the Linguistic Requirement! ANTH 373.H01 / Intro. To Language Science MW / 2:20 – 3:35 / Sloan 103 Professor: Mila P Tasseva-Kurktchiev (3 credits) 22 Honors College Students Only Cross-listed with LING 300 and PSYC 470 Course Description: This course is a general introduction to the field of language studies. We will examine how language works and simultaneously define its characteristics and component parts: the sound system, the structure of words, sentences, and meaning. The key goal is to become familiar with the terminology needed to describe and analyze language and build appreciation for the diversity of human languages. *** NOTE: This course should only be used if the student has no other choice for the Linguistic Requirement! ANTH 373.E01 / Intro. To Language Science TR / 6:00 – 7:15 / Flinn Hall 207 Instructor: TBA (3 credits) Cross-listed with LING 300 / PSYC 470 Course Description: Introduction to the linguistic component of human cognition. Properties of speech, the organization of language in the mind/brain, cross-linguistic universals, child language acquisition, and aspects of adult language processing. *** NOTE: This course should only be used if the student has no other choice for the Linguistic Requirement! ANTH 381.001 / Gender and Globalization TR / 1:15 – 2:30 / Gambrell 412 Professor: Drucilla Barker (3 credits) Cross-listed with WGST 381 Fulfills the Cultural Requirement for the Anthropology Major Course Description: 23 Examines the dialectic between globalization and the social construction of gender. Topics include the global assembly line, transnational markets for domestic labor and sex workers, and global feminist alliances. ANTH 388.E01 / Culture Pregnancy and Birth MW / 5:30 – 6:45 / Petigru 217 Instructor: Kathryn Luchok (3 credits) Cross listed with WGST 388 Fulfills the Cultural Requirement for the Anthropology Major Course Description: Pregnancy and childbirth are human universals, but the way women experience this lifealtering time is shaped in large part by their culture. This class will explore the similarities and differences in the way pregnancy and birth are experienced in the United States and crossculturally using a critical anthropological perspective. We will look at the medicalization of childbirth and alternatives to the medical model, as well as the ways culture is reified through the birth process. This class is suited to students of anthropology, women’s and gender studies, sociology, psychology, social work, nursing, pre-med, public health, and anyone interested in learning more about one of the great liminal periods in women’s lives. ANTH 391.001 / Special Topics: Health and Spirituality TR / 8:30 – 9:45 / Gambrell 412 Professor: David Simmons (3 credits) Fulfills the Cultural Requirement for the Anthropology Major Course Description: This course considers the interplay between health and spirituality across a number of cultural contexts to investigate issues of embodiment, suffering, and transcendence as fundamental characteristics of human experience. Simultaneously antagonistic and complementary, medicine and religion provide key lenses through which we understand and make sense of the world around us. While taking a meaning-centered approach to the study of religion and healing, this course also attends to the more clinical aspects of assessing the efficacy of religion and healing on general wellbeing. ANTH 391.002 / Special Topics: Ethnographic Sketch of Native North America TR / 4:25 – 5:40 / Gambrell 402 Professor: Adam King (3 credits) CANCELED Fulfills the Cultural Requirement for the Anthropology Major 24 Course Description: We tend to think of Native Americans as if they are one people. While there is a unity in modern Native America, it is still made up of hundreds of distinct ethnic groups each with their own histories, beliefs and practices. They represent a cultural diversity and richness that rivals that of any continent in the world. In this class we will explore the unique cultures of Native American groups like the Kwakiutl of British Columbia, the Hopi of Arizona, the Cheyenne of the Great Plains, the Iroquois of New York, and the Cherokee of the Southeast. We also will explore the American history that helped create modern Native America from European colonization to Removal and reservation to the Red Power movement. ANTH 391.003 / Special Topics: Language and Racism TR / 1:15 – 2:30 / Close/Hipp Building 364 Professor: Elaine Chun (3 credits) Cross-listed with LING 305 / ENGL 439 Fulfills the Linguistic Requirement for the Anthropology Major Course Description: This course explores the intersection of language, race, and power; it examines this intersection by using conceptual and methodological tools of linguistics and anthropology. Drawing from cases primarily involve the English language or communities in the United States, this course will cover the following topics: (1) LINGUISTIC PROFILING: how we sometimes use language to identify a speaker’s race and whether such profiling is racist; (2) CROSSRACIAL APPROPRIATION: why we sometimes “borrow” the language of racial groups to which we do not belong; (3) RACIAL MOCKERY: how we perform linguistic caricatures of racial speakers; (4) ETHNIC SLURS: how words referring to racial groups can convey derogatory meanings; (5) EUPHEMISMS: whether we become “colorblind” by replacing explicit racial terms with terms such as “immigrant” or “urban”; (6) REAPPROPRIATION: how and whether ethnic slurs can become positive in-group terms; (7) MAINSTREAM U.S. STANDARD: whether the different statuses of black and white varieties in contexts of U.S. media and education reproduce racial hierarchies; (8) IDEOLOGIES OF RACISM: what cultural assumptions underlie our accusations of certain speech acts as racist or our denials of other acts as non-racist; and (9) ANTI-RACIST STRATEGIES: how we can use language to counter racist acts and beliefs. ANTH 391.E01 / Special Topics: Biblical Archeology MW / 5:30 – 6:45 / Humanities Classroom Building 404 Professor: Jonathan Leader (3 credits) Meets with RELG 291.E01 Fulfills the Archaeological Requirement for the Anthropology Major 25 Course Description: An exploration of the Bible in the natural landscape and historic context. ANTH 442.001 / African American English TR / 2:50 – 4:05 / Humanities Classroom Building 317 Professor: Tracey Weldon-Stewart (3 credits) Cross-listed with LING 442 Fulfills the Linguistic Requirement for the Anthropology Major Course Description: This course is designed to introduce students to the structure, history, and use of the distinctive varieties of English used by and among many African Americans in the U.S. In this course, we will examine some of the linguistic features that distinguish African-American English (AAE) from other varieties of American English. We will consider theories regarding the history and emergence of AAE. We will look at the representation of AAE in literature. We will examine the structure and function of various expressive speech events in the AfricanAmerican speech community. And we will consider attitudinal issues regarding the use of AAE, especially as they relate to education and the acquisition of Standard English. ANTH 515.001 / Tradition & Transformations in Islamic Cultures TR / 8:30 – 9:45 / Close/Hipp Building 351 Professor: Hamid M. Khan (3 credits) Meets with RELG 551.001 CANCELED Fulfills the Cultural Requirement for the Anthropology Major OR Fulfills the 500-level(s) requirement(s) for the Major or for DURT Course Description: Islam as a dynamic cultural tradition: emphasis on the tension between Islamization and the larger Islamic tradition. ANTH 517.H01 / An Anthropological View of Blacks in Film MW / 2:20 – 3:35 / Close/Hipp Building 463 Professor: Kimberly Simmons (3 credits) 26 Honors College Students Only Meets with AFAM 517.H01 Fulfills the Cultural Requirement for the Anthropology Major OR Fulfills the 500-level(s) requirement(s) for the Major or for DURT Course Description: This course examines the historical and contemporary images and representations of Black people in film, in the United States, from an anthropological perspective. We will focus on early images as well as some of the more recent depictions of Blacks in both films and sitcoms. What do these images suggest and convey about African American culture and about Black people in the United States? How have the images changed? How have they remained the same? What are some of the gendered, color, and class dimensions of these representations? This course will consist of lectures, readings, and films. Group discussions, reaction papers, and individual projects will be assigned to explore the images and representation of African American people, culture, and life over time. ANTH 535.001 / Conflict Archaeology MW / 9:40 – 10:55 / Gambrell 406 Professor: Steve Smith (3 credits) Fulfills the Archaeological Requirement for the Anthropology Major OR Fulfills the 500-level(s) requirement(s) for the Major or for DURT Course Description: Anthropological and archaeological theories and methods in the study conflict, war, and warfare. Causes, effects, outcomes, of sustained social acts of violence of groups, tribes, states, and nations. Evolutionary, biological, social, origins of warfare. History, strategy and tactics, battlefield archaeology. ANTH 569 / Environment & Development Professor: TBA (3 credits) Cross listed with GEOG 569 Fulfills 3 hrs of the Anthropology Elective Requirement for the Major OR Fulfills the 500-level(s) requirement(s) for the Major or for DURT CANCELED 27 Course Description: Examination of development theory and environmental implications of social and economic change. Study of general theoretical perspectives will be balanced with case study materials ANTH 703.001 / Anthropological Inquiry R / 11:40 – 2:10 / Gambrell 440A Professor: Marc Moskowitz (3 credits) Course Description: This is the Department of Anthropology’s graduate level core class for cultural anthropology. As such it is meant to provide an overview of some of the most influential works for cultural anthropology, including early sociological thought. It is also designed to provide examples of different kinds of anthropological research to give students a feel for the range of work that can be done in cultural anthropology. Grading Scale: A 93 - 100%; B+ 89 - 92%; B 80 - 88%; C+ 76 - 79%; C 68 - 75%; D+ 64 - 67%; D 55 - 63 %; F 54% or below Audience: While this is a required core course for our M.A. and Ph.D. programs in the Department of Anthropology, students from other disciplines are welcomed, and interdisciplinary conversations add a great deal to the course. ANTH 745.001 / Seminar in Historical Archaeology M / 2:20 – 4:50 / Gambrell 440A Professor: Ken Kelly (3 Credits) Required Readings: Deetz, James 1996 In Small Things Forgotten. Anchor Books. Ferguson, Leland 1992 Uncommon Ground: Archaeology and Early African America, 1650-1800. Smithsonian Institution Press. Orser, Charles 1996 Images of the Recent Past: Readings in Historical Archaeology. Altamira Press. Course Description: This course will introduce students to the historical development of historical archaeology as practiced in the United States. Next, the core literature of historical archaeology will be explored to give students an understanding of goals of historical archaeology. The class will also investigate alternative approaches to historical archaeology, particularly those developed and applied to circumstances outside of Anglo-America. 28 Method of Evaluation: A mid – term exam and a final exam are required, as is a research paper on a topic of the student’s interest, developed in consultation with the instructor. Additionally, class presentations, participation, and research exercises will be required. Critical book review Mid – term exam Research exercises, class presentations, and participation Research paper 20% 20% 20% 40% Audience: This is a graduate level course designed for students interested in historical archaeology, and already possessing some familiarity with archaeological and anthropological method and theory. Students without some anthropological or archaeological background should consult the instructor. ANTH 747.001 / Language as Social Action T / 1:15 – 3:45 / Gambrell 440A Professor: Sherina Feliciano-Santos (3 Credits) Cross listed with Ling 747 Course Description: Linguistic acts are implicated in the constitution of social relationships, hierarchies, ideologies, and identities. This seminar will draw from theoretical and empirical writing in linguistic anthropology and general social theory to consider the ways in which language can be analyzed considering economic, social, cultural, political, historical, and institutional contexts. While the course’s analytical focus is language, it will be of interest to graduate students with an interest in the study of the relationship between structure and agency, continuity and change, culture and meaning, as well as the study of power and mechanisms of social stratification. . ANTH 772.001 / Gender and Culture M / 5:30 – 8:30 / TBA Professor: Drue Barker (3 credits) Cross listed with WGST 772 Course Description: Different cultures' ideas about gender and use of gender to organize social groups in a wide range of societies, including American subcultures. 29 30 PLEASE NOTE: IT IS THE STUDENT’S RESPONSIBILITY TO CHECK THE OFFICIAL U.S.C. MASTER SCHEDULE (https://ssb.onecarolina.sc.edu/BANP/twbkwbis.P_GenMenu?name=homepage ) FOR ANY CHANGES IN DAY, TIME AND/OR LOCATION OF ANY PARTICULAR COURSE. SUCH INFORMATION CAN BE CHANGED AT ANY TIME. Department of Anthropology Gambrell Hall, Suite 440 817 Henderson Street Columbia, SC 29208 (803) 777-6500 Fax (803) 777-0259 Web: http://www.cas.sc.edu/anth/ 31
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